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Hibbard Humanties Hall 405
(715) 836-2639
http://www.uwec.edu/Lists/Acad.htm
Martin Wood, Chair
Mary Alea, Debra K.S. Barker, Erica Benson, Jack Bushnell, Ruth Cronje, Helen Dale, Bernard Duyfhuizen, Max Garland, C. Kate Hale, Charles Hanson, John Hildebrand, Gloria Hochstein, David Jones, Erna Kelly, Theresa Kemp, Karen Loeb, Allyson Loomis, Carmen Manning, Lawrence Martin, Robert Nowlan, Scott Oates, Tess Onwueme, Joel Pace, William Phillips, Elizabeth Preston-Simon, August Rubrecht, Neeraja Sankaran, Asha Sen, Jennifer Shaddock, David Shih, Jan Stirm, Bruce Taylor, Stacy Thompson, Anne Utschig, Karen Welch, Blake Westerlund.
Honor Societies and Student Organizations:
STD: Sigma Tau Delta is an international honor society for the study of language and literature. Contact: Gloria Hochstein, hochstgj@uwec.edu.
NOTA: None of the Above is the campus creative arts organization. NOTA is student-run and publishes two editions annually. Contact: Allyson Loomis, goldinaa@uwec.edu.
STC: Society for Technical Communication offers ideas, contacts, and presentations to help students gain knowledge about professional communication. Contact: Erna Kelly, ekelly@uwec.edu.
Students at UW-Eau Claire pursue an English major by choosing among several emphases. Current choices included one Comprehensive emphasis (to which students do not need to add a minor field) and five standard emphases (which must be taken in conjunction with a minor). Either kind of English major offers students both a framework of core courses and focused concentrations of courses.
For all students who elect an English major, study begins with a core of eleven credits: English 210, 221, and 284. English 210, Introduction to Texts, explores a variety of texts and ways to approach them. It is specifically designed to help majors understand their options and see connections among their English coursework and other University and life experiences. English 221, The English Language, introduces students to the formal study of language, including grammar, history of the English language, and language acquisition, thereby providing students with a strong basis for their work in the discipline. English 284, Introduction to Theory and Criticism, deepens students' foundation for literary analysis and problem solving within the discipline and beyond. The major is designed to give students a common core as well as some depth of study in an emphasis. In addition to sharing information and ideas, English courses bring students together in a community with both shared and diverse learning goals.
Students can supplement their classroom experience while promoting the English Language Arts by serving as tutors in the English Writing Lab, as mentors in First Year Experiences sections of courses, as writing interns at area businesses, and as members of Sigma Tau Delta (the English Honor Society), STC (the Society of Technical Communicators) or NOTA (the UW-Eau Claire creative arts organization).
Each spring the department sponsors a student-organized festival to promote and celebrate the English Language Arts. In their final or next-to-final semester, students finish their major with a "Capstone" experience in which they complete a major independent project, submit their English Portfolio for evaluation, and participate in an Exit Interview.
The English Department also offers four minors and many courses that meet University General Education requirements.
The faculty have designed the English programs to reflect departmental priorities and to provide a good place to learn and grow for both students and faculty. Looking for connections, they seek to integrate language/linguistics, literature, composition, and teacher preparation courses. The faculty seek to nurture close, fully-integrated communities of learners who nourish and respect honest differences of all kinds. The faculty continually work to improve connections with other areas of the University and with the world outside the campus.
The English Department is located on the fourth floor of Hibbard Humanities Hall. Most faculty offices are nearby, and English classes generally meet in Hibbard Hall classrooms. Staff in the department office can provide information on courses, programs, transfer credits, advising, and departmental procedures. Staff in the Writing Center , located in HHH 605, provide information about tutoring and the English Competency requirement.
For more information about the English Department, its programs, and its faculty, visit the department's homepage on the World Wide Web at www.uwec.edu/English.
| British literature before 1790: | |
| Engl 257, 351, 352, 357, 375 | |
| British literature after 1790: | |
| Engl 259, 359, 362 | |
| American literature before 1900: | |
| Engl 243, 340, 440 | |
| American literature after 1900: | |
| Engl 244, 245 | |
| World/Post Colonial literature: | |
| Engl 231, 430, Engl/Wmns 332 | |
| American Ethnic literature: | |
| Engl 345, 346, 468, Engl/AIS 242 | |
| Women's literature: | |
| Engl/Wmns 296, 396 | |
Core courses:
A twelve-credit literature requirement:
(courses may be specified within a particular emphasis)
A twelve-credit emphasis requirement (specified below).
In addition to the English core requirement:
In addition to the English core requirement:
NOTE: No single course can be used in two categories except Women's literature.
NOTE: No more than six credits at the 200 level; no fewer than nine credits at the 400 level.
In addition to the English core requirement:
In addition to the English core requirement:
In addition to the English core requirement:
NOTE: Of these 12 literature credits, no more than nine credits at the 200 level and no fewer than six credits at the 400 level.
This major is restricted to students in the College of Education and Human Sciences: Curriculum and Instruction: Option B and leads to licensure to teach English in Early Adolescence through Adolescence classrooms. See adviser for specific information regarding English Department requirements for admission to the College of Education and Human Sciences and the Professional Semester.
In addition to the English core requirement:
NOTE: Of these literature credits, no more than nine credits at the 200 level and no fewer than six credits at the 400 level.
This major is restricted to students in the College of Education and Human Sciences: Curriculum and Instruction: Option B and leads to licensure to teach English in Early Adolescence through Adolescence classrooms. See adviser for specific information regarding English Department requirements for admission to the College of Education and Human Sciences and the Professional Semester.
Twenty-six semester credits, including
Twenty-six semester credits, including
This minor is restricted to students in the College of Education and Human Sciences: Curriculum and Instruction: Option B or C and leads to licensure to teach English in Early Adolescence through Adolescence classrooms.
Twenty-six semester credits, including
Twenty-six semester credits, including
Departmental Honors Program in English
Eligibility: (1) Upper-class majors (60 credits or more) in any English Emphasis with resident, total, and English GPAs of 3.50 or higher; (2) Transfer students with junior status who enter with a GPA of 3.50 or higher.
Application Procedure: A written application for Departmental Honors shall be submitted to the department chair for approval. The application will be considered by an Honors Committee appointed by the chair. Upon the Committee's approval, applicants shall be admitted to the program. So long as they continue to meet the eligibility requirements listed above, admitted students will continue as participants in the program.
Requirements: Candidates for Departmental Honors must complete the requirements of an English major program while meeting the following requirements with distinction: (1) Complete two English courses at the 400 level taken as Honors Options courses. An Honors Option course can be any English offering in which a student chooses to do honors work. Prior approval is required both by the instructor and by the department chair. By the end of the second week of classes, the student must file a description of the honors work to be completed during the course. The honors work must include a written project that will be submitted to the instructor and also filed with the department chair. (2) Complete one-three credits of Honors Independent Study in English. (3) Complete an Honors Thesis. This thesis may be part of the course work for the Honors Independent Study, but it is distinct from the English Capstone project. (English Honors candidates who wish to complete a substantial project that would simultaneously satisfy both the Capstone requirement and the Honors Thesis requirement can only do so with advance approval of the department chair, the Honors Independent Study instructor, and the Capstone instructor.) (4) Presentation of Results. Candidates for English Honors will present results of their Honors Thesis work at a public forum in conjunction with the English Festival or a similar appropriate event.
Directed Studies (Engl 395) and Independent Studies (Engl 399, 499) may be applied in major and minor programs only with the written permission of the student's adviser and the department chair.
Writing minors with an English major may not apply the same course in both programs.
Auditors will be admitted to writing courses only with the written permission of the instructor and the department chair.
English for Non-Native Speakers. The beginning composition course for non-native speakers of English is ordinarily ESL 305 (see Department of Foreign Languages), followed by Engl 110. At the completion of their composition course sequence, nonnative speakers will take a modified version of the competency examination.