Announcements

Brown Bag Workshops, Fall 2008
(in Humanities shared faculty lounge)

Wed. 10/15--Ron Overton:
"The I-Search Essay"

Wed. 10/22--Astrid Wimmer:
"An Option for Teaching Analysis: The Zones Workshop"

Wed. 11/5--Richard Buch:
"Writing Across the Curriculum: Making the Connection"

Wed. 11/12--Rita Nezami:
"Bringing Visual Rhetoric to the Classroom"


Writing Center

center


 

 


Courses

Courses and section #'s for the upcoming semester.

Intermediate/advanced/special theme course descriptions for the upcoming semester

The following is a list of courses offered in our program. WRT 101 and WRT 102 are offered each semester.



WRT 101

Introductory Writing Workshop: Students in this class are asked to product frequent short papers to develop fluency and correctness. Students will also be introduced to the basic requirements of academic writing. A through C/U grading only. Students may not use the Pass/No credit option. Not for credit in addition to the discontinued EGC 100. Does not satisfy DEC A requirement for students matriculating before Fall 1999. Prerequisite: Placement essay, transfer evaluation, or ESL instructor. Three credits.

WRT 102

Intermediate Writing Workshop–A: This class emphasizes writing for academic purposes. Students learn strategies for extended writing assignments at the university. Short papers and at least two major essays in a variety of academic genres are required. Students will do extensive revision on multiple drafts in a variety of genres, including a researched argument and will be required to submit a final portfolio that must be judged acceptable by their teacher and an outsider reader. A through C/U grading only. The Pass/No credit option may not be used. Not for credit in addition to the discontinued EGC 101. Placement essay or transfer evaluation. Three credits.

WRT 103

Intermediate Writing Workshop–B: Students in this workshop will have the opportunity for in-depth practice of specific types of academic writing, such as analysis, argument, and the research paper. Different sections will have different emphases. See the Program in Writing and Rhetoric bulletin board (L-82) or the current semester WRT course description web page for a list of current offerings. May be repeated once with permission of the director. The Pass/No credit option may not be used. A through C/U grading only. Not for credit in addition to the discontinued EGC 202. Prerequisite: Placement essay or WRT 102. Three credits.

WRT 201

Writing in the Disciplines/ Special Topics: Students will be taught writing in specific academic disciplines through the analysis of texts in appropriate fields to discover discourse conventions. Students produce extended written projects. Different sections emphasize different disciplines. See See the Program in Writing and Rhetoric bulletin board (H-2005) or the current semester WRT course description web page for a list of current offerings. Not for credit in addition to the discontinued EGC 201. Prerequisites: Completion of D.E.C. Category A. Three credits.

WRT 215

Argumentative Writing: Students in this course will receive extensive and intensive practice in the techniques of argumentation and interpretation. Logical and critical thinking skills are applied in formulating arguments and refutations of the sort required for standard term papers. The course focuses on imparting interpretative skills necessary for forming critical responses to articles, academic essays and studies as they are found in various disciplines. Crosslisted with PHI 215. See the Program in Writing and Rhetoric bulletin board (H-2005) or the current semester WRT course description web page for a list of current offerings. Prerequisite: Completion of DEC Category A. Three credits.

WRT 381, 382

Advanced Analysis and Argumentative Writing: Students in this intensive writing course will refine skills appropriate to upper-division work. Content varies: the focus may be on analysis or various intellectual issues, rhetorical strategies, or compositional problems within or across disciplines, but frequent substantial writing projects are central to every version of the course. Not for credit in addition to the discontinued ECG 381, 382. See the Program in Writing and Rhetoric bulletin board (H-2005) or the current semester WRT course description web page for a list of current offerings. Prerequisite: WRT 102 or equivalent by placement or transfer evaluation. Three credits per course.

WRT 392

Theories and Methods of Mentoring Writers: Closely examines the difficulties implicit in mentoring writers, with special consideration for the roles of cultural expectations and social dynamics on both the teaching of writing and writers themselves. In small groups and one-to-one interactions, students explore theories and practices upon which composition instruction and writing center work depend. Building on the understanding that writing is a recursive process (a cycle of planning, drafting, revising, and editing), students also learn to analyze and problem-solve issues that become barriers for effective writing and communication. See the Program in Writing and Rhetoric bulletin board (H-2005) or the current semester WRT course description web page for a list of current offerings.
Prerequisites: WRT 102 or 103; permission of instructor. Three credits per course.

WRT 487

Independent Project: Qualified upper-division students may carry out advanced independent work under the supervision of an instructor in the program. May be repeated. Prerequisite: permission of instructor and program director. Three to six credits.

WRT 488

Internship: Students participate in local, state, and national public and private agencies and organizations. May be repeated to a limit of twelve credits. Prerequisites: G.P.A. of 2.5 or higher; permission of instructor and program director. One to six credits, S/U grading.