2018-2019 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
English
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Return to: College of Letters, Arts & Sciences
Faculty
- Professors: Lesley Ginsberg, Rebecca Laroche, Thomas J. Napierkowski, and Susan Taylor
- Professors Emeriti: Alexander L. Blackburn, Kenneth Pellow, and Jeffrey Rubin-Dorsky
- Professor Emerita: Joan Ray
- Associate Professors: K. Alex Ilyasova, Katherine Mack (Chair), and Kirsten Bartholomew Ortega
- Assistant Professors: Ann Amicucci, Steven Carter, and David Diamond
- Director, Writing Across the Curriculum/Portfolio Assessment & Assistant Professor Attendant Rank: Michelle Neely
- Senior Instructors: Mary Margaret Alvarado, Gina Baldoni-Rus, Cheryl Birkelo, Susan Finger, Anthony Friedhoff, Keri Hemenway, Kathleen Johnson, Chelsea Lawson, Quentin Martin, Jamie May, Melonie McMichael, William Myers, Rebecca Posusta, Christine Robinson, Meghan Tifft, Sarah Treschl, Thomas Wahl, and Andrea Wenker
- Instructors: Michelle Brown, B. Denise Garrett, Catherine Grandorff, Juliet Green, Phillip Heasley, Baye Herald, Stacey Johnson, DeLyn Martineau, Jennifer McArdle, Omar Montoya, Jennifer Panko, Leslie Rapparlie, Kacey Ross, Adrian Shaw, M. Nate Siebert, Benjamin Syn, Erin Trauth, Justin Tucker, and Kevin Van Winkle
Programs of Study
English Department Academic Policies
Levels of Courses
Ordinarily, 1000-level courses are taken prior to 2000-level courses, and so on. Unless otherwise indicated, courses have general prerequisites as follows: for 2000-level courses, 24 prior college credit hours; for 3000-level courses, 30 college credit hours; for 4000-level courses, 45 college credit hours.
Prerequisite for All English Courses
Students must fulfill the ENGL 1310 requirement prior to taking any other English course beyond 1310. For English majors, ENGL 2010 is a prerequisite for all other literature courses offered through the Department of English. For non-majors, ENGL 1500 is a prerequisite for all 2000-level and non-major literature courses.
Graduate Course Offerings
In general, a 4000-level course may also be taken for graduate credit as a 5000-level course. See instructor for details. 5000- and 6000-level courses are for graduate students only.
Return to: College of Letters, Arts & Sciences
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