2023-2024 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Department of English
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Telephone: (302) 831-2361
http://www.english.udel.edu
Faculty Listing: https://www.english.udel.edu/people/directory
The English Department has a flexible and varied undergraduate program. Students choose one course from three possible areas of study (a total of nine credits): Literary History, Textual Analysis and Production, and Cultural Diversity. The next eight courses (24 credits) are all chosen in consultation with an in house academic advisor from the wide range of courses the Department offers. Finally, each student completes a capstone experience in the senior year. The options for the capstone include an internship, a portfolio, a symposium, an independent (three credits) study or thesis, and student teaching (for English Education majors).
A grade of C- is required in all major courses. No more than 45 credits with the ENGL prefix (including cross-listed courses) may be counted toward the total required for the degree. ENGL 110 is not counted in that 45-credit maximum.
To be eligible to student teach in the English Education program, students must maintain a minimum overall grade point index of 2.75 and 3.0 in the major. The major in English Education prepares students to teach English in the secondary schools (grades 7-12). Graduates of this program receive the BA in English Education and are eligible for teacher certification.
The English Department offers courses in a wide range of topics including:
- Literature, Literary History, Literary Theory
- English Education
- Environmental Humanities
- Social Justice
- Creative Writing
- Journalism and New Media
- Professional and Technical Writing
- Race, Ethnicity, and Place
- Ethnic and Cultural Studies
- Gender, Sexuality, and Identity
- Rhetoric and Persuasion
- Screen Studies and Game Studies
- Drama and Script Writing
- Print and Popular Culture
- Material Culture
The Department offers two minors-one in English (18 credits) and one in Writing (15 credits). A wide range of courses can be taken to satisfy either minor. The aim of the Minor in Writing is to help students become flexible and effective writers in a wide range of media and genres. In the English Minor, students explore the many ways they can become effective readers and creators of texts. The Department also offers an interdisciplinary minor in environmental humanities.
The English Department also offers three 4+1 programs, all of which let students do graduate work as part of their undergraduate program. The TESL 4+1 allows students to earn a BA in English and an MA in Teaching English as a Second Language in five years. The English/Public Administration 4+1 allows students to earn a BA in English, a Minor in Public Policy, and an MPA in five years. Finally, the English/Urban Affairs and Public Policy 4+1 BA allows student to earn a BA in English, a Minor in Public Policy, and an MA in Urban Affairs and Public Policy in five years.
The Department maintains an advisement center for its majors. Each student works with an in house advisor to develop a specialized program of study. Special faculty advisors also work with students seeking an internship or graduate studies in areas such as communications, law, English studies, business, and professional programs. The Department sponsors many readings and lectures throughout the academic year; publishes Caesura, a literary magazine; and has an active chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the national English honor society.
Environmental Humanities Program:
https://www.english.udel.edu/undergraduate/minors/environmental-humanities
Though the sciences provide basic insight into environmental issues, a growing number of scholars, policymakers, and environmental professionals have recognized that many of the most basic environmental questions are humanistic. Why do we have environmental problems? What shapes our ideas about the human place in nature? How has our relationship to the non-human world changed over time? The work in environmental history, environmental literature, and environmental ethics now is especially rich. This minor will give students the chance to think more rigorously and imaginatively about environmental issues by integrating the insights of many disciplines.
The field of Environmental Humanities is (by its very definition) a synthesis of the humanities, and complements the sciences and public policy. It is designed to be attractive to two distinct groups of students: those in the sciences hoping to deepen their understanding of environmental issues and to learn more effective means of communicating their own work; and those in the humanities wishing to study complex environmental issues without having to major in the sciences. Both groups of students would be very well served by the minor as they pursue graduate or professional work in this important and growing field.
The 18-credit Environmental Humanities minor requires that students take three core courses and three electives. Interested students should contact Prof. McKay Jenkins for more information.
ProgramsMajorMinorHonors Degree4+1
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