Cannot be taken if student already received a 2.0 or higher in ENGL 111, 121, or 131.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 182, ENGL 195 STUDY ABROAD (1-5, max. Offered: AWSp.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 104, ENGL 105 English for International Teaching Assistants (5)Develops language production skills, lesson planning and presentation skills, and TA-student interaction skills related to classroom teaching for international teaching assisants. Consult the Admissions Exams for Credit website for more information.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 107, ENGL 108 Writing Ready: Preparing for College Writing (5)Builds writing confidence through frequent informal writing, and introductions to key learning strategies. Prerequisite: ENGL 571 or permission of instructor. Particular attention to dynamics of production and reception, aesthetics and technique, and cultural politics. The course equivalency is effective only if taken before, and not including, Autumn quarter 1991. 10) CFocuses on emerging questions, debates, genres, and methods of multimodal analysis and production. Differences between Indian writers and writers of the dominant European/American mainstream. Links the relationship between generic forms to questions of power within social, cultural, and historical contexts. Although the course has no prerequisites, instructors assume knowledge of academic writing.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 282, ENGL 283 Beginning Verse Writing (5) VLPAIntensive study of the ways and means of making a poem.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 283, ENGL 284 Beginning Short Story Writing (5) VLPAIntroduction to the theory and practice of writing the short story.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 284, ENGL 285 Writers on Writing (5) VLPA Bosworth, Kenney, Shields, SonenbergExperiencing literature from the inside. UW College Catalog Archives 10) VLPAIntensive verse workshop. Possible authors include: Scott, Austen, the Brontes, and Dickens.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 333, ENGL 334 English Novel: Later Nineteenth Century (5) VLPAExamines the high water mark of the realist novel, as well as its fragmentation into popular genres like science and detective fiction and the emergence of literary modernism. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 528, ENGL 529 Topics in Nineteenth-Century Studies (5, max. Topics may foreground genres (science fiction; romance) or forms (comics; graffiti). Examines special topics in the history and development of the major theoretical trends, including the relationship of certain theories of gender to relevant works of literature.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 367, ENGL 368 Women Writers (5, max. However, a minimum of five credits is still needed to fulfill the requirement. Sentence-level issues related to sentence structure and lexis. AUT Qtr. The course catalog archives provides important information about academic policies, course descriptions and degree requirements. When a community/technical college course is offered for fewer credits than its corresponding UW equivalent, the community/technical college course will transfer with the specified number of credits listed in brackets, and may fulfill graduation requirements as appropriate. Considers gender as a form of social difference as well as power relationships structured around gender inequality.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 368, ENGL 369 Research Methods in Language and Rhetoric (5) VLPAIntroduces research theories and methodological approaches in language and rhetoric. 15) CExpository writing based on material presented in a specific natural science lecture course. Winter Quarter 2021; Spring Quarter 2021; Summer Quarter 2021; CSE 112 Advanced Placement (AP) Computer Science A (4) NW, QSR Course awarded … 15) VLPA, DIVInvestigates how perceptions of "woman writer" shape understandings of women's literary works and the forms in which they compose. May include gothic, historical, or realist works. Methods and content focus include ethnography, corpus analysis, case study, discourse analysis, rhetorical criticism, and various other qualitative and quantitative research methods.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 563, ENGL 564 Current Rhetorical Theory (5, max. Emphasis on narrative, image, and point of view.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 345, ENGL 346 Studies in Short Fiction (5) VLPAThe American and English short story, with attention to the influence of writers of other cultures. Connects English language study with the study of literature, orality and literacy, education, ethnicity, gender, and public policy.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 270, ENGL 277 Introduction to Children's and Young Adult Literature (5) VLPAIntroduction to creative works written for children and young adults, with emphasis on historical, cultural, institutional, and industrial contexts of production and reception. Program Dates: June 1, 2021 - August 7, 2021 Stipend: $5000 and a $75 … Special attention to the novel as a distinct literary form. 15)Literary criticism and theory from Kant's Critique of Judgment to the mid-twentieth century and the work of Northrop Frye. The course meets the Natural World (NW) component of UW graduation requirements. 10)Credit/no-credit only.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 601, ENGL 700 Master's Thesis (*-)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 700, ENGL 800 Doctoral Dissertation (*-)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 800. Consult the Admissions Exams for Credit website for more information. The equivalency takes effect beginning with Autumn quarter 2004. Addresses competing conceptions of modernism and periodizations of modernity, including: preoccupations with novelty/the new; narratives of historical development; temporality; constructions of high and low culture; intersections between aesthetics and politics; and transnationalism.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 385, ENGL 386 Asian-American Literature (5) I&S/VLPA, DIVExamines different forms of Asian American expression as a response to racial formations in local and global contexts. Examines Middle English texts, the cultural importance of written material, the shifting roles of literacy in early England, the relationship to French and Latin, the regional dialects of English in the period, and manuscript culture. In this case, the Biology program accepts the course for credit: Alternatively, the UW #XX designation means that the course does not correspond directly to a program offered at the University. Concurrent registration in the specified course required. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 520, ENGL 522 Topics in the English Renaissance, 1485-1660 (5, max. Prerequisite: ENGL 283; ENGL 284.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 384, ENGL 385 Modernism/Modernity (5)Introduces and explores the genealogy, character, and consequences of the modern for textual production and reception. NOTE: [W] Writing credit is assigned on an individual basis and not included in the equivalency guide. For Educational Opportunity Program students only, upon recommendation by the Office of Minority Affairs.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 110, ENGL 111 Composition: Literature (5) CStudy and practice of good writing; topics derived from reading and discussing stories, poems, essays, and plays. Offered: jointly with C LIT 509.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 509, ENGL 510 History of Literary Criticism and Theory IV (5, max. The course is a blended online course with two parts – an online eLearning and a skill based in person class. Also examines changing assumptions about the social and educational function of children's and young adult literature.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 277, ENGL 281 Intermediate Expository Writing (5) CWriting papers communicating information and opinion to develop accurate, competent, and effective expression.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 281, ENGL 282 Intermediate Multimodal Composition (5) CStrategies for composing effective multimodal texts for print, digital physical delivery, with focus on affordances of various modes--words, images, sound, design, and gesture--and genres to address specific rhetorical situations both within and beyond the academy. Explores key issues and debates, such as race and racism, inequality, literary form, and canonical acceptance. Offered: AWSpS.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 297, ENGL 298 Intermediate Interdisciplinary Writing - Social Sciences (5, max. For a complete list of prefixes used at the UW (as well as detailed information about programs, majors, and courses), see the University of Washington Course Descriptions. Focuses on culture as a site of political and social debate and struggle.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 307, ENGL 308 Marxism and Literary Theory (5) VLPAIntroduces Marxist theory and methodology. Connections between specific skills of literary/theoretical and critical reading and writing, and the demands of contemporary workplaces and civic life offer students the opportunity to consider their post-college goals. Offered: jointly with C LIT 551.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 501, ENGL 502 Manuscript Studies (5)An examination of the theoretical and methodological issues attending the study of written texts including literacy, circulation, production, and reception in Premodern genetics, and archival research methods. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 552, ENGL 554 Theories of Structure, Genre, Form, and Function (5, max. Focuses on culture as a site of political and social debate and struggle. indicates the equivalent UW course prefix and number for the course listed in Column 1. Topics may include sound, meter, style, sentence and discourse structure, conversation strategies, narrative orientation, and/or dialect/variation in literature.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 374, ENGL 375 Rhetorical Genre Theory and Practice (5)Explores the workings and evolution of rhetorical genres as they emerge from and shape recurring social situations. 10)Discussion and practice of second-language teaching techniques. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 537, ENGL 540 Modern Literature (5, max. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 541, ENGL 543 Anglo-Irish Literature (5, max. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 543, ENGL 544 World Literature in English (5, max. If you are from a UW department, or represent a Washington State community or technical college, and have questions about the equivalency review process, see the Equivalency Review Process Guidelines for more information. Offered: S.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 207, ENGL 210 Medieval and Early Modern Literature, 400 to 1600 (5) VLPAIntroduces literature from the Middle Ages and the Age of Shakespeare, focusing on major works that have shaped the development of literary and intellectual traditions of these periods. If the column is blank, the course does not satisfy any requirements. UW Colleges Archived Catalogs. Prerequisite: ENGL 383; ENGL 384.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 484, ENGL 485 Novel Writing (5, max. 10)Lectures and seminars presented by visiting scholars or a range of local scholars relevant to English graduate studies.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 598, ENGL 599 Special Studies in English (5, max. Fifteen quarter credits of foreign language are required for graduation from the College of Arts and Sciences (all majors), as well as from the Occupational Therapy and Social Welfare majors. Also assists students to develop critical reflective skills to become better familiarized with the writing and revision process. Surveys some of the most important questions and debates in postcolonial literature, including issues of identity, globalization, language, and nationalism. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Considers questions of aesthetics, history, and form. The historical focus is contemporary, with attention to foundational modern theorists.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 506, ENGL 507 History of Literary Criticism and Theory I (5, max. Consult the Admissions Exams for Credit website for more information.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 106, ENGL 107 International Baccalaureate (IB) English Preparation for University Study in English (5)Course awarded based on International Baccalaureate (IB) score. The “Meets UW requirements” column in the Course Equivalency Tables may include the following notations:Areas of Knowledge, Language Skills; Reasoning and Writing in Context. Students will develop an e-portfolio to help present their skills to potential employers. 10) VLPAReviews the institutional history of English as an academic discipline and the core debates and politics that have shaped the content, teaching, and study of literature and literacy theory. Offered: jointly with C LIT 553.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 503, ENGL 504 Digital Literary and Textual Studies (5)An examination of digital textuality from the rise and fall of "hypertext" to contemporary convergence and transmediation in hybrid visual-verbal genres; computer games, digital video, and e-poetry. Offered: AWSp.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 388, ENGL 395 Study Abroad (1-5, max. Prose works examine early exploration, conflicts of native and settlement cultures, various social and economic conflicts. lyric, epic, romance, verse drama) or subgenres (e.g. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 556, ENGL 558 Capstone in Textual and Digital Studies (1)Capstone in Textual and Digital Studies. Column 2 (UW Equivalency) Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. 15)Prerequisite: teaching experience.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 564, ENGL 567 Approaches to Teaching Composition (1-5, max. 15)Equivalency for 100-level English courses taken on UW study abroad programs or direct exchanges. Topics include the history of standardizing practices, colonial/post-colonial English, the evolution of English words, and textual history.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 373, ENGL 374 The Language of Literature (5) VLPAExamines the ways that literary texts structure and use language. Offered: AWSp.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 288, ENGL 295 Study Abroad (1-5, max. Required of, and limited to, Honors students in creative writing.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 495, ENGL 496 Major Conference for Honors (5)Individual study (reading, papers) by arrangement with the instructor. Emphasis on reading The Bible with literary and historical understanding.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 310, ENGL 311 Modern Jewish Literature in Translation (5) VLPASurvey of Jewish experience and its literary expression since 1880. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytic prose. Methods and content focus vary by instructor and may include ethnography, corpus analysis, case study, discourse analysis, rhetorical criticism, and various other qualitative and quantitative research methods.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 369, ENGL 370 English Language Study (5) VLPAWide-ranging introduction to the study of written and spoken English. Prerequisite: may not be taken if a minimum grade of 2.0 received in either ENGL 111, ENGL 121, or ENGL 131. 15) CExpository writing based on material presented in a specified humanities lecture course. Possible authors range from Orwell to Zadie Smith.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 339, ENGL 340 Anglo-Irish Literature (5) VLPAPrincipal writers in English of the modern Irish literary movement - Yeats, Joyce, Synge, Gregory, and O' Casey among them - with attention to traditions of Irish culture and history.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 340, ENGL 341 Studies in the Novel (5) VLPAExplores the workings and evolution of the novel. Topics focus on education, public policy, politics, law, journalism, media, digital cultural, globalization, popular culture, and the arts.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 206, ENGL 207 Introduction to Cultural Studies (5) I&S/VLPA Kimberlee Gillis-BridgesIntroduces cultural studies as an interdisciplinary field and practice. Introduces theoretical and methodological approaches that inform the teaching and learning of writing.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 471, ENGL 472 Language Learning (5) VLPAConsideration of how an individual achieves psychological and esthetic grasp of reality through language; relates language development to reading skills, literary interpretation, grammar acquisition, oral fluency, discursive and imaginative writing.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 472, ENGL 473 Current Developments in English Studies: Conference (5) VLPAView course details in MyPlan: ENGL 473, ENGL 474 Special Topics in English for Teachers (1-10, max. Topics vary.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 444, ENGL 451 American Writers: Studies in Major Authors (5, max. Credit/no-credit only.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 115, ENGL 121 Composition: Social Issues (5) CFocuses on the study and practice of good writing: topics derived from a variety of personal, academic, and public subjects. 30) VLPAEquivalency for 200-level English courses taken on UW study abroad programs or direct exchanges. Generally, business courses from the community and technical colleges that correspond to those offered in the UW Business Administration program are listed in the Course Equivalency Tables. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 599, ENGL 600 Independent Study or Research (*-)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 600, ENGL 601 Internship (3-10, max. Prerequisite: either ENGL 102 or placement by test score. in translation by European writers from the mid-19th century to the present. Open only to upper-division English majors. Medicine and disease as metaphors for personal experience and social analysis.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 364, ENGL 365 Literature and Discourse on the Environment (5) VLPA Blake, HandwerkPays attention to verbal expression; forms and genres; and historical, cultural, and conceptual contexts of the natural environment. Offered: jointly with POL S 281.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 251, ENGL 256 Introduction to Queer Cultural Studies (5) I&S, DIVExamines the cultural practices in literature, film, and art that articulate and give meaning to bodies, sexualities, and desires. Administrative Resources Listing of websites within university divisions. Offered: S.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 204, ENGL 205 Method, Imagination, and Inquiry (5) VLPAExamines ideas of method and imagination in a variety of texts, in literature, philosophy, and science. The University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point occupies lands of the Ho-Chunk and Menominee people. Revision of manuscripts is emphasized, but new work may also be undertaken.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 492, ENGL 493 Advanced Creative Writing Conference (1-5, max. Prerequisite: ENGL 383; ENGL 384.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 483, ENGL 484 Advanced Prose Workshop (5, max. 18)Intensive reading in literature or criticism, directed by members of doctoral supervisory committee. Possible topics include genres of drama (tragedy, mystery play, melodrama, agitprop); histories of drama (Elizabethan theater, Theater of the Absurd, the Mbari Mbayo club, In-Your-Face Theater; and theorists of performance and dramaturgy.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 344, ENGL 345 Studies in Film (5) VLPATypes, techniques, and issues explored by filmmakers. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 518, ENGL 520 Seventeenth-Century Literature (5, max. Offered: jointly with C LIT 508.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 508, ENGL 509 History of Literary Criticism and Theory III (5, max. The equivalency is effective only from Autumn quarter 1988 through Summer quarter 2007. The course may not appear in the community college catalog. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 540, ENGL 541 Contemporary Literature (5, max. indicates how courses satisfy UW general education requirements. This catalog is an informational publication of UW-Green Bay. Readings from major authors in different literary forms; discussions of critical and philosophical issues in a time of change.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 330, ENGL 331 Romantic Poetry I (5) VLPABlake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, and their contemporaries.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 331, ENGL 332 Romantic Poetry II (5) VLPAByron, Shelley, Keats, and their contemporaries.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 332, ENGL 333 English Novel: Early and Middle Nineteenth Century (5) VLPAExplores the romantic and early-Victorian phases of the English novel. Links the relationship between generic forms to questions of power within social, cultural, and historical contexts.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 362, ENGL 363 Literature and the Other Arts and Disciplines (5, max. Prerequisite: ENGL 501/C LIT 551; recommended: Must have completed a sequence of three courses, beginning with an Introduction to Textual Theory course (ENG 501/C LIT 551) and followed by one core elective and one open elective related to Textual and Digital Studies . Explores frameworks used in study of literature and culture by scholars today.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 304, ENGL 305 Theories of Imagination (5) VLPA/I&SSurvey of theories of imagination since the seventeenth century. lists specific details about the course from the community or technical college, including course prefix, course number, the number of credits (in parentheses), and if the course was previous taught with a different prefix or number. B. Courses that are offered for more credit than the corresponding UW equivalent usually receive B A 1XX or 2XX for the additional credits. Practice asking engaging questions, sharing opinions, and arguing your point persuasively in the classroom. Topics vary but might include transmedia storytelling, digital humanities, audiovisual essays, new media journalism, and performance. Readings may include gothic novels by Ann Radcliffe and Matthew Lewis, poetry by Oliver Goldsmith and Robert Burns; and nonfiction prose by Samuel Johnson and Thomas Paine.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 328, ENGL 329 Rise of the English Novel (5) VLPATraces the development of a major and popular modern literary genre - the novel. The length of time required to review a course can vary widely. If the majors declared have different degree designations, then the student must choose which degree they want to receive. 15)Introduces research theories and methodological approaches in language and rhetoric. Offered: jointly with C LIT 510.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 510, ENGL 512 Introductory Reading in Old English (5)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 512, ENGL 513 Old English Language and Literature (5, max. biology, physics, and math) and social sciences (e.g. Prerequisite: either ENGL 101 or placement by test score.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 102, ENGL 103 Writing from Sources (5)Developmental and practice of reading, writing, and critical thinking strategies needed to create organized and correctly documented papers using academic sources. Includes attention to thinking critically about differences of power and inequality stemming from sociocultural, political, and economic difference.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 361, ENGL 362 Latino Literary Genres (5) VLPA, DIVConsiders how conventions of genre have been distributed in U.S Latino literature and beyond in networks of Latino transnationalism and trans-border exchanges. Explores how and why Marx's writings, Marxist theory, and materialist methods became central to the study of literature and culture over the course of the twentieth century.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 308, ENGL 309 Theories of Reading (5) VLPAInvestigates what it means to be a reader. Recommended: ENGL 288. Includes the nature of language; ways of describing language; the use of language study as an approach to English literature and the teaching of English.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 370, ENGL 371 English Syntax (5) VLPADescription of sentence, phrase, and word structures in present-day English.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 371, ENGL 372 World Englishes (5) VLPA, DIVExamines historical, linguistic, economic, and sociopolitical forces involved in the diversification of Global/New Englishes. 12)Supervised experience in local businesses and other agencies. Readings in contemporary prose and writing using emulation and imitation. Concurrent registration in the specified course required. Noncredit Continuing Education Unit (CEU) Noncredit or Continuing Education Students are taking courses to pursue personal or professional interest, gain general knowledge, learn a new skill, upgrade existing skills, or enrich their personal understanding of a wide variety of topics. Writers may include Bachmann, Baudelaire, Brecht, Celan, Chekhov, Dostoevsky, Ferrante, Flaubert, Ibsen, Jelinek, Kafka, Perec, Proust, Rilke, Tsvetaeva, and Undset.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 313, ENGL 314 Transatlantic Literature and Culture (5) VLPAExplores literatures and cultures produced in the Atlantic world. In this example, all three Chemistry courses must be completed to earn the UW equivalencies; if only one or two courses are completed, then the credit is usually awarded as departmental 1XX or 2XX. Explores current debates on linguistic imperialism and resistance, concepts of 'mother tongue', nativeness, comprehensibility/intelligibility judgments, and language ownership.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 372, ENGL 373 History of the English Language (5) VLPAExplores evolution of English sounds, forms, structures, and word meanings form Anglo-Saxon times to the present. 15) VLPA, DIVThe study of contemporary approaches to analyzing the gender politics of literature and culture. The course number may be listed more than once, but with different equivalencies and effective dates. 15)View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 554, ENGL 555 Feminist Theories (5, max. Please visit the link below to view UW Colleges catalogs from 1969-2018 or to request a course syllabus. Revision of manuscripts is emphasized, but new work may also be undertaken.View course details in MyPlan: ENGL 493, ENGL 494 Honors Seminar (5, max.