UNIVERSITY FACULTY SENATE FORMS
Revised 2-21-07
Academic Program Approval
This form is a routing document for the approval of new
and revised academic programs. Proposing department should
complete this form. For more
information, call the Faculty Senate Office at 831-2921.
Submitted by: ____Thomas Pauly_____________________phone
number__831-1970______
Department: __English _____________________________email
address_tpauly@udel.edu_
Action: ____Revise
Concentration_________________________________________________________________
(Example: add major/minor/concentration, delete
major/minor/concentration,
revise major/minor/concentration,
academic unit name change, request for permanent status, policy change,
etc.)
Effective term____________07F________________________________________________________________________
(use format 04F, 05W)
Current degree____BA__________________________________________________________
(Example: BA, BACH, BACJ, HBA,
Proposed change leads to the
degree of: ____BA_____________________________________
(Example: BA,
BACH, BACJ, HBA,
Proposed name:___Major: English, Concentration:
Professional Writing___________________
Proposed new name for revised
or new major / minor / concentration / academic unit
(if
applicable)
Revising or Deleting:
Undergraduate major / Concentration:__English/Business and Technical
Writing____
(Example: Applied Music – Instrumental degree BMAS)
Undergraduate minor:____________________________________________________
(Example: African
Studies, Business
Administration, English, Leadership,
etc.)
Graduate Program Policy statement change:_________________________________
(Must attach your
Graduate Program Policy Statement)
Graduate Program of Study:______________________________________________
(Example: Animal Science: MS Animal Science: PHD
Economics: MA Economics: PHD)
Graduate minor / concentration:___________________________________________
Note: all graduate studies
proposals must include an electronic copy of the Graduate Program Policy
Document, highlighting the changes made to the original policy document.
List new courses required for
the new or revised curriculum. How do they support the overall program
objectives of the major/minor/concentrations)?
(Be aware that approval
of the curriculum is dependent upon these courses successfully passing through
the Course Challenge list. If there are no new courses enter “None”)
ENGL 101—Tools of Textual Analysis
ENGL 102—Texts in Time
A gateway course (101: Tools of Textual Analysis) will introduce students to basic concepts of literary analysis and teach them how to write in the discipline. This course is a prerequisite for nearly all English courses. It is part of our new First Year Experience, linked to E110, with the professor teaching both 101 and 110. A second course (102: Texts in Time) will give students the opportunity to explore how texts reflect the cultures that create them by examining a specific historical context. This course will be taught in small sections, with intensive writing and the chance to develop analytical skills necessary in advanced courses. These two introductory courses are required of all majors; after that, students will all declare a concentration. While the requirements for each concentration vary, on the whole our majors will then enter into a sequence of historical survey courses covering British and American literature. Thus, most of our students will be taking the same courses their first two years, and these courses will systematically lay the foundation for skills and historical knowledge upon which subsequent courses will be based. Having taken a sequence of courses together, students can then (in their junior and senior years) develop and pursue their own specialized intellectual interests, since most courses after that will be electives. In order to be able to offer English courses to non-majors, there will be a separate track of courses which do not require 101 as a prerequisite.
Explain, when appropriate,
how this new/revised curriculum supports the 10 goals of undergraduate
education: http://www.ugs.udel.edu/gened/
All English courses
involve extensive reading, research, critical thinking, discussion, and
writing. We work to maintain class sizes that facilitate review and feedback of
written assignments, and we make assignments that demand advanced thinking
skills: problem solving, interpretation, and theoretically-informed reading.
English classes in general attend to diverse literatures, examining how the
production, dissemination, reception, and disposition of texts are influenced
by literary, historical, cultural, and ethnic contexts. Many classes involve
active learning through service learning, independent research, internships,
study abroad, and other experiences that enlarge students' perspectives of the
world beyond the classroom. Our current curricular revisions are intended to
make our courses more representative of diverse
cultures and to insure that students have outcomes we expect: exceptionally
strong reading and research skills, the ability to articulate
compelling arguments, and the ability to produce expert writing.
Identify other units affected
by the proposed changes:
(Attach permission from the affected units. If no other unit is affected, enter “None”)
None.
Describe the rationale for
the proposed program change(s):
(Explain your reasons for creating, revising, or deleting the
curriculum or program.)
We are changing our
curriculum and its concentrations in major ways in response to our APR. In the
new gateway courses to the major, part of a strong FYE, students will develop
reading, writing, and interpretive skills important to all successive courses. Our
new curriculum will allow more freedom of electives across concentrations,
rationalizing course numbering and prerequisites, making fewer requirements
within specific historical periods, and generally updating the program. We are
creating new internship courses and undergraduate research courses and
providing more opportunities to work in global and multicultural literature. We are redesigning our courses in grammar,
style, and rhetoric and modifying our capstone experience to best use our
resources for a meaningful senior year experience, including mentored research,
internships, student teaching, and seminars.
Program Requirements:
(Show the new or revised curriculum as it should appear in the
Course Catalog. If this is a revision,
be sure to indicate the changes being made to the current curriculum and include a side-by-side comparison of
the credit distribution before and after the proposed change.)
PROPOSED PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS
ENGL 101 Tools of Textual Analysis . . . . . . 30
ENGL 102 Texts in Times
ENGL 204 American Literature
ENGL 205 British Literature to 1660
ENGL 206 British Literature 1660-Present
ENGL 415 Writing in the Professions (or 312 or 410, if 415 is not available)
ENGL 411 Rhetoric for Business and Technical Writers
ENGL 414 Technical Editing
ENGL 412 Business and Technical Publication OR ENGL 416: Designing
Online Information
ENGL 464 Internship in Business and Technical Writing
Six additional English credits (two courses) . . . . . . 6
CURRENT PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS
All majors must complete five of the following six courses:
ENGL 202-- Biblical and Classical Literature
ENGL 205--British Literature I
ENGL 206--British Literature II
ENGL 300--Texts and Contexts
ENGL 324-- Shakespeare
ENGL 340-- American Literature to the Civil War
OR
ENGL 341--American Literature: Civil War to World War II
In addition to the core sequence, English majors concentrating in Business and Technical Writing will take one course at the 300- level or above from each of the following groups (2 courses total):
Medieval and Renaissance literature (excluding ENGL 324)
OR
Literature between 1700 and 1900
Modern literature
OR
Cultural and theoretical studies
One other literature course is required. This course may be at the 200-, 300-, or 400-level if one of the courses taken in the above two groups is a 480 seminar. Otherwise, this additional course must be a 480 seminar.
Students concentrating in business and technical writing must also take the following technical writing courses:
One of the following three courses:
ENGL 312--Written Communications in Business
ENGL 410--Technical Writing
ENGL 415- -Writing in the Professions
Each of the following courses:
ENGL 411-- Rhetorical for Business and Technical Writers
ENGL 412-- Technical Publication
ENGL 414-- Technical Editing
ENGL 464-- Technical Writing Internship
Optional:
ENGL 413--Topics in Technical Writing
ROUTING AND AUTHORIZATION: (Please do not remove supporting
documentation.)
Department Chairperson Date
Dean of College Date
Chairperson, College Curriculum
Committee___________________________________Date_____________________
Chairperson, Senate Com. on UG or GR
Studies Date
Chairperson,
Senate Coordinating Com. Date
Secretary, Faculty Senate Date
Date of Senate Resolution Date
to be Effective
Registrar Program
Code Date
Vice Provost for Academic Programs
& Planning Date
Provost Date
Board of Trustee Notification Date
Revised