Timeroom: Fall 2023

Displaying 461 - 470 of 1272 Results for: Level = All Graduate
Manchester   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 810 (M1) - Teaching Writing

Teaching Writing

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Full Term (08/28/2023 - 12/11/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   4  
CRN: 13970
An introduction to various methods of teaching writing. Combines a review of theories, methods, and texts with direct observation of teaching practice.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Cross listed with : ENGL 710.M1
Instructors: C.C. Hendricks
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/28/2023 12/11/2023 T 3:40pm - 6:00pm PANDRA P347
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 815 (01) - Teaching English as a Second Language: Theory and Methods

TESL: Theory and Methods

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Full Term (08/28/2023 - 12/11/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   10  
CRN: 14530
A course on the linguistic, psychological, and sociological theories that inform our understanding of language acquisition and current best practices in the teaching of ESOL. Provides an overview of first and second language acquisition, bilingualism, learner individual differences (e.g. age, motivation, aptitude, learning strategies), and sociocultural contexts of ESL teaching and learning.
Department Approval Required. Contact Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Cross listed with : ENGL 715.01
Classes not allowed in section: Freshman
Instructors: Soo Hyon Kim
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/28/2023 12/11/2023 TR 6:10pm - 7:30pm HS 240
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 819 (01) - Sociolinguistics Survey

Sociolinguistics Survey

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Full Term (08/28/2023 - 12/11/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   5  
CRN: 15978
How language varies according to the characteristics of its speakers: age, sex, ethnicity, attitude, time, and class. Quantitative analysis methods; relationship to theoretical linguistics. Focus is on English, but some other languages are examined. Introduction to linguistics required prior to registering for this course.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Cross listed with : ENGL 719.01, LING 719.01
Instructors: Rachel Burdin
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/28/2023 12/11/2023 MW 10:10am - 11:30am HS 332
Final Exam 12/18/2023 12/18/2023 M 10:30am - 12:30pm HS 332
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 829 (01) - Spec Top/Composition Studies

Spec Top/Composition Studies

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Full Term (08/28/2023 - 12/11/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   10  
CRN: 16052
Advanced course on a topic chosen by the instructor. Precise topics and methods of each section vary. Possible topics include: alternative discourses and rhetorics; contrastive rhetoric; electronic discourse and digital rhetoric; women's rhetorics and feminist pedagogies; Montaigne and the essay tradition; theories of literacy; theories of persuasive writing; theories of transactional writing; and written discourse analysis. Barring duplication of subject, may be repeated for credit. For details see the course descriptions available in the English Department.
Section Comments: FA23 Topic: Race, Writing & Composition Studies
Department Approval Required. Contact Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: Florianne Jimenez
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/28/2023 12/11/2023 W 9:10am - 12:00pm HS 336
Final Exam 12/18/2023 12/18/2023 M 8:00am - 10:00am HS 336
Additional Course Details: 

FA23 Special Topic: Race, Writing & Composition Studies

What is race, and how does its socially constructed nature influence writing and rhetorical practice? Race, Writing, and Composition Studies examines how race and racial legacies in the U.S. and around the globe impact our social and scholarly conceptualizations of writing, language, and education. In this course, we will examine how race shapes the field of composition and rhetoric, and how the field has responded, with specific attention to understandings of racial minority students and their language practices.

Required Reading:

Inoue, Asao B. Antiracist Writing Assessment Ecologies: Teaching and Assessing Writing for a Socially Just Future. The WAC Clearinghouse; Parlor Press.

Martinez, Aja Y. Counterstory. National Conference of Teachers of English/Studies in Writing and Rhetoric, 2021.

Omi, Michael, and Howard Winant. Racial Formation in the United States. 3rd ed. New York: Routledge.

Prendergast, Catherine. Literacy and Racial Justice : the Politics of Learning after Brown V. Board of Education. Southern Illinois University Press, 2003.

Pritchard, Eric Darnell. Fashioning Lives: Black Queers and the Politics of Literacy. Southern Illinois University Press, 2016.

 

Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 891 (01) - English Grammar

English Grammar

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Full Term (08/28/2023 - 12/11/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   10  
CRN: 14539
An introduction to the terminology and major concepts in English grammar. Covers descriptive vs. prescriptive grammar, parts of speech, phrase structure, clause types, and basic sentence patterns. Useful for pre-service teachers seeking to acquire the background knowledge needed to make informed decisions about the teaching of English grammar.
Department Approval Required. Contact Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Cross listed with : ENGL 791.01
Instructors: Soo Hyon Kim
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/28/2023 12/11/2023 TR 3:40pm - 5:00pm HS 108
Final Exam 12/15/2023 12/15/2023 F 1:00pm - 3:00pm HS 108
Manchester   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 891 (M1) - English Grammar

English Grammar

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Full Term (08/28/2023 - 12/11/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   2  
CRN: 14759
An introduction to the terminology and major concepts in English grammar. Covers descriptive vs. prescriptive grammar, parts of speech, phrase structure, clause types, and basic sentence patterns. Useful for pre-service teachers seeking to acquire the background knowledge needed to make informed decisions about the teaching of English grammar.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Cross listed with : ENGL 791.M1
Instructors: Susanne Paterson
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/28/2023 12/11/2023 M 1:10pm - 4:00pm PANDRA P345
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 893 (01) - Phonetics and Phonology

Phonetics and Phonology

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Full Term (08/28/2023 - 12/11/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   5  
CRN: 10495
The sounds and sound systems of English in the context of linguistic theory: comparisons of English to other languages. A basic linguistic course required prior to taking this course.
Section Comments: Also listed as LING 793 & ENGL 793.
Department Approval Required. Contact Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Cross listed with : ENGL 793.01, LING 793.01
Instructors: Sean Madigan
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/28/2023 12/11/2023 MWF 1:10pm - 2:00pm HS 107
Final Exam 12/19/2023 12/19/2023 T 8:00am - 10:00am HS 107
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 897 (I01) - Special Studies in Literature

Special Studies in Literature

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Full Term (08/28/2023 - 12/11/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   5  
CRN: 15419
A) Old English Literature; B) Medieval Literature; C) 16th Century; D) 17th Century; E) 18th Century; F) English Romantic Period; G) Victorian Period; H) 20th Century; I) Drama; J) Novel; K) Poetry; L) Nonfiction; M) American Literature; N) A Literary Problem; O) Literature of the Renaissance. The precise topics and methods of each section vary. Barring duplication of subject, may be repeated for credit. For details, see the course descriptions available in the English department.
Section Comments: Cross-listed with ENGL 797M.01 'Advanced Shakespeare'
Department Approval Required. Contact Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Cross listed with : ENGL 758.01
Instructors: Douglas Lanier
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/28/2023 12/11/2023 MW 11:10am - 12:30pm HS 102
Additional Course Details: 

Special Topic Fall 2023: Shakespeare in the 21st Century

This course is designed to introduce you to issues and practices that have become central to Shakespeare criticism and performance in the past twenty-five years. We'll examine the ways in which cross-gender and cross-racial casting has reshaped Shakespeare performance, the rise of Shakespearean adaptation and same-language "translation," the globalization of Shakespeare, festival performance, screen Shakespeare (especially the small screen), efforts to bring decolonization and social justice to the fore in teaching and performance, and the vexed question of "canceling" Shakespeare, among other issues. In addition to delving deep into several Shakespeare plays, we will read a range of essays and view many different kinds of Shakespeare performances. This course will assume that you have some previous familiarity with Shakespeare; it is an ideal follow-up to ENGL 657, "Introduction to Shakespeare." Requirements will include short writing assignments, a class presentation, and a final research paper. 

Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 897 (J01) - Special Studies in Literature

Special Studies in Literature

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Full Term (08/28/2023 - 12/11/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   5  
CRN: 15423
A) Old English Literature; B) Medieval Literature; C) 16th Century; D) 17th Century; E) 18th Century; F) English Romantic Period; G) Victorian Period; H) 20th Century; I) Drama; J) Novel; K) Poetry; L) Nonfiction; M) American Literature; N) A Literary Problem; O) Literature of the Renaissance. The precise topics and methods of each section vary. Barring duplication of subject, may be repeated for credit. For details, see the course descriptions available in the English department.
Department Approval Required. Contact Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Cross listed with : ENGL 797.J01
Instructors: Sandhya Shetty
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/28/2023 12/11/2023 TR 11:10am - 12:30pm HS 240
Final Exam 12/13/2023 12/13/2023 W 3:30pm - 5:30pm HS 240
Additional Course Details: 

Fall 2023 Detailed Description: The English Novel in the World

Study of the postcolonial Anglophone novel from the mid-twentieth century to the present day (possibly one or two translations). This course will engage questions of form and genre as they emerge for novelists engaged in shaping an imaginative response to colonialism and its long aftermath, one that includes the rise of new nations and nationalisms, exile and migration, and transnational cultural exchanges that dismantle assumed boundaries. In addition to shifts from realism to magical realism and back, subgenres of fiction, we will also study the modes in which postcolonial literary narratives grasp ecological destruction, animal extinction, and human responsibility. Required texts to be selected from the work of Salman Rushdie, Amitava Ghosh, J.M. Coetzee, Nadine Gordimer, Chinua Achebe, Mohsin Hamid, Michael Ondaatje, Abdul Rahman Munif, and Mahasweta Devi.       

Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 897 (M01) - Special Studies in Literature

Special Studies in Literature

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Full Term (08/28/2023 - 12/11/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   5  
CRN: 14604
A) Old English Literature; B) Medieval Literature; C) 16th Century; D) 17th Century; E) 18th Century; F) English Romantic Period; G) Victorian Period; H) 20th Century; I) Drama; J) Novel; K) Poetry; L) Nonfiction; M) American Literature; N) A Literary Problem; O) Literature of the Renaissance. The precise topics and methods of each section vary. Barring duplication of subject, may be repeated for credit. For details, see the course descriptions available in the English department.
Section Comments: Special Topic: American Lit 1815-1865
Department Approval Required. Contact Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Cross listed with : ENGL 742.01
Instructors: Brigitte Bailey
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/28/2023 12/11/2023 MW 1:10pm - 2:30pm HS 250C
Additional Course Details: 

Fall 2023 Detailed Description: American Literature 1815-1865

Antebellum writers tried to shape the nation through their texts, as they expressed the struggles over power and identity that led to the Civil War—and that continue to define U.S. discourses today. We encounter the genres—novels, oratory, poetry, appeals, slave narratives, essays, and nature writing—that authors used to grapple with slavery, social reform, environmental transformation, and aesthetics. Writers include William Apess (Pequot), Margaret Fuller, Catharine Maria Sedgwick, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Edgar Allan Poe, Frederick Douglass, Henry David Thoreau, Elizabeth Stoddard, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Herman Melville, Harriet Wilson, Walt Whitman, and Emily Dickinson. We’ll consider critical debates on antebellum literature by reading selected scholarly essays, and we’ll dip into antebellum visual culture, too. This course emphasizes research; students develop their interpretations of what we read by building on the criticism and cultural history about the period.