University General Course Catalog 2017-2018 ARCHIVED CATALOG: LINKS AND CONTENT ARE OUT OF DATE. CHECK WITH YOUR ADVISOR.
English, M.A.
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Return to: Graduate Programs in the College of Liberal Arts
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I. Contact Information
Valerie Fridland, Professor/Director, Graduate Studies - English
fridland@unr.edu
(775) 784-6689
II. Brief Introduction
The M.A. program is designed for students who plan to continue work toward the Ph.D., for potential community college teachers, for individuals who want to acquire overall background in the study of language and literature, and for those interested in writing and editing careers. Four specializations are offered within the degree program: literature, writing, public engagement, and language. Both a thesis plan and a non-thesis plan are available for all specialization, except for the public engagement emphasis. The public engagement emphasis is available as a non-thesis plan only. Proficiency in one foreign language (the equivalent of four semesters of college-level coursework) is required for all specialization, except for the public engagement emphasis.
III. Program Objectives/Student Learning Outcomes
- Declarative Knowledge: broad knowledge of several of the historical fields in, literary genres of, and major critical approaches to British, American, and World Literatures in English; or, broad knowledge of writing studies issues and methodologies; or broad knowledge in literary and rhetorical public engagement and its methodologies, or broad knowledge of linguistics issues and methodologies.
- Students will demonstrate specialized competence in the primary and secondary literature of an appropriate specialized sub-field of literature or writing or public engagement or language.
IV. Admission Requirements
Applicants to the M.A. program must hold a bachelor’s degree with an undergraduate major or minor in English and a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher. Potential applicants without an undergraduate major or minor should talk with the Director of Graduate Studies to determine which undergraduate English courses they should take to prepare to apply. V. Program Requirements
General requirements: In the non-thesis plan, a minimum of 23 units must be earned in residence; in the thesis plan, the minimum is 21 units. All M.A. students are required to take a substantial portion of the coursework at the 700-level or above. In the literature emphasis (thesis and non-thesis plans) and public engagement emphasis (non-thesis plan), at least 23 units must be completed in courses numbered 700 or above. In the Writing and Language emphases, 19 units must be numbered 700 or above in the thesis plan, or 16 units in the non-thesis plan. The M.A. program requires a comprehensive exam as part of the degree requirements. In general the exam includes three parts:
- a professional paper or a writing portfolio
- a written examination over a set reading list or over coursework
- an oral exam of about an hour and a half, covering the professional paper or portfolio and the written exam. Students must register for 1 unit of ENG 795 - Comprehensive Examination , the semester they will be completing their exams.
A. Requirements for Literature Emphasis
In consultation with their M.A. committee chair, each student will complete either a professional paper or a portfolio. 2. Distribution Requirements
The student must take at least one course in nine of the following fields:
- Poetry
- Fiction
- Drama
- Linguistics
- Nonfiction/Intellectual Prose
- Rhetoric
- Literary Criticism
- American Literature
- British Literature before 1800
- British Literature after 1800
Five of the distribution requirements may be met by courses taken at the advanced undergraduate level (the equivalent of our department’s 400-level courses) in which the student earned a “B” or above. The Director of Graduate Studies, in consultation with the faculty, determines which distribution requirement(s) specific courses may meet. 3. Literature Topic or Field
The student must take at least two courses in a particular field of interest, determined in consultation with his or her M.A. committee chair. Fields or topics might, for instance, include the Renaissance, nineteenth-century British poetry, or the American novel. B. Requirements for Language Emphasis
At the completion of all coursework, student’s must pass written examinations administered by his or her advisory committee. 3. Language Electives
Nine additional units must be chosen from the following: 4. Other Electives
Other courses should be selected in consultation with the student’s advisory committee to complement the student’s interest in language. Courses may include graduate courses in English, including additional courses among those listed under 2 and 3 above. If approved by the student’s advisory committee, a limit of two language-related courses may also be taken in Anthropology, Psychology, Computer Science, Foreign Languages, Basque Studies, Speech Pathology, Philosophy or in the College of Education. C. Requirements for Writing Emphasis
Each student will assemble a portfolio of ancillary work in the field of writing. Working closely with the advisory committee, the student will prepare an annotated bibliography of approximately 15 important works in the field of writing. For the comprehensive examination, the student writes a synthesizing paper on a topic approved by the committee. Alternatively, the student may elect to take a one-day written examination, prepared by the committee, over ideas and concepts represented by the student’s selected reading list, as well as those the student has explored in the annotated bibliography. 2. Electives
At least two courses for the thesis plan and three courses for the non-thesis plan must be chosen from the following electives: 3. Other Electives
In consultation with the advisory committee, the student will choose at least 2 courses for the thesis plan or 3 courses for the non-thesis plan, to complement his or her interests. No more than three courses may be taken outside the Department of English. 4. Language Studies
The student’s undergraduate or graduate course work must include an advanced course in English language studies, as approved by the advisory committee. The following are acceptable courses. D. Requirements for the Public Engagement Emphasis
In consultation with the M.A. committee chair, each student will complete a professional portfolio. The portfolio will include an historical and critical framework for understanding and engaging a particular issue through literary and rhetorical texts as well as professional materials that display knowledge of the framework.
2. Public Engagement Requirements
3. Power Place and Publics Electives
Students will be required to take two English graduate seminars that match the focus on power, place and publics through consultation with the instructor as well as their advisor.
4. Other Electives
In consultation with the advisory committee, choose 2 English courses, one in rhetoric and one in literature.
5. Interdisciplinary Literacy Requirement
The interdisciplinary literacy requirement mandates that students have competency in a foreign language or cognate discipline. Because this program is designed to be academic as well as instrumental, there may be students for whom a secondary content area is more beneficial that a foreign language competency. Thus, students can decide if they wish to fulfill this requirement through foreign language coursework (or examination), two graduate-level courses in a single discipline outside the English department, or three advanced courses in linguistics. No more than three courses total may be taken outside the English department.
VI. Total Units (31-33 units)
The M.A. program is 31 units (thesis plan) and 33 units (non-thesis plan) with 1 credit required for the comprehensive examination (ENG 795 ). The comprehensive examination can be used to fulfill the required units of 700-level coursework.
VII. Notes
The literature emphasis includes a variety of courses dealing with different genres and periods in English and American literatures; it focuses on the ability to think and write critically about literary texts. The writing specialization focuses on the craft of writing and offers a choice of coursework in expository and imaginative writing, composition theory and practice, language, and literature. The public engagement emphasis combines the literature and writing emphasis and adds an emphasis on public engagement. The language specialization includes courses in linguistics, the structure and history of the English language, and literature.
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