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Department Chair:
Sophia Adjaye
Program
Coordinator:
Robert S.
Carlisle
Program Office:
Faculty Towers, 201E
Telephone:
(661) 654-2127
email:
rcarlisle@csub.edu
Website:
www.csub.edu/GradStudies/Engl.html
Faculty:
S. Adjaye, M. Ayuso, R. Carlisle, E. Case,
L. Clymer, K.
Flachmann, M. Flachmann, S. Frye,
G. Hudson, S.
Iyasere, M. Macarthur,
C. MacQuarrie, M.
Pawlowski, A. Troup
Program Description
The English
graduate program provides a carefully planned and integrated
program ensuring a foundation of professional skills through
a common core of courses; some uniform degree of coverage in
the areas of English and American literature; intensive
training in reading, critical analysis, research, and
writing; and breadth through an emphasis on the fields of
literature, language, and composition. The MA qualifies
students to teach in the California community college system
or secondary schools as well as prepares them for careers in
editing, advertising, and public information.
The Master of
Arts in English provides: (1) a carefully planned and
integrated program ensuring a foundation of professional
skills through a common core of courses; (2) some uniform
degree of coverage in the areas of English and American
literature; (3) more intensive training in reading, critical
analysis, research, and writing than is possible in
undergraduate work, and (4) breadth through an emphasis on
the fields of literature, language, and composition.
To meet these
objectives, the English graduate program has been designed
primarily to provide: (1) a well‑balanced program for those
who wish to terminate their studies at the master’s level
and whose primary aim is to teach in a community college;
(2) advanced training for teachers who wish to improve their
professional skills and status; (3) a variety of courses for
students who plan to continue towards the Ph.D. degree at
another institution, and (4) continuing education for those
who wish to extend their knowledge as an end in itself
through an interesting and stimulating series of classes in
literature, criticism, language, as well as the teaching of
composition and English as a Second Language.
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APPLICATION AND
ADMISSION
Application
Procedure
Persons seeking
graduate study in English must first apply for admission to
the University Office of Admissions. Applications are
available online, as well as in the Office of the Associate
Vice President for Academic Programs. Admission to graduate
study by the university does not constitute acceptance into
the English MA Program. It does, however, permit students
to take courses as unclassified post-baccalaureate students
and to begin the process leading to classification (see
“Classification of Graduate Students” below).
Upon admission to
the university, students must immediately notify the English
Department’s Graduate Program Coordinator of their intention
to pursue the MA degree. The Graduate Coordinator will
familiarize the student with the requirements and timetable
of the MA Program. Students wishing to pursue graduate
studies culminating in a master’s degree in English must
file an application with the Department of English. To
obtain this application, students may write to the Graduate
Program Coordinator of the Department of English, or they
may go to the web site described above. Although the
application asks for scores for the Graduate Record
Examination, students need not fill out that section.
Admissions
Requirements
- Admission to the graduate program leading to the Master of
Arts in English requires the following:
1. A
baccalaureate degree in English from an accredited college
or university, including the equivalent of ENGL 300, ENGL/LING
319, ENGL/LING 414 (previously ENGL/LING 318), and two
period courses;
2. A 2.5 GPA
(A=4.0) for the last 90 quarter units (60 semester units)
attempted;
3. A combined
score of 1000 on both the verbal measure of the Graduate
Record Exam General Test and the Literature in English
Subject Exam, with a minimum of 500 on the verbal measure or
an overall undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a
4.0 scale) with 3.0 in the major;
4. Submission
of the graduate program’s form, which is available online.
5. For
international students or those whose first language is not
English, a TOEFL score of 550 or higher (or 213 on the
new conversation scale for the computer-based TOEFL).
Documentation must be provided in original form by the
testing institution; copies submitted by the applicant are
not acceptable.
Students who have
a baccalaureate degree in a subject other than English must
complete the eight-course (40 units) undergraduate core
requirements for English with a GPA of 3.00 before being
considered for admission to the master’s degree program in
English. The undergraduate core requirements are described
below. All courses are to be selected in consultation with
the Graduate Program Coordinator for English.
1. ENGL 300
Approaches to Literature
2. One course
in a major figure or group: ENGL 325, 335, 336, 337, or 375
3. One course
in the structure of English: ENGL/LING 319
4. One course
in the history of the language: ENGL/LING 414 (previously
ENGL/LING 318)
5. One course
from the period 450-1785: ENGL 320, 330, or 340
6. One course
from the period 1785 to the present: ENGL 350, 351, 360,
361, 380, 381, or 382
7. One genre
course: ENGL 475
8. Any other
upper division literature course
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Classification of Graduate Students
There are three
classifications for students in the English graduate
program:
Classified
- A student who meets all the requirements for admission to
the master’s degree program in English will be admitted as a
Classified Graduate Student. A Classified Graduate Student
may take any graduate-level course meeting the requirements
of his or her plan of study as long as the appropriate
prerequisites have been met.
Conditionally
Classified
- A student who meets most but not all of the requirements
for admission as a Classified Graduate Student may be
admitted as a Conditionally Classified Graduate Student.
The Graduate Committee for English will determine the
conditions which the student must meet in order to be
advanced to Classified Graduate Student status. A
Conditionally Classified Graduate Student may take no more
than two five-unit courses that count towards the
requirements for the MA in English while meeting the
specified conditions.
Candidacy
- Classified students who have maintained a 3.25 GPA will be
advanced to candidacy in the term in which they intend to
graduate.
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Academic Advising
It is essential
that MA students stay in contact with the Graduate Program
Coordinator and especially their advisors, so the department
can provide current information to help the student move
expeditiously through the program. It is the student’s
responsibility, in consultation with the Graduate Program
Coordinator, to choose appropriate courses and to organize a
thesis or examination committee. Meeting with the Graduate
Program Coordinator is an important first step in the MA
program. The Graduate Program Coordinator advises and
guides students during the period of graduate study and
responds to any misgivings students may have while in the
program. Students have a responsibility to schedule regular
meetings with the Graduate Program Coordinator.
Committee
Selection
- Each MA student in English must have a committee, either
to provide examinations or to read and guide the thesis.
The Graduate Program Coordinator can provide assistance in
forming an MA committee.
Program
Requirements
Note:
Students who wish to pursue the doctorate in English are
strongly encouraged to begin or continue the study of one or
more foreign languages. Courses in French and Spanish are
available at CSUB in the Department of Modern Languages and
Literatures.
Each master’s
candidate must complete a minimum of nine English graduate
courses of five units each plus two three-unit courses (ENGL
500 Methods of Scholarly Research and either ENGL 690
Comprehensive Examination or ENGL 691 Thesis). Students
must earn a GPA of 3.0 (B) or better. (No course in which
the student receives less than a “B-” (2.7) will count
toward the degree.) The courses will include:
Required
courses:
1. ENGL 500
Methods of Scholarly Research. Must be taken as one of the
student’s first three graduate English courses.
2. ENGL 515
Theories of English Grammar or
ENGL 518
History of the English Language
3. ENGL 570
Criticism
One course
from each of the seven fields listed
below:
1. ENGL 525
Chaucer
ENGL 533
Seventeenth-Century British Literature or ENGL 535
Shakespeare
2. ENGL 541
Eighteenth‑Century British Literature or ENGL 576
Development of the English Novel
3. ENGL 552
Nineteenth‑Century British Literature
ENGL 564
Twentieth‑Century Poetry or
ENGL 568
Modern British Novel
4. ENGL 582
Early American Literature or
ENGL 583
Later Nineteenth-Century American
Literature
ENGL 584
Modern American Literature or
ENGL 585
Contemporary American Literature
5. ENGL 504
Approaches to the Analysis of Writing
ENGL 505
Rhetorical Theory
6. ENGL 506
Composition Theory and Practice or ENGL 578 Special
Methods in the Instruction of
Literature
ENGL 507
Writing in a Second Language or
ENGL 508
Teaching Basic Writers
7. ENGL 580
Ethnic Literature
Undergraduate
Courses for Graduate Credit
- Graduate students normally will take courses from those
numbered in the 500-600 level series, but they may
substitute one or two 400-level classes (supplemented by
additional graduate-level work) with the permission of the
instructor and the Graduate Committee. Also with the
approval of the instructor of the class and the Graduate
Program Coordinator, graduate students may take up to two
graduate courses in independent study mode; however, ENGL
500, 515, 518, and 570 are not available through independent
study mode.
ENGL 690
Comprehensive Examination or ENGL 691 Thesis
- Upon completion of all course work, students enroll in
ENGL 690 (3) or ENGL 691 (3). ENGL 690 is an independent
reading which culminates in a written comprehensive
examination based on the department’s standardized reading
list. The examination must be passed with a grade of “B-”
(2.7) or better, and it may be taken no more than two times.
Additional
Requirements
Writing
Competency Requirement
- All graduate students must satisfy the Graduation Writing
Assessment Requirement (GWAR) as soon as possible, unless
they have already done so as undergraduates or graduates at
CSUB or at another California State University. This
requirement may be met by passing the regularly scheduled
examination or by successfully completing ENGL 305, or 310,
or 311; this requirement must be satisfied before the
student may take the final comprehensive examination.
Time
Limitation on Course Requirements
- State law mandates a seven-year limitation on course
credits. Students who fail to complete their degree
programs within the seven-year limit may petition the
Department’s Graduate Committee to permit the revalidating
of outdated courses. If granted, such revalidation will
normally require an oral or written examination on the
course content supervised by a specialist in the field.
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Additional Programs
Teaching
Assistant Program in Writing
- The Teaching Assistant Program in Writing begins with a
one-quarter apprenticeship in a composition course or
courses in the department. If the faculty mentor’s
evaluations are positive and enrollment is sufficient, the
student will be assigned to his or her own class for a
maximum of three quarters. Students are required to take
ENGL 600: English Practicum (3) in conjunction with their
apprenticeship. Prerequisites for the Teaching Assistant
Program in Writing are: (1) completion of ENGL 506 with a
grade of “B+” (3.3) or better, and (2) completion of 20
hours of tutoring.
Teaching
Assistant Program in Literature
- The Teaching Assistant Program in Literature begins with a
one-quarter apprenticeship in a literature course in the
department. If the faculty mentor’s evaluations are
positive, the student may apply to work as a teaching
assistant for an instructor in ENGL 101. Students are
required to take ENGL 600 English Practicum (3) in
conjunction with their apprenticeship. Prerequisite: ENGL
578 Special Methods in the Instruction of Literature with a
grade of B+ (3.3) or better.
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COURSE DESCRIPTIONS
ENGL 500
Methods of Scholarly Research (3)
The study of the
nature and function of imaginative, expository, and
argumentative writing. The resources for scholarship in
composition and in literature and the problems of method in
the major areas of research in English. Must be taken as
one of the student’s first three graduate English courses.
ENGL 504
Approaches to the Analysis of Writing (5)
A study of
various linguistics approaches for analyzing the structure
of written texts.
ENGL 505
Rhetorical Theory (5)
An introduction
to recent research on written composition, the most current
theories of rhetoric, and the implications of these theories
for the teaching of writing.
ENGL 506
Composition Theory and Practice (5)
Emphasis on the
understanding of grammar, syntax, structure, and form, in
principle, as well as of the problems in communicating
effective and acceptable language usage in a classroom
situation.
ENGL 507
Writing in a Second Language (5)
The writing
process and the written products of people composing in
English as a foreign language. Topics of discussion include
contrastive rhetoric, error analysis, and evaluation.
Special attention will be given to the writing problems of
international students learning English and to appropriate
instructional procedures helpful to such students.
ENGL 508
Teaching Basic Writers (5)
This course
includes both the traditional underpinnings and the
practical applications for teaching developmental writers
and addresses the diverse cultural, emotional, and academic
needs of these students.
ENGL 515
Theories of English Grammar (5)
Study of the
assumptions, systems, and applications of one or more modern
approaches to the English language.
ENGL 518
History of the English Language (5)
Studies in the
development of English phonology, morphology, and syntax
from the Old English period to the present.
ENGL 525
Chaucer (5)
Studies in The
Canterbury Tales and/or Troilus and Criseyde, and a
selection of Chaucer’s shorter poems.
ENGL 533
Seventeenth-Century British Literature (5)
Study of
seventeenth-century poetry, prose, and/or drama. (Note:
May be repeated with permission of advisor if different
course content.)
ENGL 535
Shakespeare (5)
Study of selected
plays. Prerequisite: ENGL 335 or consent of the
instructor.
ENGL 541
Eighteenth-Century British Literature (5)
Study of
eighteenth-century poetry, prose, and/or drama. (Note: May
be repeated with permission of advisor if different course
content.)
ENGL 552
Nineteenth-Century British Literature (5)
Study of
nineteenth-century poetry, nonfiction prose, fiction, and/or
drama. (Note: May be repeated with permission of advisor
if different course content.)
ENGL 564
Twentieth-Century Poetry (5)
Survey of major
British and American poets from about 1914 to the present.
(Note: May be repeated with permission of advisor if
different course content.)
ENGL 568
Modern British Novel
Survey of major
British novelists from 1900. (Note: May be repeated with
permission of advisor if different course content.)
ENGL 570
Criticism (5)
Problems in the
application of critical methods in both literature and
language studies, with emphasis on the formation and
development of major trends in critical theory.
ENGL 572
Poetry and Poetics (5)
Study of selected
poets, their works, and their poetics. (Note: May be
repeated with permission of advisor if different course
content.)
ENGL 576
Development of the English Novel (5)
Study of
continuity and change in the structure and style of the
English novel and novella.
ENGL 578
Special Methods in the Instruction of
Literature (5)
An introduction
for graduate students intending to teach high school or
community college English, this course explores the
implications of modern literary theory for classroom
instruction of the literary text.
ENGL 580
Ethnic Literature (5)
Study of American
ethnic writers, their viewpoints, and their aesthetics. The
social and cultural contexts of the literature will also be
studied. May be repeated with permission of advisor when
course content changes, as in African-American Literature,
Chicano Literature, Asian-American Literature, etc.
ENGL 582 Early
American Literature (5)
Studies in
American literature from the Colonial Period to the Civil
War. (Note: May be repeated with permission of advisor if
different course content.)
ENGL 583 Later
Nineteenth-Century American
Literature (5)
Studies in
American Literature from the Civil War to 1900. (Note: May
be repeated with permission of advisor if different course
content.)
ENGL 584
Modern American Literature (5)
Studies in
Twentieth-Century American Literature to WWII. (Note: May
be repeated with permission of advisor if different course
content.)
ENGL 585
Contemporary American Literature (5)
American
Literature since WWII. (Note: May be repeated with
permission of advisor if different course content.)
ENGL 591 Theories
of Second Language
Acquisition (5)
This class
examines and compares the most recent and influential
theories of second language acquisition including the
monitor model, interlanguage theory, linguistic universals,
cognitive theory, and acculturation/pidginization theory.
The class applies towards the TESL Certificate, not towards
the MA in English. Prerequisite: ENGL/LING 319 or 415 or
420 or ENGL 514.
ENGL 600
English Practicum (3)
A requirement for
participation in the Teaching Assistant Program in English,
this course allows students to observe and participate in
the design and daily work of a college-level writing class
(at BC or at CSUB). Students will work with a master
teacher in and outside of class (inasmuch as we can
accommodate specific requests) and be responsible for some
independent work outside of class that is directly relevant
to the assigned course. Can be repeated for different
course content.
ENGL 690
Comprehensive Examination (3)
A comprehensive
written examination on a reading list covering major works
of English and American Literature. Readings selected in
consultation with the student’s graduate committee. The
examination must be passed with a grade of “B-” or better,
and it may be taken no more than two times. Prerequisite:
successful completion of the graduate course work.
ENGL 691
Thesis (3)
A carefully
designed study of a selected topic or area in English or
American literature. Emphasis placed on original insights
as contributions to graduate scholarship. Prerequisites:
Classified Status and approval of the department’s Graduate
Committee.
ENGL 698
Directed Study in the Instruction of
English
(variable units)
A class in the
theory and methods in undergraduate and graduate instruction
in English. Weekly meetings with faculty sponsor and
supervised experience which may include developing,
administering, and scoring examinations; leading small group
discussions; tutoring; and directing students in researching
term papers. Offered on a credit, no-credit basis only.
Prerequisites: consent of instructor who will serve as the
sponsor and approval by chair of the Department of English.
ENGL 699
Individual Study (variable units)
Admission with
consent of department chair.
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