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Course descriptions, prerequisites and more...

Below you will find the list of courses offered through the College's schools, departments, and programs. This list includes important information about each course, including the course description, credit hours, prerequisites, repeatability, and more. Use the filters to narrow your search.

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149 courses found. Showing results 1–10.
  • ENG-E 301 Literatures in English to 1600 (3 cr.) The historical study of literature in English for the period 450 to 1600.
  • ENG-E 302 Literatures in English, 1600–1800 (3 cr.) Representative study of British and American literature of the sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries in the context of trans-Atlantic cultural developments.
  • ENG-E 303 Literatures in English, 1800–1900 (3 cr.) Representative study of nineteenth-century British and American literature in the context of trans-Atlantic cultural developments.
  • ENG-E 304 Literatures in English, 1900-Present (3 cr.) Representative study of twentieth-century literatures in English. In addition to Britain and North America, cultural locations may include the Indian subcontinent, Australasia, Anglophone Africa, the Caribbean, etc. Focuses on themes associated with modernity and cross-cultural contacts.
  • ENG-G 205 Introduction to the English Language (3 cr.) Acquaints students with contemporary studies of the nature of language in general and of the English language in particular.
  • ENG-G 208 World Englishes (3 cr.) An introduction to varieties of English spoken around the world, including those of Africa, Asia, Australasia, North America, and the British Isles, in which students explore English-speaking cultures, not in isolation, but in relation to one another, through their common language.
  • ENG-G 302 Structure of Modern English (3 cr.) Focuses on linguistic analysis of present-day spoken and written English, with attention to its phonemic, morphemic, and syntactical systems and its system of expressive features.
  • ENG-G 405 Studies in English Language (3 cr.) Topics vary from semester to semester.
  • ENG-J 101 Introduction to College Composition (2 cr.) P: Consent of department. For Groups students only. An introduction to the writing process. ENG-J 101 can lead directly to freshman-level writing courses or, at discretion of instructor, to ENG-J 102.
  • ENG-J 102 Introduction to College Composition (3 cr.) P: Consent of department. For Groups students only. A further introduction to the writing process; continuation of ENG-J 101.