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Graduate Courses

A listing of the graduate classes offered in the program.

RPC Graduate Courses

Charlie Kostelnick

Engl 500. Proseminar: Teaching English Composition
(3-0) Cr. 3. F.
Required of all new English 150/250 teaching assistants.
Introduction to the teaching of First-Year Composition (FYC). Foundational and relevant newer composition theory and pedagogical methods related to FYC objectives and their classroom enactment, including development of assignments and supporting activities, and evaluation of student projects.

Engl 501. Research Methods in Rhetoric and Professional Communication.
(3-0) Cr. 3. F.
Prereq: 6 graduate credits in English.
Survey of the major qualitative and quantitative methods used in research on communication and language in academic and nonacademic settings.

Engl 503. Teaching Composition: Theory and Research
(3-0) Cr. 3. Alt. S.
Prereq: 6 credits in English.
In-depth consideration of the theory and practice of critical composition pedagogy.  Opportunities for actual classroom application.

Engl 504. Teaching Business and Technical Writing
(3-0) Cr. 3.  Alt. S.
Prereq: 302, 309, or 314.
Theory and practice of teaching college courses in business and technical communication. Some consideration of in-service writing courses for business and government. Emphasis on applicable communication and composition theory, curriculum planning, assignment design, materials development.

Engl 505. Technology in Business, Technical, and Professional Communication
(3-0) Cr. 3.  Alt. S.
Prereq: Graduate classification.
Examination of the role of technology, especially computer technology, in communication practices within academic and workplace settings.

Engl 506. Theory and Research in Professional Communication
(3-0) Cr. 3. S.
Prereq: 6 credits in English, permission of instructor.
Introduction to professional communication as a discipline, with emphasis on theories of communication and discourse that inform professional communication research and on trends and developments in that research and the field.

Engl 507. Writing and Analyzing Professional Documents
(3-0) Cr. 3. F.
Prereq: 6 credits in English, permission of instructor.
Introduction to the theory and practice of planning, preparing, and presenting information in written, oral, and visual forms prepared for business, science, industry, and government.  Guided readings.  Team projects. Individual projects.

Engl 508. Advanced Workshop in Academic Writing
(3-0) Cr. 3. Alt. SS.
Prereq: 6 graduate credits.
Hands-on practice in writing academic discourse for publication; rhetorical analyses of student-selected academic journals; discussion of current trends in academic writing; professional perspectives on the referee process and on journal editorial decision making. Focus on the writing of selected short pieces (opinion essays, standard reviews, conference-length papers) and of article-length manuscripts.

Engl 509. Writing Proposals and Grant Applications
(3-0) Cr. 3. F.
Prereq: 6 credits in English composition.
Introduction to the theory and practice of preparing and analyzing proposals and grant applications intended for businesses, governmental agencies, and/or private and corporate foundations. Individual assignments and group projects include text documents and oral presentations. to persuasive discourse.

Engl 529. Multimedia Content Management
(3-0) Cr. 3. Alt. S. (Dual listed with 429.)
Prereq: English 313 or . . .
Strategies for developing and delivering multimodal content via digital media. Focus on the principles on database design, interface development, usability testing, and collaborative content management within technical communication settings.

Engl 542. Production Processes for Technical Documents
(3-0) Cr. 3. Alt. S. (Dual listed with 442.)
Prereq: 302, 309, 313, or 314.
Review of the principles of desktop publishing as practiced in the field of technical communication. Focus on theories of print document design and project management, as well as digital prepress techniques.

Engl 547. The History of Rhetorical Theory I: From Plato to Bacon
(3-0) Cr. 3. F.
Prereq: 6 credits in English.
Rhetorical theory from the classical period of ancient Greece and Rome through the Middle Ages to the early Renaissance; attention to its relation to the nature of knowledge, communication, practice, and pedagogy.

Engl 548. The History of Rhetorical Theory II: From Bacon to the Present
(3-0) Cr. 3. S.
Prereq: 6 credits in English.
PRhetorical theory from the early modern period (Bacon, Descartes, and Locke) to the present; attention to its relation to the nature of knowledge, communication, practice, and pedagogy.

Engl 549. Multimedia Design in Professional Communication
(3-0) Cr. 3. Alt. S. (Dual listed with 449.)
Prereq: 505.
Rhetorical principles of information-based multimedia design.  Practical understanding of computer applications used in multimedia development.  Focus on theoretical and practical elements of producing multimedia training programs in both education and industry.  Work with interactive hypertext, digital audio, and non-linear video editing.

Engl 582X. Advanced Rhetorical Analysis.
(3-0) Cr. 3. S.
Prereq: Graduate classification.
Extended practice in the close textual analysis of various kinds of rhetorical artifacts; study of analytic methods, such as neoclassical criticism, Burkean analysis, genre analysis and narrative analysis; and attention to controversies over the scope and function of rhetorical analysis.

Engl 586. Visual Communication in Professional Writing
(3-0) Cr. 3. F.
Prereq: A course in business or technical communication.
Rhetorical theory and research in graphics, document design, and related principles of visual communication. Methods of designing texts, data displays, illustrations, and other visual elements in business and technical communication.

Engl 587. Internship in Business, Technical, and Professional Writing
(3-0) Cr. 1 to 3 each time taken, maximum of 6. S. (Dual listed with 487.)
Prereq: 507 plus 3 additional graduate credits in business and technical writing or composition and rhetoric, permission of instructor. Limited to masters and doctoral degree candidates in English.
An opportunity to write, edit, and design business and technical documents in a professional setting. Projects include reports, proposals, manuals, brochures, newsletters.

Engl 592. Core Studies in Rhetoric and Professional Communication
(3-0) Cr. 3. Repeatable for a maximum of 9 credits.
Prereq: 12 hours in rhetoric, linguistics, or literature, excluding 150/250.
Seminar on topics central to the fields of rhetoric, composition, and professional communication or composition.
Engl 592A. Rhetoric of Science and Technology
Engl 592B. Visual Rhetoric.
Engl 592C. Multimodal Theory and Pedagogy.

Engl 602. Research Design in Rhetoric and Composition
(3-0) Cr. 3. Alt. F.
Prereq: 501, permission of instructor.
A workshop for advanced graduate  students in rhetoric and  professional communication. Focus on qualitative and/or quantitative methods.

Engl 603. Seminar in Advanced Pedagogy in Rhetoric and Composition: Theory and Research.
(3-0) Cr. 3. Alt. S.
Prereq: 503 or 504, permission of instructor.
Exploration of relationships between theory and practice in current pedagogy. Intensive examination of contemporary theories of poststructualism, new media, feminism, postcolonialism, or cultural studies and their impact on current pedagogical practice. Participation in pedagogical research and theory building.

Engl 611. Topics in Rhetorical Theory.
(3-0) Cr. 3. Repeatable. Alt. F.
Prereq: 547 or 548..
Rhetorical theory, criticism, and/or practice in relation to an historical period or a particular theoretical issue.

Engl 631X. Organization and Administration of Multimodal Writing Programs.
(3-0) Cr. 3.
Prereq: ENGL 500; ENGL 503, ENGL 504, or ENGL 603.
Survey of the major components of writing instruction in academic and nonacademic settings. History, theory, organization, and evaluation of writing programs. Guided observation of writing program functions at various institutions and businesses.

Engl 699. Dissertation Research
The Ph.D. in rhetoric and professional communication (RPC) focuses on the theory of rhetoric and the practice of written communication in professional communities such as business, industry, and government. The degree qualifies graduates for academic positions in rhetoric and in business and technical communication as well as to work in the priva te sector as professional writing specialists, editors, and communications production managers.

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