FAQ
Major Requirements
Students who are considering majoring in English are encouraged, but not required, to take EN120 as their W1. The “gateway” course (required course) for all English majors is EN200, which is taken either after completing your W1 or concurrently with your W1.
As an English major, you can count a limited number of study abroad courses toward your major requirements. We will accept toward the English major four courses taken during a year abroad (five only in extreme circumstances) or three taken during a semester abroad. These totals (4 for a year, 3 for a semester) also apply to courses taken at another institution. You must consult with your advisor before you leave for pre-approval and also discuss your senior year and remaining requirements. Your advisor will ensure that you receive proper credit for pre-approved courses.
Critical Theory is the study of language, literature, and culture. You will gain mastery over an array of theoretical discourses and develop awareness of how underlying assumptions about representation shape reading practices. Furthermore, you will learn to read complex arguments, recognize assumptions about interpretation and language, and use theoretical approaches and tools for interpreting the systems of representation that constitute culture.
Possible approaches include classical theory, cultural materialism, structuralism, poststructuralism, psychoanalysis, Marxism, feminist theory, or postcolonial theory.
Occasionally, when there is extra space in a senior seminar class, it will be opened to juniors. This is up to the professor. Most students prefer to take the course in their senior year.
Yes. Please discuss courses outside the department with your advisor. Approved electives vary depending upon your concentration.
Advising for English Majors
When you declare your major, the registrar’s office will assign an advisor to you. When your advisor is on sabbatical or on leave, you will be assigned a new advisor. When your original advisor returns, if you want to go back to that advisor, please follow the process for changing your advisor as described in the next question.
Yes, you can change your advisor. Once you have the permission of the new advisor, the new advisor must contact the registrar’s office and the department chair to request that you become their advisee.
Enrolling in Courses
When you have formulated a proposal for an Independent Study, discuss your proposal with the professor who you would like to “work with”. Once that professor accepts your request, you may register online and the professor will then approve the course.
During the spring semester of your junior year, formulate a proposal for an honors thesis. This is usually a topic that you have already worked with in a prior course. Before May, discuss your proposal with the professor who you would like to “work with”. Once that professor accepts your request, you may submit your proposal to the honors coordinator (currently Assistant Professor Sam Plasencia) by midnight EDT on May 1.
Typically, students spend the summer doing their research.
Honors
This is your starting point: What is your thesis topic and which professor is knowledgeable in this area?
A student, who is interested in doing an honors thesis, will approach a professor with their idea for their thesis and if the professor is interested, the professor will ask the student to solidify their ideas into a draft proposal including primary and secondary sources. Once the student has done this, they will schedule a second meeting with the professor. After the second meeting, the professor/Honors Advisor will confirm a commitment to the student and make suggestions for revisions to the draft proposal in order for the student to generate the final proposal. The student will then be responsible to submit their final proposal to the honors coordinator (currently Associate Professor Sam Plasencia) by midnight EDT on May 1.
You must have 3.0 GPA and a 3.5 in the major at the end of junior year, which must be confirmed by the Registrar in June.
By May 1 of your junior year you need to have secured an Honors Advisor, written a formal proposal that defines the work to be done and the methods for achieving it, and submitted your proposal to the honors coordinator (currently Associate Professor Sam Plasencia).
Honors projects in literature will extend through both semesters of your senior year. Students propose projects in the spring of their junior year. If approved, students will undertake preparatory reading and research during the summer, continue researching and writing in the fall and spring semesters, and complete their work in late spring of their senior year, including a presentation at CLAS.
Last day of Spring classes: students submit the final version of their honors thesis to the department.