2022-2023 Academic Catalog 
    
    May 20, 2024  
2022-2023 Academic Catalog [Archived Catalog]

Courses


Prerequisites: 
A “C-” or higher is required for all prerequisite courses.
Course Numbering:
100-299 - Lower division Undergraduate
300-499 - Upper division Undergraduate
500-699 - Graduate
700-799 - Doctoral

Search Tip: Use the asterisk (*) key as a wild card.

Example: Select “Prefix” NURS and enter 6* in the “Code or Number” field to return all Nursing courses at the 600 level.

Cross-listed courses have the same educational outcome and the course can be used interchangeably for degree requirements. (Ex. HUM-118 and ENGL-118) Related courses have shared attributes, but because they have different expectations and educational outcomes, may not be utilized interchangeably for degree requirements. (Ex. DSCI-303 and DSCI-503) Both types of courses can be offered at the same times, dates, share a classroom and instructors, etc.

 
  
  • EDUC 652 - Analysis and Correction of Reading Disabilities


    Credits: 3
    Students will learn how to use and interpret informal and norm-referenced assessment instruments with students who have various literacy problems. Students will learn how to provide appropriate instruction in phonemic awareness, phonics, word analysis, vocabulary, spelling, fluency, comprehension, metacognition and writing strategies for struggling readers and writers.
  
  • EDUC 653 - Literature and Literacy


    Credits: 3
    Students will focus on the appropriate use of literature in literacy development from early childhood to high school. Special emphasis will be given to the reading/writing connection. Candidates will develop a content-based integrated literature unit of study for a classroom teacher that includes technology.
  
  • EDUC 655 - Examination of Literacy Programs


    Credits: 3
    This course will help candidates deeply explore current and relevant models and methods used to teach reading in elementary and secondary schools. Examples include literacy programs and methods that have been used to support early literacy, ESL, information literacy, and family literacy. Candidates will practice training peers in various research-based literacy methods and models. The candidate will leave this course with the skills needed to compose both individual, and school-wide literacy action plans focused on research-based reading methods that support literacy development, current teaching practices, and the overall effectiveness of literacy programs.
  
  • EDUC 656 - Behavioral Intervention for Diverse Struggling Readers and Counseling Techniques for their Care Givers


    Credits: 3
    This course will help candidates explore behavior interventions that can be used with struggling elementary and secondary readers in the school setting. Special emphasis will be given on working with struggling readers from diverse backgrounds (race/ethnicity, socioeconomic background, gender, physical and cognitive disabilities, etc.). Candidates will also develop counseling skills for working with, and supporting, caretakers of struggling readers.
  
  • EDUC 657 - Analysis of Reading Data, Instructional Coaching, and Partnerships with Reading Teachers


    Credits: 3
    In the local area, one of the primary roles of reading specialists, outside of assisting students who have reading difficulties, is often to serve as an instructional coach to assist reading teachers in the continuous improvement of their craft. Part of this course focuses on the essential skills that instructional coaches need, including building a climate of trust, modeling best practices, observing teachers and facilitating reflective conversations. Candidates will explore some of the common obstacles faced by instructional coaches and how to overcome such challenges. The candidate will leave this course with a thorough understanding of resources and tools reading specialists may use to facilitate and coach adult learners in the areas of reading curriculum, reading methods, and reading assessment.

    Student data should drive all instructional decisions that reading specialists make alongside classroom teachers. As a result, part of this course will also include candidates practicing a deep analysis of student reading data. The candidate will leave this course with an ability to analyze student data in order to appropriately select various reading methods, instructional strategies and interventions appropriate for a variety of struggling readers.

  
  • EDUC 659 - Psychological-Educational Testing


    Credits: 3
    This course introduces various educational and psychological tests with special emphasis on the evaluation of abilities and achievement of various student populations. Special emphasis will also include the administration and interpretation of individual intelligence tests. Students will study multiple assessment tools and put some of the most widely-used into field-based practice. Concepts and models for the identification of various populations of high ability learners are discussed.
  
  • EDUC 660 - Early Childhood Curriculum


    Credits: 3
    This class will utilize a collection of resources from professional organizations in the field of Early Childhood Development. In some cases the students will the resources to conduct their own research on given topics. The following is a list of resources that will be accessed by students throughout the semester.
    Related Courses: EDUC-460
  
  • EDUC 661 - Early Childhood Assessment


    Credits: 3
    Students will study the basic concepts of test construction, assessment and the categories of instruments used in screening and diagnosing learning and other aspects of early childhood development for children with and without disabilities. The course prepares students to identify tests and assessment procedures, evaluate them for adequacy and appropriateness and translate the results into developmentally appropriate practice.
    Related Courses: EDUC-461
  
  • EDUC 662 - Integrated Curriculum


    Credits: 3
    Content-specific learning is not how children have come to an initial understanding of their environment. Learning for the young child involves not only parts, but a constructed whole. Using knowledge of child development, teachers will learn to formulate early childhood curriculum and instruction that is based upon developmental theories of learning.
  
  • EDUC 665 - Family Systems/Issues


    Credits: 3
    Through readings, outside speakers and on-site visits, students become aware of various strategies and resources available to the teacher in working with young children and their families. Special attention will be given to understanding the needs of students racial/ethnic backgrounds as well as those from lower socio-economic environments, and those with and without exceptional learning needs . Students will develop an appreciation for the problems and concerns affecting families, ways in which the school can support families in raising their children in developmentally appropriate ways and how to advocate for families of children with special needs on the local and state level.
    Related Courses: EDUC-465
  
  • EDUC 666 - Early Childhood Intervention


    Credits: 3
    This course provides information and experiences in observing and assessing, implementing and evaluating interventions, and collaboratively implementing a developmentally and individually appropriate support program to promote the development of young children with disabilities, developmental delays or special abilities within an early childhood setting. Students will be introduced to contemporary problems, research and issues that impact early childhood education around working with children with disabilities and their families.
  
  • EDUC 668 - Behavior Management


    Credits: 3
    This course is designed to examine classroom organization and behavior management techniques and programs in the early childhood and early childhood special education environment. The overall focus of this course will be on the teacher as the decision-maker in the design and implementation of strategies for the everyday applications of individual and group behavior management programs. Emphasis on functional assessment and positive behavior supports will be addressed.
    Related Courses: EDUC-468
  
  • EDUC 699 - Capstone Experience


    Credits: 3
    Students investigate a professionally meaningful question, issue or perspective in their particular area of educational practice. This investigation must involve reading on the chosen topic and a pilot action research project comprised of at least one cycle of action research (plan, act, observe, reflect), or an expert review analysis comprised of at least one cycle of researching a high impact strategy through a review of the literature and expert consultation leading to the development of a peer-reviewed professional plan/program to be implemented in their classroom, school, or school system during the upcoming academic year.  A specific focus is on formative and summative methods of strategy/program evaluation.   The Capstone experience is intended to help graduate students consolidate and evaluate the knowledge and skills gained during the Master’s of Arts in Education program as they review the goals of the program and/or their area of emphasis in study.  The culminating event includes students leading a formal, engaging, and coherent dialogue summarizing current literature and their study’s methodology, results, conclusions, limitations, recommendations, and implications.
    Prerequisite: EDUC-619
  
  • EDW 560 - STEM Certificate Program


    Credits: 0-6
    Learn to integrate STEM into the classroom with research-based best practices led by expert educators in the field. Teachers, librarians, media specialists, technology trainers, principals, instructional coaches, and others interested in meeting state and national standards while engaging students in STEM can participate in this innovative program. 
  
  • ENGL 101 - Writing Across the Disciplines I: Rhetorical Situations


    Credits: 3
    ENGL-101 builds on students’ previous experience with reading and writing while providing opportunities to investigate diverse disciplines and genres. Students will explore practices and techniques for reading within specific disciplines and genres while adapting their writing for specific audiences, purposes, and contexts. Students will have the opportunity to give and receive feedback in order to facilitate meaningful conversations about writing and revision. The course is framed and interspersed with reflective writing experiences in which students can intentionally consider the transfer of their knowledge and skills leading into ENGL-104.
  
  • ENGL 104 - Writing Across the Disciplines II: Research & Argument


    Credits: 3
    ENGL-104 builds on the foundation of ENGL-101 by deepening students’ abilities to write for particular purposes, audiences and contexts within specific disciplines and genres. Students engage in a guided inquiry into a research question of their choosing. Using this project-based learning approach, they identify an audience and develop an advocacy project targeting their audience. The course includes an introduction to informational and digital literacy. Students will find and evaluate sources, and they will write in multiple modes. Students will use refection as a means of guiding their research and transferring their learning to future coursework and writing in their major.
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 108 - Multicultural Voices in American Literature


    Credits: 3
    Students develop an appreciation of the literary contributions from writers of Asian, African, Latin, Caribbean, Middle Eastern, and Native descent.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Cross-listed: HUM-108
    Related Courses: ENGL-308 and HUM-308
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 109 - Survey of American Literature


    Credits: 3
    This course studies major authors and works from the Puritan era to the present.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-309
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 110 - The American Novel


    Credits: 3
    This course studies classic and contemporary American novels.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-310
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 114 - Fairy Tale in Literature And Film


    Credits: 3
    This course will discuss the origin and history of the Central and East European fairy tale. The course reading will include original fairy tales (such as Grimms’ Fairy Tales) and dramatic, fictional, poetic, and cinematic adaptations of representative tales from the tradition.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-314
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 118 - Literary Forms: Fable to Film


    Credits: 3
    The course explains the art of storytelling through an analysis of narrative techniques in fiction, drama and film.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Cross-listed: HUM-118
    Related Courses: ENGL-318, HUM-318
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 119 - Survey of Women’s Literature


    Credits: 3
    A study of the English and American traditions of literature by women. The course focuses on literary analysis and appreciation of fiction, poetry, memoirs, essays, and drama by classical and contemporary authors. The roles of women as authors and as characters will be considered within their historical and literary contexts.
    General Education Area: Literature, Humanities, Social Science
    Cross-listed: WGS-119
    Related Courses: ENGL-319 and WGS-319
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 122 - American Realism and Modernism


    Credits: 3
    This course studies novels, short fiction, poetry, plays, and essays by various writers of the late 19th and early 20th century. Major authors of this period are read in the context of the historical, cultural, and literary changes of the times; special attention will be devoted to the rise of modernism in American literature. Authors studied may include Kate Chopin, Henry James, Edith Wharton, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Marianne Moore, T. S. Eliot, William Faulkner, Eugene O’Neill, and others.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-322
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 126 - Latin American Magical Realism


    Credits: 3
    Magical Realism is an interesting and distinctive yet complex genre, combining elements of the fantastic and true-to-life in ways that differ from conventional, English-influenced fantasy stories. While many feature elements of what Americans consider imaginary, at the same time many of the novels are also deeply rooted in the politics and culture of their countries. For many critics, the genre emerged from and is best defined by twentieth-century Latin American writers. This class will examine the conventions and contradictions of this genre, ways in which individual writers employ language and storytelling techniques, and some of the complex relationships between these writers, their novels, their varied countries of origin, and the role of their original languages and translation.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-326
  
  • ENGL 127 - Early American Voices


    Credits: 3
    This course will study major authors and literary movements from the Puritan Era to the end of the Civil War. By analyzing fiction, poetry, memoirs, and essays, we will trace the development of an American consciousness and identity from the 17th to the 19th century. Authors will include writers such as Bradstreet, Taylor, Edwards, Emerson, Hawthorne, Melville, Douglass, Whitman, and Dickinson.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-327
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 129 - Writing Fiction I


    Credits: 3
    In this course, we will examine what it takes to craft a successful short story, from inspiration to publication. We will learn some of the basics of good writing, with special attention to plot, form, character, and tone. We will read and respond to one another’s works-in-progress, learning from our collective abilities. We will learn practical strategies for finding inspiration. And along the way, we will expose ourselves to some of contemporary fiction’s most vibrant voices.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 130 - Writing Poetry I


    Credits: 3
    Writing Poetry is designed to introduce and develop skills in writing, reading, and critiquing poetry. Emphasis will be given to generating, workshopping and revising creative writing by students.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 200H - Superheroes in Literature and Culture


    Credits: 4
    This course will look at the rise and evolution of one of 20th Century America’s most prevalent figures, the superhero. Students will examine the philosophical and cultural problems that costumed heroes provoke by looking at the recent wave of superhero novels, films, and academic analyses, as well as by looking at comics and graphic novels.
    General Education Area: Fine Arts, Humanities
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101 and Membership in Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 204H - Composition and Community: Engaging in Writing through Service


    Credits: 4
    This seminar develops students’ skills in argumentative writing, while giving students the opportunity to serve others through their writing. The course is built on the premise that writing is a social act, and that serving others will allow students to invest in themselves as writers. For example, students may be asked to tutor others during the course of the semester. This is a hands-on, discussion-oriented, service learning course that requires engagement with a diverse community. Students will examine texts that will serve as models for writing arguments. The course will build towards a research project allowing students to put sources in dialogue. When students finish the class, they should be able to write effective argumentative projects based on research. Along with working in a service-learning environment, students will participate in small group work, peer editing, conferences with the instructor, and presentations.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: Membership in Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 205 - Writing About Literature


    Credits: 3
    Students develop skills in analyzing fiction, poetry, and drama.
    Note: This course may count toward the writing minor.

    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-305
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL- 204H
  
  • ENGL 212 - Taking Stage: Drama at Maryville


    Credits: 0-3
    This class is for students who wish to be directly involved with the Maryville University Drama Club’s Fall or Spring on-campus play productions. Students enrolled in this course may choose to take on such roles as performers (pending a successful open audition), set design/production, stage crew, lighting, sound, costumes, props, and music. Opportunities are also available to work with print/social media advertising. Meeting times will be determined by the production schedule.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Cross-listed: HUM-212, MUS-212
  
  • ENGL 213H - War and Peace in Literature and Film


    Credits: 4
    In this course students will study poetry, drama, fiction, art, and film from throughout the world which address many aspects of war and its repercussions and effects on the family, culture and the larger civilization.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Cross-listed: HUM-213H
    Prerequisite: Membership in Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 215H - Tolkien: Medieval and Modern


    Credits: 4
    In this course students will explore Tolkien as a medievalist and a modern writer. They will study and discuss The Lord of the Rings, Silmarillion, Adventures of Tom Bombadil, Leaf by Niggle, and On Fairy Stories, as well as the medieval texts Beowulf, the Elder Edda, and the Saga of the Volsungs. Students will learn how Tolkien’s work, in sentiment and detail, continues the early-medieval heroic tradition of the Old English Beowulf and the Old Norse Elder Edda poems in regard to the heroic code, the vitality of legend and the past (even a romantic view of history), the pantheon and otherworldly beings (elves and dwarves), cosmology, fate and free will, and the subtlety of cultural speech acts. Nevertheless, twentieth-century concerns are also central to Tolkien’s fantasy texts, such as worldwide warfare, fear of tyranny by way of overwhelming power, industrialization and the environment, fading tradition, and the nature of good and evil.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Cross-listed: HUM-215H
    Prerequisite: Membership in Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 221 - Shakespeare and his World


    Credits: 3
    Students will study in detail the dramatic and literary values of representative comedies, tragedies, histories and romances.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Cross-listed: ENGL-221H
    Related Courses: ENGL-321
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 222H - The Mystery of Language


    Credits: 4
    We speak, read, and write every day, and yet language remains one of the greatest mysteries of our existence. How do we affect language, how does language affect us? How is communication possible? What is the relationship between language and experience? Between speech and silence? What are the limits of language? We will explore questions like these by studying philosophical, psychological, and literary approaches to solving the enigma of language.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Cross-listed: HUM-222H
    Prerequisite: Membership in Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 223 - New Voices, New Forms in American Literature


    Credits: 3
    This class will examine some of the major authors and literary movements in America after WWII, decade by decade, in order to read them closely, consider their timeliness and timelessness, compare the ways in which literature has maintained and defied previous conventions, and discuss how different kinds of outsiders established their voices. We will likely include short fiction by Flannery O’Connor and Sherman Alexie, novels by Ken Kesey, Toni Morrison, and Don DeLillo, memoir by Maxine Hong Kingston, and drama by Tony Kushner; poetry will likely include the Beats, Confessional poetry, and the Black Arts Movement, with an in-depth look at the work of contemporary poet Sharon Olds.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-323
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 224H - Detective Fiction


    Credits: 4
    The seminar will study the origin of detective fiction and the cultural and scientific circumstances which made the genre possible. Secondly, the course will explore the reasons behind the popularity of this kind of fiction for the last two centuries. The course will also examine the development of forensic science and detecting by studying the evolution of police investigation procedures from the 19th century to then present day. Students will read a variety of detective stories beginning with Edgar Allan Poe and Arthur Conan Doyle ending this study in the 21s century.
    General Education Area: Humanities, Social Science
    Cross-listed: CRIM-224H
    Prerequisite: Membership in Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 225 - Modern Fantasy


    Credits: 3
    The fantastic has been around in story and literature for a long time. Many people actually believed in mythological beings, and some people still do. Why does Fantasy persist, even thrive, in the modern period? How do we define Fantasy as a genre? We will ask these questions and others as we adventure in the weird worlds of Lord Dunsany, Robert E. Howard, George MacDonald, Ursula Le Guin, N. K. Jemisin and various authors throughout the world as the genre becomes diverse in authorship, subject matter and setting. We will investigate the nature of belief, our need for quests, explore the unknown and unusual, encounter characters that defy categories of being, and ask how Fantasy paradoxically portrays real-world issues.
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 225H - Modern Fantasy


    Credits: 4
    The fantastic has been around in story and literature for a long time. Many people actually believed in mythological beings, and some people still do. Why does Fantasy persist, even thrive, in the modern period? How do we define Fantasy as a genre? We will ask these questions and others as we adventure in the weird worlds of Lord Dunsany, Robert E. Howard, George MacDonald, Ursula Le Guin, N. K. Jemisin and various authors throughout the world as the genre becomes diverse in authorship, subject matter and setting. We will investigate the nature of belief, our need for quests, explore the unknown and unusual, encounter characters that defy categories of being, and ask how Fantasy paradoxically portrays real-world issues.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101 and Membership in Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 229H - Wonder Women: Feminist Science Fiction


    Credits: 4
    This class will combine an introduction to feminist theory and practice with an exploration of the various ways science fiction literature represents and reimagines gender roles. Science fiction’s boundless speculative range makes this genre a perfect vehicle for a critique and change of systemic patriarchy. Readings will include classic texts by writers such as Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Ursula K. LeGuin, James Tiptree, Jr., Joanna Russ, and Octavia Butler. We will also investigate the emergence of “strong” female protagonists in Young Adult science fiction, and make our own attempts at writing feminist sci fi.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Cross-listed: WGS-229H
    Prerequisite: Membership in Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 230H - Writing Poetry I


    Credits: 4
    Writing Poetry is designed to introduce and develop skills in writing, reading, and critiquing poetry. Emphasis will be given to generating, workshopping and revising creative writing by students.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
    Membership in Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 233 - Modern American Drama


    Credits: 3
    This course explores American Drama from the late 19th century through the late 20th century. In reading such authors as Arthur Miller, Sam Shepard, Lorraine Hansberry, and Tony Kushner, students explore how this unique art form not only explored the turbulence of an ever-changing America, but in many ways affected the perceptions of American society. Along with close-readings of key plays, students will explore modern American drama in performance through screenings of plays as well as excursions to go see plays in local production.
    Cross-listed: HUM-233
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 234 - Storytelling in the Sciences


    Credits: 3
    We often assume that science and storytelling are as different from one another as fact from fiction. In this course, we will explore the idea that we need storytelling in order to understand science, and that we need science in order to understand storytelling. Throughout the semester, we will investigate all kinds of science storytelling, from cave paintings to modern film. We will explore the scientific function of ancient myth, we’ll read a novel about a velociraptor written by a paleontologist, and we’ll explore how a critical eye toward storytelling can help us to understand what is happening right now with the pandemic.
    General Education Area: Humanities
  
  • ENGL 234H - Storytelling in the Sciences


    Credits: 4
    We often assume that science and storytelling are as different from one another as fact from fiction. In this course, we will explore the idea that we need storytelling in order to understand science, and that we need science in order to understand storytelling. Throughout the semester, we will investigate all kinds of science storytelling, from cave paintings to modern film. We will explore the scientific function of ancient myth, we’ll read a novel about a velociraptor written by a paleontologist, and we’ll explore how a critical eye toward storytelling can help us to understand what is happening right now with the pandemic.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: Membership in Bascom Honors
  
  • ENGL 241 - Social Issues and Storytelling


    Credits: 3
    This course will explore social issues and storytelling methods and narrative techniques presented in the first season of David Simon’s landmark television series The Wire. Many critics believe that this series is one of the most well-written and compelling television series ever written because of the diversity of characters and the thematic breadth of each episode.
    Cross-listed: SOC-241
  
  • ENGL 241H - Social Issues and Storytelling


    Credits: 4
    This course will explore social issues and storytelling methods and narrative techniques presented in the first season of David Simon’s landmark television series The Wire. Many critics believe that this series is one of the most well-written and compelling television series ever written because of the diversity of characters and the thematic breadth of each episode.
    General Education Area: Humanities, Social Science
    Cross-listed: SOC-241H
    Prerequisite: Membership in the Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 257 - World Literature I: The Dawn of Story


    Credits: 3
    This class begins four thousand years ago, with the Epic of Gilgamesh, the first great work of world literature, and then moves through the ancient and medieval world up to the 17th century. Readings may draw from classic works such as The Odyssey, Greek tragedies and comedies, The Aeneid, Beowulf, The Divine Comedy, The Journey to the West, Narrow Road to the Interior, The Canterbury Tales, and Don Quixote. The class may also include writers such as Plato, Aristotle, and Augustine, as well as selections from the Bible, the Koran, and the Bhagavad-Gita.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-357
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 258 - World Literature II: The Modern Mind


    Credits: 3
    Individuality and personal freedom, or alienation and existential despair? This class explores the development of modernity as reflected and developed in the literatures of the world from the 18th century to the present. Readings will be drawn from various global traditions, and may include authors such as Goethe, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Baudelaire, Rilke, Lu Xun, Kafka, Akhmatova, Camus, Abe, and Allende.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-358
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 261 - Writing for Stage and Screen I: Storytelling


    Credits: 3
    This workshop-style course focuses on the art and craft of dramatic writing. By first examining dramatic works of literature as well as cinematic screenplays, students will learn and practice style and techniques that are geared towards composition for a visual medium, whether that be in theatre or film. Then, students will compose and workshop their own original story outline that will become either a short 10-minute play or screenplay of a short 10-minute film. Students will then have the opportunity to either stage their short play or shoot their short film using their iPads.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Cross-listed: FPAR-261
    Related Courses: ENGL-361
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 296 - Independent Study


    Credits: 1-4
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
  
  • ENGL 297H - Special Studies


    Credits: 4
    These courses are offered periodically based on the interests of our students and faculty.

    Fall 2022: Power, Women, Gender, and Jane Austen

    Jane Austen, one of the most influential English novelists, is well known for Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, and Emma. Women and their relationships with men are among Austen’s central concerns, especially regarding the social act of courtship. Austen represents issues of manners, class, money, education, and love in the context of gender and the influence of social forces like family and the imagination of the individual. We will explore these issues as represented in the above novels. We will also discuss what it meant to be a woman and a writer in the early nineteenth century in the context of political and social movements.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Cross-listed: WGS-297H
    Prerequisite: Membership in Bascom Honors Program

  
  • ENGL 304 - Grammar, Glamour, and Stylistic Choices


    Credits: 3
    In this class students examine the many choices they have in developing their own voice and their own style in their writing.Students learn a variety of sentence patterns to make their writing more precise and more powerful.As students gain a comprehensive understanding of grammar, they use that knowledge to choose effective rhetorical patterns for their writing.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-104, or ENGL- 204H
  
  • ENGL 305 - Writing About Literature


    Credits: 3
    Students develop skills in analyzing fiction, poetry, and drama.
    Note: This course is intended for English majors, and may count toward the writing minor.

    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-205
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 306 - Advanced Research Writing


    Credits: 3
    In this course, students develop their skills as professional writers. Topics for essays and articles are chosen from the students major fields of study or areas of interest. The focus is on developing writing skills through a consideration of styles of writing, strategies of argumentation, and resources for research.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: ENGL-104, or ENGL- 204H
  
  • ENGL 307 - Advanced Creative Writing


    Credits: 3
    A course to develop skills in creative writing, particularly in writing fiction and poetry. Strategies of style, techniques of narrative writing, and forms of poetry are examined.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: ENGL-104 or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 308 - Multicultural Voices in American Literature


    Credits: 3
    Students develop an appreciation of the literary contributions from writers of Asian, African, Latin, Caribbean, Middle Eastern, and Native descent.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Cross-listed: HUM-308
    Related Courses: ENGL-108 and HUM-108
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 309 - Survey of American Literature


    Credits: 3
    This course studies major authors and works from the Puritan era to the present.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-109
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 310 - The American Novel


    Credits: 3
    This course studies classic and contemporary American novels.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-110
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 311 - Adolescence in American Literature


    Credits: 3
    Students read novels, short stories, poems, and essaysthat focus on the passages from youth to adulthood and from innocence to experience.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 312 - History of Literary Criticism


    Credits: 3
    A study of the development of literary criticism in the western intellectual tradition, the course examines the distinction between criticism concerned primarily with form and criticism concerning itself with evaluation.
    Note: English majors may take this course as a capstone course.

    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 313 - Themes in American Literature


    Credits: 3
    Each course focuses upon a major theme in American literature; for example, “American Identity.”
    Cross-listed: HUM-313
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 314 - Fairy Tale in Literature And Film


    Credits: 3
    This course will discuss the origin and history of the Central and East European fairy tale. The course reading will include original fairy tales (such as Grimms’ Fairy Tales) and dramatic, fictional, poetic, and cinematic adaptations of representative tales from the tradition.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-114
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 315 - Contemporary American Fiction/Non-Fiction


    Credits: 3
    This course analyzes and appreciates selected works of contemporary American fiction and non-fiction.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-215
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 316 - Grendel to Gutenberg: English Literature I


    Credits: 3
    A study of major authors and works of English literature from the Anglo-Saxon period to Shakespeare, this course is required for the English major.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-104, or ENGL- 204H
  
  • ENGL 317 - Gulliver To Google: English Literature II


    Credits: 3
    A study of major authors and works of English literature from Neoclassicism to the present, this course is required for the English major.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-104, or ENGL- 204H
  
  • ENGL 318 - Literary Forms: Fable to Film


    Credits: 3
    The course explains the art of storytelling through an analysis of narrative techniques in fiction, drama and film.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Cross-listed: HUM-318
    Related Courses: ENGL-118 and HUM-118
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 319 - Survey of Women’s Literature


    Credits: 3
    A study of the English and American traditions of literature by women. The course focuses on literary analysis and appreciation of fiction, poetry, memoirs, essays, and drama by classical and contemporary authors. The roles of women as authors and as characters will be considered within their historical and literary contexts.
    General Education Area: Literature, Humanities, Social Science
    Cross-listed: WGS-319
    Related Courses: ENGL-119 and WGS-119
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 320 - Uneasy Minds: Mental Illness in Literature


    Credits: 3
    This course studies the various ways in which mental illness is portrayed in novels, memoirs, poetry, and essays.  The course will also explore the therapeutic aspects of reading and writing literature.
  
  • ENGL 321 - Shakespeare


    Credits: 3
    Students will study in detail the dramatic and literary values of representative comedies, tragedies, histories and romances.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-221
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 322 - American Realism and Modernism


    Credits: 3
    This course studies novels, short fiction, poetry, plays, and essays by various writers of the late 19th and early 20th century. Major authors of this period are read in the context of the historical, cultural, and literary changes of the times; special attention will be devoted to the rise of modernism in American literature. Authors studied may include Kate Chopin, Henry James, Edith Wharton, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Marianne Moore, T. S. Eliot, William Faulkner, Eugene O’Neill, and others.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-122
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 323 - New Voices, New Forms in American Literature


    Credits: 3
    This class will examine some of the major authors and literary movements in America after WWII, decade by decade, in order to read them closely, consider their timeliness and timelessness, compare the ways in which literature has maintained and defied previous conventions, and discuss how different kinds of outsiders established their voices. We will likely include short fiction by Flannery O’Connor and Sherman Alexie, novels by Ken Kesey, Toni Morrison, and Don DeLillo, memoir by Maxine Hong Kingston, and drama by Tony Kushner; poetry will likely include the Beats, Confessional poetry, and the Black Arts Movement, with an in-depth look at the work of contemporary poet Sharon Olds.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-223
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 326 - Latin American Magical Realism


    Credits: 3
    Magical Realism is an interesting and distinctive yet complex genre, combining elements of the fantastic and true-to-life in ways that differ from conventional, English-influenced fantasy stories. While many feature elements of what Americans consider imaginary, at the same time many of the novels are also deeply rooted in the politics and culture of their countries. For many critics, the genre emerged from and is best defined by twentieth-century Latin American writers. This class will examine the conventions and contradictions of this genre, ways in which individual writers employ language and storytelling techniques, and some of the complex relationships between these writers, their novels, their varied countries of origin, and the role of their original languages and translation.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-126
  
  • ENGL 327 - Early American Voices


    Credits: 3
    This course will study major authors and literary movements from the Puritan Era to the end of the Civil War. By analyzing fiction, poetry, memoirs, and essays, we will trace the development of an American consciousness and identity from the 17th to the 19th century. Authors will include writers such as Bradstreet, Taylor, Edwards, Emerson, Hawthorne, Melville, Douglass, Whitman, and Dickinson.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-127
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 329 - Writing Fiction II


    Credits: 3
    Furthering the work of Writing Fiction I, this intermediate creative writing course emphasizes the development of individual voice and style through in-depth study of short story collections by contemporary fiction writers, as well as rigorous workshopping of student prose.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-129
  
  • ENGL 330 - Writing Poetry II


    Credits: 3
    Furthering the work of Writing Poetry I, this intermediate creative writing course emphasizes the development of individual voice and style through in-depth study of poetry collections by contemporary poets, as well as rigorous workshopping of student poems.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-130
  
  • ENGL 334 - The Words and the Melody


    Credits: 3
    This course will investigate the poetic and musical elements of song. Students will be introduced to several poems, and will learn to analyze these poems’ prosody and structure. We will then examine musical settings of these and other poems in order to discover ways in which musicians and composers relate to the form and content of poetry in song. Students will be required to write and memorize poetry in various verse forms, and to analyze music critically. Students who are confident in their musical skills will have the opportunity to compose songs of their own.
    Cross-listed: MUS-334, HUM-334
  
  • ENGL 335 - International Film History


    Credits: 3
    This course is a survey of the history and key developments of film—as an institution and art form—from its beginnings to roughly the end of World War II in 1945. Along the way we will study some of the important directors (e.g. Murnau, Griffith, Welles, Kurosawa, Hitchcock, Renoir, Lang, et al.) and view films that are considered landmarks in the history of cinema (e.g. Nosferatu, Citizen Kane, The Battleship Potemkin, Stagecoach, Bicycle Thieves). We will study films produced by American studios, but we will also spend a considerable amount of time exploring how these films developed in dialogue with other national cinemas. To that end, the course is international in scope; in addition to screening a number of American films, we will also examine films by Soviet, French, German, Japanese, Spanish, and Italian directors.
  
  • ENGL 335H - International Film History


    Credits: 4
    This course is a survey of the history and key developments of film—as an institution and art form—from its beginnings to roughly the end of World War II in 1945. Along the way we will study some of the important directors (e.g. Murnau, Griffith, Welles, Kurosawa, Hitchcock, Renoir, Lang, et al.) and view films that are considered landmarks in the history of cinema (e.g. Nosferatu, Citizen Kane, The Battleship Potemkin, Stagecoach, Bicycle Thieves). We will study films produced by American studios, but we will also spend a considerable amount of time exploring how these films developed in dialogue with other national cinemas. To that end, the course is international in scope; in addition to screening a number of American films, we will also examine films by Soviet, French, German, Japanese, Spanish, and Italian directors.
    Prerequisite: Membership in Bascom Honors Program
  
  • ENGL 336 - African American Literature, Music, and Protest


    Credits: 3
    Broadly speaking, literature refers to many kinds of written, discipline-specific texts, such as artistic or literary writing, scientific articles and books, medical articles and journals, musical compositions and scholarship, etc.  Protest literature reflects writing that argues strongly against a perceived injustice or a forced inadequacy; it may criticize, demand change, or express anger.  In many respects, a great deal of African American literature is centered on a form of protest, whether directly stated or implied.  This course will investigate the relationship between African American music and writing that gives voice to protest.
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 350 - Write Short: Fiction, Nonfiction, and Poetry


    Credits: 3
    Some of the most interesting work today in contemporary literature engages short forms. In this course, we will read, discuss, generate and revise creative writing in short form, in poetry, fiction and non-fiction. Readings and writing assignments will revolve around flash fiction and non-fiction, the short poem, Japanese haiku, the uses of aphorism, the uses of short sentences, and genre-blur (is it a prose poem? Flash fiction? Flash creative nonfiction?)
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-150
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 352 - Oxford Tutorial in Creative Writing


    Credits: 3-5
    Coursework includes meeting regularly with Oxford University professors, attending lectures, and participating in writing workshops. Students are encouraged to write fiction, creative non-fiction, and poetry.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101 and writing portfolio submitted to the English Department.
  
  • ENGL 356 - World Mythology


    Credits: 3
    In this class, we will learn to read and discuss mythology as a unique kind of storytelling. While we will pay special attention to elements often shared in common by myths across the globe (the hero, the underworld, the trickster, etc.), we also will explore what myths can tell us about the unique cultures, histories, and political contexts of the people who produce them. Our readings (and viewings) will include a wide variety of works both ancient and modern, from The Odyssey and The Arabian Nights to Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. Required work will include participation in weekly online discussions, short analysis papers, and a multimedia presentation.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 357 - World Literature I: The Dawn of Story


    Credits: 3
    This class begins four thousand years ago, with the Epic of Gilgamesh, the first great work of world literature, and then moves through the ancient and medieval world up to the 17th century. Readings may draw from classic works such as The Odyssey, Greek tragedies and comedies, The Aeneid, Beowulf, The Divine Comedy, The Journey to the West, Narrow Road to the Interior, The Canterbury Tales, and Don Quixote. The class may also include writers such as Plato, Aristotle, and Augustine, as well as selections from the Bible, the Koran, and the Bhagavad-Gita.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-257
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 358 - World Literature II: The Modern Mind


    Credits: 3
    Individuality and personal freedom, or alienation and existential despair? This class explores the development of modernity as reflected and developed in the literatures of the world from the 18th century to the present. Readings will be drawn from various global traditions, and may include authors such as Goethe, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Baudelaire, Rilke, Lu Xun, Kafka, Akhmatova, Camus, Abe, and Allende.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-258
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101, ENGL-104, or ENGL-204H
  
  • ENGL 361 - Writing for Stage and Screen I: Storytelling


    Credits: 3
    This workshop-style course focuses on the art and craft of dramatic writing. By first examining dramatic works of literature as well as cinematic screenplays, students will learn and practice style and techniques that are geared towards composition for a visual medium, whether that be in theatre or film. Then, students will compose and workshop their own original story outline that will become either a short 10-minute play or screenplay of a short 10-minute film. Students will then have the opportunity to either stage their short play or shoot their short film using their iPads.
    Related Courses: ENGL-261
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 362 - Writing for Stage and Screen II: Production


    Credits: 3
    This workshop-style course continues the work done in ENGL / FPAR 261 - Writing for Stage and Screen I: Storytelling. Students will continue to learn and practice style and technique suited for composition of either a short 10-minute play or a short 10-minute film. Through workshop, students will then work on developing, casting and directing rehearsals of their narratives, or learn the craft of camera work and editing of their short films-all with the intention of featuring these completed projects in an end-of-semester showcase for the class and invited Maryville community.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Cross-listed: FPAR-362
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 370 - History of Western Theatre


    Credits: 3
    This course examines the evolution of dramatic literature through the shared spectrum of major works of drama and the theatrical spaces upon which such plays were performed. Students will explore important plays from classical antiquity through modern drama, and study how conventions of the genre took shape from one playwright to another. Essential to these readings will be an appreciation of how theatre spaces themselves evolved along with the drama, oftentimes shaping the way that playwrights wrote their plays. Students will be encouraged to view drama not only from the perspective of literature, but also as works of performative art.
    General Education Area: Fine Arts
  
  • ENGL 390 - Children’s Literature


    Credits: 3
    Engage in reading, discussion, creative responses, and critical analysis of literature for children and adolescents in this course. Differentiation for the needs of the learner are discussed along with strategies for expanding vocabulary, reading comprehension, and writing processes. An emphasis is placed upon issues of social justice and diverse points of view. 
    Cross-listed: EDUC-390
  
  • ENGL 400H - Tutorial


    Credits: 4
    An honors tutorial is based on a theme where students:

    • complete common weekly readings
    • write individual essays
    • meet in groups with the faculty member to discuss the readings and essays
    • meet with each other to further discuss the readings.

    Students must be of sophomore rank or higher.

    Fall 2021: The Ghost Story in Culture and Literature
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: Membership in Bascom Honors Program

  
  • ENGL 406 - Writing Tutorial


    Credits: 3
    The student undertakes and completes a substantial writing project under the direction of a full-time faculty member in English or communication.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: ENGL-104 or ENGL-204H; Permission of the Instructor
  
  • ENGL 411 - The Teaching and Assessment of Writing


    Credits: 3
    This course is designed for prospective teachers of writing. Students learn strategies for teaching and assessing writing. The course moves from a historical and theoretical grounding in writing instruction and assessment to practical design and implementation. Students design assessments and give feedback on assignments within an English composition course. Students then have the opportunity to adapt instructional and assessment strategies for their future teaching practices.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: Admission to the Teacher Education Program; and Permission of the Instructor
  
  • ENGL 412 - Monsters in Film and Literature


    Credits: 3
    This course will look at influential modern works such as Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, recent revisionism by writers such as Anne Rice and Octavia Butler, and a few of the many monster movies. Students will consider the language, structure, origins, contexts, and implications of the stories.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Related Courses: ENGL-212, ENGL-212H
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 491 - Literary Magazine Internship


    Credits: 1-3
    Each spring, five to seven students are selected to be on the editorial staff of the Maryville literary magazine, Magnolia. Students who can edit, proofread, design graphics, do layout and other design work, and plan public relations and advertising campaigns are invited to apply. Interested students from all majors are eligible. The entire staff of the magazine works together to decide the written and artistic content of the magazine.
    General Education Area: Literature
    Prerequisite: Students must apply to and interview with Magnolia’s faculty advisor
  
  • ENGL 493 - Cooperative Education


    Credits: 1-6
    General Education Area: Humanities
  
  • ENGL 495 - Research in the Humanities


    Credits: 3
    The student undertakes and completes a substantial research project under the direction of a full-time faculty member in Humanities. 
    General Education Area: Literature
    Cross-listed: HUM-495
    Prerequisite: ENGL-104, or ENGL- 204H
  
  • ENGL 496 - Independent Study


    Credits: 1-4
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
  
  • ENGL 497 - Special Studies


    Credits: 3
    These courses are offered periodically based on the interests of our students and faculty. More information can be requested from the department.
    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: ENGL-101
  
  • ENGL 498 - Seminar: Your Brain on Language


    Credits: 3
    This course introduces the student to the study of the English language as a cultural subject, as a means to understanding how usage changes, how vocabulary changes, how orthography changes, and how these changes are effected. The history of the English language will also be studied along with the various linguistic influences impacting its development. Along with the historical study, the class will consider the development of English grammar and punctuation.
    Note: English majors may take this course as a capstone course.

    General Education Area: Humanities
    Prerequisite: ENGL-104, or ENGL- 204H
  
  • ENGL 499 - Internship


    Credits: 1-6
    Note: Up to six credits in ENGL-499 may be counted toward an English major.

    Prerequisite: Permission of Instructor
  
  • EXSC 110 - Introduction to Exercise Science


    Credits: 3
    The course provides an overview of the exercise science profession to include the history of exercise science, career opportunities, and certifications available. The concepts of basic physiological, neurological, and biomechanical processes associated with physical activity and human movement will be discussed. Students will be given the opportunity to meet with experts in the field and learn about the various career opportunities. Content based on guidelines published by the American College of Sports Medicine and the National Strength and Conditioning Association.
 

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