This advanced composition course provides instruction in academic writing through literary analysis and increases students’ exposure to literature.
Prerequisites
A grade of 2.0 or better in ENGL&101.
Quarters Offered
Fall,
Winter,
Spring,
Summer
Course Outcomes
Upon successful completion of the course, students should be able to demonstrate the following knowledge or skills:
- Students will read and analyze major literary works in order to:
- Further develop the academic writing skills introduced in 101
- Use literary analysis to develop problem-solving skills
- Define the themes presented by literary texts, using textual, critical, social and/or historical analysis
- Define how these themes present conceptual problems, and develop plans to solve these problems
- Understand the use of literature as a source of ideas and information that may be used in complex arguments
- Assess and interpret multiple possible solutions to a problem posed by a literary text
- Recognize their own place as participants in academic debate and discussion
- Recognize the importance of proper documentation style, and the differences between the various styles used in different college disciplines
- Develop and improve habits of lifetime literacy
- Create a typed draft of a sustained, detailed, precisely defined analytical essay in at least 500 words.
- Extend a reasoned opinion of a piece of literature based on a close reading of the text.
- Demonstrate an ability to understand and formally respond to critical writings on literature.
- Demonstrate an understanding of and ability to apply common literary terms.
- Compose formal essays that exhibit clear critical thinking, textual analysis, and an understanding of literary merit.
- Demonstrate an awareness of audience, originality, sophistication, style, unity, structure, support, documentation (MLA), grammar/usage and format.
- Write and correctly document a research paper in MLA format.
Institutional Outcomes
IO1 Communication: Students will be able to communicate clearly and effectively.
Course Content Outline
- The course will provide instruction in the writing of formal essays that use problem-solving techniques to interpret or respond to literary fiction, poetry, drama, and/or creative nonfiction.
- The course will focus on reading comprehension as well as writing. Film may be used as a supplement to written texts, or as the focus of one instruction unit, but at least 60% of the assigned essays will focus on written works.
- Essays may focus on a variety of modes of literary analysis, but each of the following must be considered at some point in the term:
- Creating and sustaining an argument about the meaning of a work of literature using evidence taken from the text
- Describing technical aspects of written texts as stylistic choices made by authors
- Articulating ways in which the conventions of literary texts (such as plot conflict, paradox, narrative point of view, historical perspective and other sources) affect interpretation
- Appreciating and using a vocabulary which supports and encourages detailed analysis of literary texts
- Recognizing and appreciating existing critical readings of literary texts produced by experts in the field of literary criticism
- The majority of essays are to be composed outside of class, and class time should be focused on interpretation of literature and instruction in writing style
- While tests on comprehension of the texts may be used as a tool to ensure that students complete assigned readings, no less than 70% of the grade must be based on formal essays which focus on the assigned literary texts