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ENGL 337 Introduction to U.S. Latino/a Literature
An historical survey of literature by U.S. Latina/o writers of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Dominican, and Central/South American descent. Various genres, including oral forms such as corridos as well as novels, poetry, essays, and autobiographical writing, will be considered. Prerequisite: Prior completion of the KU Core Written Communication requirement. Recommended: Prior completion of one 200-level English course.
Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of General Studies in English
http://catalog.ku.edu/liberal-arts-sciences/english/ba-bgs-english/
Why study English language and literature? Because reading and writing shape the world. KU's English Department is at the core of the humanities, highlighting the "human" through our individual, one-on-one interactions with our students, our emphasis on community and global engagement, and our abiding interest in our shared humanity through the stories of others. We seek to challenge the mind and to engage the imagination of our students, to teach them to ask questions and to seek for answers. We encourage them to grapple with the complexity of a culturally and commercially interconnected world and the global networks and processes of cultural exchange. We believe that words and ideas will shape the world. We teach our students life-long skills, so that they learn to write clearly, creatively, and effectively—discovering themselves even as they lay a solid foundation for professional success. A commitment to teaching and learning. Our department is renowned for its tradition of excellence in teaching. The vast majority of our undergraduate classes have 20-35 students, and much of the class time is dedicated to active learning and engagement with texts and ideas. In the last ten years, faculty members in the department of English have won ten Kemper Fellowships for Excellence in Teaching, two Chancellors Club Teaching Professorships, a Career Achievement Teaching Award, and a wide variety of other university-level teaching and advising awards, and the department as a whole received the Center of Teaching Excellence (CTE) award for Department Excellence in Teaching at the University of Kansas. A variety of career and life paths. English majors graduate to a variety of careers, including law, teaching, scholarship, publishing, library science, and journalism--as well as medicine, politics, design, and any number of other fields that value clear communication, interpretive skill, and critical and creative thinking. Engaged and innovative scholarship. KU's English Department has several core strengths that cross tracks and periods, including Global and Cross-Cultural Approaches; Literature, Rhetoric, and Social Action; Diversity Studies; Language, Literature and Science; and Popular Expressive Forms. At the KU English Department, students work closely with nationally-renowned writers and researchers. Our faculty have won national awards that recognize excellence in research, including grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Philosophical Society, and the Newberry Library, among others. English Department faculty members have also received major research funding from the University of Kansas, including the Hall Center for the Humanities Research fellowships and Keeler Intra-University Fellowships for interdisciplinary work. Undergraduate students can work one-on-one with faculty mentors in the Honors Program, McNair Scholars Program, and Dean's Scholars Program, as well as through independent Directed Studies.
Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of General Studies in Literature, Language, and Writing
http://catalog.ku.edu/liberal-arts-sciences/english/ba-bgs-literature/
KU's English Department is at the core of the humanities, highlighting the "human" through our individual, one-on-one interactions with our students, our emphasis on community and global engagement, and our abiding interest in our shared humanity through the stories of others. We seek to challenge the mind and to engage the imagination of our students, to teach them to ask questions and to seek for answers. We encourage them to grapple with the complexity of a culturally and commercially interconnected world and the global networks and processes of cultural exchange. We believe that words and ideas will shape the world. We teach our students life-long skills, so that they learn to write clearly, creatively, and effectively—discovering themselves even as they lay a solid foundation for professional success.
Bachelor of Science in Education
http://catalog.ku.edu/education/curriculum-teaching/bs-education/
...ENGL 326 Introduction to African Literature ENGL 336 Jewish American Literature and Culture ENGL 337...
Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of General Studies in American Studies
http://catalog.ku.edu/liberal-arts-sciences/american-studies/ba-bgs/
...Literature II 3 ENGL 336 Jewish American Literature and Culture 3 ENGL 337 Introduction to...
Minor in Leadership Studies
http://catalog.ku.edu/liberal-arts-sciences/institute-leadership-studies/leadership-studies-minor/
...K-12 Schools ENGL 323 Twentieth Century Literature and Culture ENGL 337 Introduction to U...
Bachelor of Fine Arts in History of Art
http://catalog.ku.edu/arts/visual-art/bfa-art-history/
...D. Cross-regional HA 337/567 Contemporary Art...Art Seminar Writing Requirement - ENGL 101 and 102...
Minor in Chicanx and Latinx Studies
http://catalog.ku.edu/liberal-arts-sciences/american-studies/minor/
...602 Topics in Latin American Studies: _____ ENGL 337 Introduction to U.S. Latino/a...
Accelerated Master of Arts in History
http://catalog.ku.edu/liberal-arts-sciences/history/ama/
...and Nature 3 HIST 337 History, Ethics, Modernity...still need to complete ENGL 102 (or equivalent...