Author in context course
Guidelines
The Author in Context course
teach students how to examine an individual author's work in view of the
literary, biographical, historical and cultural forces that shaped that
work. The course also develops students'
understanding of the critical and theoretical issues that have informed
literary scholarship and criticism on an individual author's works. In addition, since all Author in Context
courses fulfill one of the writing-intensive requirements for the major, each
section must fulfill the criteria for such courses. Hence, Author in Context courses will meet
the following guidelines:
1. The
course focuses primarily upon a single author, the contexts that shaped his or
her work as well as the critical and/or theoretical contexts that continue to
shape the reading and interpretation of the work.
2. Required
readings include primary literary works by the author as well as historical or
cultural contextual scholarship, literary criticism, and/or theoretical readings
to suggest a range of ways the author's works may be read.
3. The
course requires students to produce 15-20 pages of formal writing for a specific
audience and purpose. This does not
include in-class essay exams or informal writing about course content. Students
will produce two or more formal written pieces unless a single longer piece
written in multiple drafts is more appropriate to course objectives.
Instructors will provide explicit written directions for completion of the
formal writing assignments as well as clear assessment criteria; they will
build into the course syllabus instruction in how to complete formal writing
assignments.
4. For
at least two of the formal written pieces, the instructor will intervene in the
students' writing process, guiding them to generate ideas, plan a draft, and
make substantive changes to produce a final draft. If a single longer piece
written in multiple drafts is more appropriate to course objectives, the
instructor will intervene at least twice in the students' writing process. The
instructor may choose to make suggestions for revision either in written form
or in conferences with students.
5. Students
will use informal writing to explore course materials, engage the readings, and
reflect on course content. Such
informal writing can include any of the following and any number of other
writing activities: reading journals or
logs, focus questions or discussion topics, short in-class responses to
lectures or readings, invention and pre-writing for formal papers.
6. The
course description and syllabus distributed to students will indicate
that it is a writing-intensive course, describe the role writing will play in
it, and explain any special policies related to writing such as a policy on
late papers, peer writing workshops, revision, or plagiarism.
Author
in context procedure for approval
Author
in context proposal form
AUTHOR IN CONTEXT SAMPLE COURSE PROPOSAL