Undergraduate Degree Program
Admission to Undergraduate Degree Program
All degree programs in the Department of English are open enrollment.
However, special enrollment limitations apply for teaching majors.
The Discipline
The English major provides a detailed knowledge of the English language
and of literature written in English. English majors approach language
and literature as a source of knowledge and aesthetic pleasure, a mode
of encountering and evaluating diverse minds and attitudes, a vehicle
for art and action, a means of historical understanding, and a source
of spiritual insight. English majors use writing as their primary means
(1) of knowing, understanding, and evaluating their experience and their
reading and (2) of sharing their insight with others. In keeping with
the long-standing ideals of a liberal arts education, the English Department
aims to cultivate in its students those foundational skills in writing,
awareness, and judgment upon which lives of wisdom, service, and an ever-increasing
love for learning might be built.
Career Opportunities
With a firm grounding in the liberal arts, English majors are prepared
for any career that requires perceptive reading, orderly and clear thinking,
intellectual maturity, and effective writing. Many career opportunities
for English majors exist in teaching, professional writing and editing,
law, business, communications, or government service. English majors can
certify to teach secondary-school English, or they can prepare for graduate
study in English and college teaching. When combined with prerequisite
courses in other departments, the English major provides excellent preparation
for graduate work in law, business, library science, medicine, humanities,
or religion. By selecting areas of concentration, some English majors
prepare for careers in technical and professional communication, editing,
creative writing, and related fields. By supplementing their English major
with computer classes, some find work in information technology. The skills
and knowledge acquired by an English major also provide good preparation
for government service, especially when combined with the study of foreign
languages, economics, political science, and history.
General Information
The Department of English strongly recommends that StDev 317, a 1-credit-hour
course, be taken at the end of the sophomore year or the beginning of
the junior year. Because liberal arts degrees provide preparation in a
variety of useful fields rather than a single career track, this course
is recommended to help liberal arts students focus on specific educational
and occupational goals and to identify the career options or educational
opportunities available to them. The course will introduce them to the
resources needed for accessing information about graduate schools, internships,
careers, and career development. Students will learn basic employment
strategies, including the steps necessary for obtaining employment related
to their own specialty.