Classes are scheduled one night a week for 18 weeks from 6:30 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. for Fall and Spring semesters. Summer semester classes are scheduled one night a week for an eight week period from 6:00 p.m. to 10 p.m.
| PRWR
6000: Issues and Research in Professional Writing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. (Students must take this course first.) This
course is the required core course in the Master of Arts in Professional
Writing (MAPW) program. It introduces students to the three program
concentrations—applied writing, composition and rhetoric, and creative
writing—by focusing on key issues, theories, and research methods
specific to each field as well as those that cut across all three
concentrations. The course provides the necessary foundation of
knowledge, skills, and practice—through a variety of readings on
contemporary issues and through discussion, critique, and application
of research methodologies—for students to complete MAPW requirements
and coursework within their concentration and support areas.
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PRWR
6100: Readings for Writers
(Repeatable) |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. The study of writers
describing their ways of writing and/or how others' writing has
influenced writers. This course studies the works listed as influential
and then examines the application of such influence in later texts.
Readings will vary, but will include literature, drama, poetry,
essays, journalism, and scientific and professional texts.
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| PRWR
6150: Context, Style, and Audience in Professional Writing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. A study of the ways
context, stylistic choices, and audience influence all areas of
writing in action, whether in the workplace, on the Internet, in
publishing, or in the classroom. Course will focus on the creation
of specific texts, many by the students themselves, with attention
to the rhetorical traditions behind all spoken and written acts.
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| PRWR
6240: Technical Writing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. An intensive workshop focused on creating technical documents for clients, consumers, and the general public. Topics addressed will include the history, function, theory, and ethical practice of technical writing. Students will become more capable and informed technical writers and potential leaders in their organizations. |
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| PRWR
6260: Managing Writing in Organizations |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. A foundational course introducing students to organizational writing and the planning that informs it. Students will learn to think creatively and systematically about the writing needs of businesses, nonprofit organizations, and government agencies. They will analyze the missions, constituencies, structures, and cultures of existing organizations to identify the most appropriate rhetorical strategies and products for organizations in their real-world contexts. Next, stuents will draft a plan for an organization, which may include a mission statement, key messages, organizational branding, a list of essential (print, electronic, audio, and video)documents, a yearly calendar of events and document releases, a budget and production plan, and a distribution plan for key documents. In addition, students will study how professional writers face situations that require ethical analysis and action to guard an organization's mission and reputation. The course will also inform students about careers available to organizational writers and the technologies they use in performing their work. |
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| PRWR 6280: Business and Technical Editing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. The study and practice of business and technical editing in texts found in corporate, engineering, government, high-tech, and scientific settings, including reports, proposals, manuals, company newsletters, and Internet web pages. Editorial responsibilities for document development, copyediting, and proofreading will be explored. Practice of electronic editing and hard copy editing will be stressed. |
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| PRWR
6300: Understanding Writing as Process |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. The study of the
concept of writing as a process and its implications for professional
writers in various creative, workplace, and instructional situations.
This course will focus on such questions as What happens when we
write? Can the processes by which individuals shape written texts
be observed, documented, and theorized? How does social context
affect writing processes? How does understanding writing as process
affect the teaching of writing? |
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| PRWR
6410: Feature Writing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. The study of the
principles and processes of news reporting and feature writing techniques,
including editorial writing, promotional communications, and informative
newspaper and magazine article writing. |
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| PRWR
6440: Professional and Academic Editing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. The study and practice
of professional and academic (trade, professional, educational,
and scholarly) editing for magazines, journals, books, and textbooks.
Editorial divisions of labor and approaches and responsibilities
of editors, along with the introduction to text development, acquisition,
and line editing. |
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| PRWR
6460: Fiction Writing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. Workshop course
in the writing of fiction. Short stories and novellas may be studied.
Small-group critique, one-to-one conferences, and peer revision
techniques may be used |
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| PRWR
6470: Poetry Writing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. Workshop course
in the writing of poetry. Study of traditional, free verse, haiku,
and experimental forms by means of small-group critique, one-to-one
conferences, and peer revision. |
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| PRWR
6480: Play Writing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. Workshop course
in the writing of drama. Study and practice in writing monologues
and dialogues, presenting stage directions, and the production of
one-act and multi-act dramatic works. |
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| PRWR
6490: Screen and Television Writing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. Workshop course
in writing for cinema, radio, and television. Study and practice
in effective screenplay writing techniques, on-air report writing,
on-screen news writing, and the principles of script writing, evaluation,
and promotion will be examined. |
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| PRWR
6500: Teaching Writing in High Schools and Colleges |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. An investigation
into the theories and practices that have shaped writing instruction
over the past thirty years. Students will examine student-centered
instruction, writing process theories, current methods of assessment,
technologies of writing, and other important advances in order to
produce curricular design for high school and college writing classes.
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| PRWR
6520: Creative Nonfiction |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. Readings from and
writing in creative or literary nonfiction, including the personal
essay, biography, travel writing, the research essay, and the nonfiction
novel. Attention to the history and development of the genre and
its subdivisions and to the markets for its manuscripts.
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| PRWR
6550: Document Design and Desktop Publishing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. Principles and
practice in computer-aided publishing. Examine word processing and
desktop publishing capabilities, develop graphic and text design
experience, explore the skills needed to produce professional quality
newsletters, brochures, reports, pamphlets, and books. |
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| PRWR
6650: Introduction to Literacy Studies |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. An overview of approaches
for studying and shaping literacy in a range of social contexts,
including workplaces, instructional settings, and the literary marketplace.
This course will explore competing definitions of literacy and their
implications for professional writers with students learning to
use research about literacy to enhance their work as professional
writers. |
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| PRWR
6750: Teaching Writing to Speakers of Other Languages |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. The study of the
theories and practices in the teaching writing to ESL writers. Emphasis
will be placed on second language acquisition of writing skills
and ESL composition techniques and principles for various ESL writing
situations. |
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| PRWR
6760: World Englishes |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. A study of the unprecedented
growth of English on a global scale. Course will examine the current
state of English in the world and the cultural/social factors that
have given rise to a number of different varieties of English in
the world. These varieties, attitudes towards them, and implications
for various written media of communication will be explored.
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| PRWR
6800: Careers in the Literary Arts |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. The first half of
the course will survey components that make up the literature field
and introduce the student to the management concerns in selected
components. The survey will inform the student about professional
and organization infrastructures that support the literary arts
in the United States and give the student theoretical and practical
knowledge concerning arts management. The second half of the course
will focus on the writer’s personal management. Grantsmanship and
fellowship writing as well as submissions-and-publications procedures,
literary promotions, and time management will be discussed.
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| PRWR
6850: Web Content Development |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. Study and practice
in writing and development of Web content for multiple, diverse
audiences in commercial
areas, such as e-business, public relations, and advertising; in
public service organizations, including nonprofit and government
organizations; and in the area of personal and career development.
Students will create their own professional e-portfolio and develop
Web content for commercial, nonprofit, or public organization. Course
topics will include site architecture, visual rhetoric, audience
analysis, collaboration with graphic designers to create Web pages,
ethics, accessibility for disabled users, corporate intranet design,
and international considerations. |
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| PRWR
6860: Intercultural Communication in Contexts |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. A study of written
communication across cultures. Course will use a case-studies format
to explore principles for effectively communicating in English across
different cultures. Topics will include document design for international
audiences, rhetorically sensitive strategies, issues of translation
and contrastive rhetoric. Students will be able to study a specific
type of written communication in a specific region or regions of
the world according to their interests and need. |
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| PRWR
7500: Advanced Creative Writing |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director, 6000-level creative writing course in the appropriate genre,
and permission of the instructor. Advanced
workshop course in either fiction, poetry, play, literary nonfiction,
or screen and television writing. Open only to students who have
already reached a fairly high level of accomplishment in the genre.
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| PRWR 7550: Advanced Applied Writing |
3-0-3.Repeatable Prerequisite: Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program Director; PRWR 6260 or permission of instructor.
This advanced applied writing course builds on the lessons of PRWR 6260 and is intended for students studying applied writing. Focusing each semester on a significant topic in applied writing, the course will offer students advanced, in-depth study of subjects critical to organizational writers such as grant and proposal writing, organizational writing for external audiences, organizational writing for internal audiences, and instruction in multimedia writing. The course will involve substantial service-learning writing assignments to prepare students for careers as professional writers in corporate, nonprofit, and governmental organizations. Students will collaborate with clients and classmates as they plan, draft, and finalize short, long, and electronic texts. In addition to reading and critiquing written texts, each course will include appearances by guest speakers whose current and previous employment experiences provide insights into the careers of those who write for organizations. PRWR 6260 or permission of instructor. |
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| PRWR
7600: MAPW Practical Internship |
| (Up to six
hours may be used to satisfy MAPW degree requirements)
1-6. Prerequisite: Admission to the
MAPW program and permission of Graduate Program Director and/or
faculty supervisor.
Guided and supervised practical experience
in one concentration of the MAPW Program. |
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PRWR
7900: Special Topics
(Repeatable) |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director. Exploration of
a specifically designed topic. |
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PRWR
7950: MAPW Directed Study
(Repeatable once) |
| 3-0-3. Prerequisite:
Admission to the MAPW program, or permission of the Graduate Program
Director, PRWR 6000, and a graduate course in the field of the directed
study. An intensive, advanced
investigation of selected topics deriving from individual course
of study. The content will be determined jointly by the instructor,
the student, and the student’s advisor. The proposed course of study
must be submitted to the Graduate Director by a deadline published
each term for MAPW Committee approval. |
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| PRWR
7960: MAPW Capstone Project |
| 1-6. Completion
of 27 credit hours in the MAPW program and at least four courses in
the concentration; approval of capstone project. A
project designated as a thesis, portfolio or practicum and accompanied
by a rationale for its purpose and design that involves electronic
and/or print media and is relevant to the student’s concentration
in professional writing. After submitting an approved capstone proposal,
the candidate works under the direction and advice of two faculty
members to produce the project. The candidate must submit the capstone
project at least two weeks before either 1) a discussion about the
project with the faculty committee, or 2) a public presentation
about the project or a reading from the project for an audience
of faculty and peers. The candidate will consult with the capstone
committee chair and committee member about which option to choose.
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