Department: English

CodeNameDescription
ASD 4Study Lab B&H StudyStudy Lab B&H Study
ASD 5Study Lab Soc 1005Study Lab Soc 1005
ASD 8Coll Skills I EslColl Skills I Esl
ASD 9Study Lab ReadingStudy Lab Reading
ASD 11Study Lab in Psychology 1001This course focuses on the application of study strategies for PSY 1001. The lab includes reading and study strategies, techniques for mastering the technical vocabulary of the discipline, and researching and test-taking skills.
ASD 15Study Lab in MusicStudy Lab in Music
ASD 16Study Lab In WritingStudy Lab In Writing
ASD 17College Reading ICollege Reading I
ASD 18College Reading IICollege Reading II
ASD 23Study Lab - Bus 1000Study Lab - Bus 1000
ASD 32Study Lab Pub AdminStudy Lab Pub Admin
ASD 81Bas Col Read Non-NatBas Col Read Non-Nat
ASD 83Coll Read I Non-NatColl Read I Non-Nat
ASD 85Coll Read II Non-NatColl Read II Non-Nat
ASD 116Intnsv Workshop WritIntnsv Workshop Writ
CCS 1Communication Skills ICommunication Skills I
CCS 2Communication Skills IICommunication Skills II
CED 1Study Lab In HistoryStudy Lab In History
CED 5Study Lab SOC 1005Study Lab SOC 1005
CED 6Study Laboratory in AnthropologyStudy Laboratory in Anthropology
CED 8College Skills I English As a second LanguageCollege Skills I English As a second Language
CED 9Study Lab ReadingStudy Lab Reading
CED 10Study Lab In ArtStudy Lab In Art
CED 11Study Lab Psychology 1001Study Lab Psychology 1001
CED 12Study Laboratory in MathematicsStudy Laboratory in Mathematics
CED 15Study Lab in MusicStudy Lab in Music
CED 16Study Lab in WritingStudy Lab in Writing
CED 17College Skills ICollege Skills I
CED 18College Skills IICollege Skills II
CED 19Study Lab English 1900Study Lab English 1900
CED 20Study Lab in English 1950Study Lab in English 1950
CED 22Study Lab in Economics 1002Study Lab in Economics 1002
CED 23Study Lab in BUS 1000Study Lab in BUS 1000
CED 31Study Lab in Political Science 1101Study Lab in Political Science 1101
CED 32Study Lab in Public AdministrationStudy Lab in Public Administration
CED 33Study Lab in LawStudy Lab in Law
CED 34Study Lab in PhilosophyStudy Lab in Philosophy
CED 39Study Lab in BiologyStudy Lab in Biology
CED 85College Skills English as a Second Language IICollege Skills English as a Second Language II
CED 87Study Lab in ListeningStudy Lab in Listening
CLT 43Literature of Latin AmericaLiterature of Latin America
CSTE 100Cs - Basic Wrtg Lv 1Cs - Basic Wrtg Lv 1
CSTE 102Cs-Bsc Wrt ESL Level ICs-Bsc Wrt ESL Level I
CSTE 112Basic Writing ESL IIBasic Writing ESL II
CSTE 150Basic Writing Tutor lBasic Writing Tutor l
ENG 1Engl Placement 0132Engl Placement 0132
ENG 2English Placement E0132English Placement E0132
ENG 3English Placement 0152English Placement 0152
ENG 4Engl Placement 2100Engl Placement 2100
ENG 5Gram Prince&WrtgGram Prince&Wrtg
ENG 100Basic Writing IBasic Writing I
ENG 102Basic Writing ESL Living IBasic Writing ESL Living I
ENG 112Bsc Writ ESL Lev 1bBsc Writ ESL Lev 1b
ENG 132Basic Writing (English as a Second Language)ENG 132 is for non-native speakers of English who have not passed the CUNY/ACT Writing Skills Test (ACT). It is designed to develop fluency and effectiveness in writing at the short-essay level, to promote significant acquisition of vocabulary and id...
ENG 150Basic Writing IIBasic Writing II
ENG 152Bsc Wrtng ESL Lvl IVBsc Wrtng ESL Lvl IV
ENG 153Basic Writing ESL Level IIIBsc Wrt ESL Lev III
ENG 160College LiteracyCollege Literacy
ENG 600Eng As Secnd LangEng As Secnd Lang
ENG 1000War Image & RealityWar Image & Reality
ENG 1020Sex Romance & RlismSex Romance & Rlism
ENG 1040God Lit & ReligGod Lit & Relig
ENG 1060Images Of SuccessImages Of Success
ENG 1080Fem As Subj & ObjectFem As Subj & Object
ENG 1100Cur Gen In Amer CultCur Gen In Amer Cult
ENG 1120Writer & The CityWriter & The City
ENG 1200Modern TroubadoursModern Troubadours
ENG 1220Freudian InterpFreudian Interp
ENG 1240Mythic PatternsMythic Patterns
ENG 1300Maj Genr Eng/Cont LtMaj Genr Eng/Cont Lt
ENG 1400Eng & Cont Lit IEng & Cont Lit I
ENG 1450Eng & Cont Lit IIEng & Cont Lit II
ENG 1500American Lit IAmerican Lit I
ENG 1550American Lit IIAmerican Lit II
ENG 1600Third-World LitThird-World Lit
ENG 1620Ethnic LiteratureEthnic Literature
ENG 1640Surv Afro-Amer LitSurv Afro-Amer Lit
ENG 1800Grt Works West Lit IGrt Works West Lit I
ENG 1850Grt Wrks West Lit IIGrt Wrks West Lit II
ENG 1900Eng As 2nd Lang IEng As 2nd Lang I
ENG 1950Eng As 2nd Lang IIEng As 2nd Lang II
ENG 2000CompositionComposition
ENG 2001Intro Comp Non-EslIntro Comp Non-Esl
ENG 2002Intro Comp Esl IIntro Comp Esl I
ENG 2003Intro Comp Esl IIIntro Comp Esl II
ENG 2005College Now: From Page to StageA select group of high school students studies a major dramatic text that will be produced in New York City during the summertime. Working with a team of scholar-teachers, students discover how close textual analysis guides and informs theatrical per...
ENG 2021Early Modern EuropeEarly Modern Europe
ENG 2050CompositionComposition
ENG 2052Intro Comp Esl IIIIntro Comp Esl III
ENG 2053Intro Comp Esl IVIntro Comp Esl IV
ENG 2100Writing IThis is an intensive course introducing students to writing as a means of discovery. In Writing I students practice and share their written articulation of ideas as a community of writers. Students read a variety of intellectually challenging and the...
ENG 2100HHonors Writing IThis is an intensive course introducing students to writing as a means of discovery. In Writing I students practice and share their written articulation of ideas as a community of writers. Students read a variety of intellectually challenging and the...
ENG 2100TWriting IEnglish 2100T is intended for multilingual/ multidialectal speakers of English who have met the University requirements for freshman composition but are in need of additional support in language development. The course is equivalent to English 2100,...
ENG 2150Writing IIWriting II is an intensification of Writing I. This course encourages students to read, reflect on, write about, and synthesize ideas from a range of genres and literary forms. Students examine and learn how to employ different styles, various approp...
ENG 2150HHonors - Writing IIWriting II is an intensification of Writing I. This course encourages students to read, reflect on, write about, and synthesize ideas from a range of genres and literary forms. Students examine and learn how to employ different styles, various approp...
ENG 2150TWriting IIThis course is intended for multilingual/ multidialectal speakers of English who have met the University requirements for freshman composition but are in need of additional support in language development. English 2150T is equivalent to English 2150,...
ENG 2200Literature and Economic PerspectivesA study of selected literary works in which economic themes figure prominently. Readings are historically, nationally, and generically diversified, with examples from such authors as Daniel Defoe, Anton Chekhov, Thomas Mann, Ezra Pound, Arthur Mille...
ENG 2201Topics in Politics and LiteratureThis course examines the relation of politics to literature, focusing in different semesters on questions such as What can literature teach us about politics?; What literatures emerge from politics?; and What is the impact of politics on literature?...
ENG 2300Children's LiteratureThis course surveys the history of literature written for children. Discussion is primarily based on critical analysis of myths and traditional stories, modern fairy tales, classics, ethnic stories, poetry, modern realism, and new literary trends. Th...
ENG 2400Film Art and LiteratureThe course explores the process of artistic adaptation by examining how filmmakers bring novels, short stories, plays, and poems from the page to the screen. It highlights the distinctive ways film and literature tell stories, portray character, and...
ENG 2450The Art of FilmThis course introduces students to the film medium by exploring a wide range of cinematic and narrative techniques. Focusing on artistic innovation and visual style, we study how such cinematic elements as framing, camera movement, editing, and sound...
ENG 2460The Factual Film from Propaganda to DocudramaThis course explores non-fiction film and video. Drawing on international sources, it explores the documentary, the news film, the compilation film, and video productions. The course addresses such fundamental questions as: What is propaganda? Is obj...
ENG 2470Women In FilmWomen In Film
ENG 2500Perspectives on the NewsThis is a course in reading and analyzing the news. By examining how news is reported and shaped, students improve their writing skills, heighten their awareness of effective communication, and gain insight into the impact of the news media in Americ...
ENG 2510Practicum: Radio Programming, Production, and Management (Experimental Course)Under the tutelage of professionals in the field, students enrolled in this intensive practicum learn the basics of operating a college radio station with respect to programming (news, music, and ad hoc special programming), production (including eng...
ENG 2520Broadcast News RadioBroadcast News Radio
ENG 2530Broadcast News ProdBroadcast News Prod
ENG 2550Journal WritingJournal Writing
ENG 2600Narration-Short StorNarration-Short Stor
ENG 2610Fiction WorkshopFiction Workshop
ENG 2630Wkshp: Dram WrtngWkshp: Dram Wrtng
ENG 2640Writing Of PoetryWriting Of Poetry
ENG 2650Wkshp: Flm&Tv WrtngWkshp: Flm&Tv Wrtng
ENG 2660Wksp: Wrtng Of CritWksp: Wrtng Of Crit
ENG 2700Study Of LanguageStudy Of Language
ENG 2750History of the English LanguageSee Department for Description.
ENG 2800Great Works of Literature IThis course presents a global approach to literature by introducing a variety of narrative, lyric, and dramatic forms representative of different cultures and historical periods, from ancient times through the sixteenth century. Specific choices depe...
ENG 2800HHon Great Works of Lit IThis course presents a global approach to literature by introducing a variety of narrative, lyric, and dramatic forms representative of different cultures and historical periods, from ancient times through the 16th century. Specific choices depend up...
ENG 2800TGreat Works of Literature IGreat Works of Literature I
ENG 2801Great Works TutorialGreat Works Tutorial
ENG 2850Great Works of Literature IIThis course presents a global approach to literature by introducing a variety of narrative, lyric, and dramatic forms representative of different cultures and historical periods, from the seventeenth century to the present. Specific choices depend up...
ENG 2850HHonors Great Works IIThis course presents a global approach to literature by introducing a variety of narrative, lyric, and dramatic forms representative of different cultures and historical periods, from ancient times through the sixteenth century. Specific choices depe...
ENG 2850TGreat Works Lit IIGreat Works Lit II
ENG 2851Great Works TutorialGreat Works Tutorial
ENG 2900Lit Mov In Eng Lit ILit Mov In Eng Lit I
ENG 2920Lit Mov In Eng Lt IILit Mov In Eng Lt II
ENG 2950Amer Lit IAmer Lit I
ENG 2960Amer Lit IIAmer Lit II
ENG 2970Third World LitThird World Lit
ENG 2972Ethnic LiteratureEthnic Literature
ENG 2974Surv Afro Amer LitSurv Afro Amer Lit
ENG 2976Post Colonial LiteraturePost Colonial Literature
ENG 3000Feature Artcl WritngFeature Artcl Writng
ENG 3001Naked EnglishThe form, variety, and extraordinary possibilities of the English sentence; from the simple to the advanced; for the subject matter of this course, one that examines how sentences are put together, how they work, and how they carry power to persuade...
ENG 3005Introduction to Literary StudiesThrough the study of various literary genres and critical methods, students will learn to identify the defining characteristics of literary genres, develop a working vocabulary of literary terms, practice close reading and other modes of reading and...
ENG 3010Survey of English Literature IThe course surveys the development of literature written in English, from its beginnings through the seventeenth century. Major works to be studied include Beowulf, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, Shakespearean drama, and Milton's Paradise Lost.
ENG 3015Survey of English Literature IIThis course surveys the development of English literature from the eighteenth century to the present. To be studied are such major authors as Blake, Wordsworth, Keats, and other Romantics; the Bront's, Browning, Dickens, and other Victorians; Joyce,...
ENG 3020Survey of American Literature IThis course explores the development of American literature, both prose and poetry, from its beginnings in Native American oral forms through the Civil War. Included is the literature of discovery and exploration, of abolition, and of American trans...
ENG 3025Survey of American Literature IIThis course explores the development of American literature, including prose, poetry, and drama, from the Civil War to the present. To be studied are such writers as Mark Twain, Henry James, Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. DuBois, Stephen Crane, Edith W...
ENG 3030Contemporary Literature From Asia, Africa, and Latin AmericaThis course examines major themes in the contemporary literature of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. It focuses on poems, short stories, novels, and plays by Nobel Laureates like Naguib Mahfouz, Octavio Paz, Wole Soyinka, and Rabindranath Tagore, as...
ENG 3032Ethnic LiteratureThis course studies important works from prominent racial and ethnic minorities of the United States, with emphasis on the contributions of these minorities to American culture.
ENG 3034A Survey of African American LiteratureThis course charts the development of African American literature from the 18th century to the present in the context of the complex dynamic of resistance and collaboration that helped to shape the culture, politics, creative imagination, and selfide...
ENG 3036Post-Colonial LiteratureThis course examines postcolonial literary texts written in English,specific to nations and regions that were once European colonies,especially in Africa, Asia, Australia, and the Caribbean. The focus is onliterature of empire, especially, but not li...
ENG 3038Survey of Caribbean Literature in English (Cross-listed with BLS & LTT)This course charts the development of Caribbean literature in English from the 19th century to the present and emphasizes its formal and thematic aspects. Special attention is given to the influence of Caribbean Geography and Caribbean history on its...
ENG 3040Children's LiteratureThis course surveys the history of literature written for children. Discussion is primarily based on critical analysis of myths and traditional stories, modern fairy tales, classics, ethnic stories, poetry, modern realism, and new literary trends. Th...
ENG 3045Literature for Young AdultsYoung adult literature addresses readers between the ages 12 and 20 who seek intellectual stimulation, pleasure and self-discovery. In this course, students will read historical and realistic fiction, fantasies, poetry, and biographies and autobiogra...
ENG 3050Journalistic WritingA course geared to giving the student a command of the business language. It will introduce the most common vocabulary of the basic business topics and provide the student with a thorough review of the structure of the language.
ENG 3058Introduction to Science WritingIntroduction to Science Writing
ENG 3060Feature Article WritingThis course is intended for students who wish to learn how to write for general magazines as well as for specialized journals. Stress is placed on an analysis of magazines and markets, techniques for writing effective query letters, methods of resear...
ENG 3064PhotojournalismStudents combine skills learned in photography and journalism courses to complete several short photojournalistic essay/assignments as well as a larger final essay. Areas of study include visual imagery, theories, techniques, and the history of the s...
ENG 3065Electronic Research Methods and Resources for WritersThis course explores the impact of information research on writing. Students develop proficiency in evaluating, identifying, and using relevant print and electronic sources to locate business, government, biographical, political, social, and statisti...
ENG 3100Copy EditingThis course provides hands-on practice in preparing articles for publication in newspapers, magazines, and electronic media. Students learn to write headlines and captions, check facts and grammar assess fairness and accuracy, and guard against poten...
ENG 3150Business CommunicationThis is a course in the concepts, tools, and skills of basic business communication, both written and spoken. Using the case study method, the course offers practical experience in researching business problems, editing, and using language to reach d...
ENG 3200Business and Financial WritingThis hands-on course is designed to develop students' skills in reporting, researching, and writing business stories and to expand their knowledge of the business world. Intensive writing and reporting is involved; students will write each week, both...
ENG 3201Topics in Politics and LiteratureThis course examines the relation of politics to literature; focusing in different semesters on questions such as What can literature teach us about politics? What literatures emerge from politics? What is the impact of politics on literature? Ficti...
ENG 3210Television Journalism Basics IThis course exposes students to the central production and reportage techniques involved in television news reporting. The course emphasizes person-on-the-street interview segments. Students learn how to handle the tripod and camera and become adept...
ENG 3215Literature and GlobalizationThis course examines the intersections between globalization and literature,with a particular focus on how globalization has affected¿and, in turn, beenaffected by¿narrative fiction. We will devote particular attention to analyzingthe different narra...
ENG 3220Media EthicsIn this course, students examine a range of legal and ethical issues that arise in the media and learn to apply moral reasoning to complex questions. Examining case studies from the professional world and surveying ethical theory. Students consider...
ENG 3260The Art of FilmThis course surveys the principles of film form and explores the varied ways in which film conveys meaning. Through screenings of feature films, documentaries, and short films -- narrative and non-narrative, live action and animated -- students exami...
ENG 3270Film and LiteratureThe course explores the process of artistic adaptation by examining how filmmakers bring novels, short stories, plays, and poems from the page to the screen. It highlights the distinctive ways film and literature tells stories, portrays character, an...
ENG 3280Documentary FilmThis course reviews the historical development of documentary films and explores the ethical responsibilities of the documentary filmmaker, the use of the camera as a tool of political and social activism, and the role of documentary as an art form....
ENG 3285Women in FilmThis course explores women's contributions to the development of film. It analyzes the on-camera image of women and their behind-the-camera contributions as directors, producers, screenwriters, and editors. It emphasizes how dominant stereotypes of w...
ENG 3290The Holocaust and FilmThis course examines the cinematic representations of the Holocaust. We explorefilms that are used as propaganda; created to represent an aspect of the Holocaust; part of Hollywood feature films; documentaries; comedies; a combination of memoir and f...
ENG 3300Science CommunicationThis course focuses on understanding scientific, medical, environmental, and technical information and expressing it in clear and concise English. It is designed for those who seek proficiency in reporting and writing science journalism, science-rela...
ENG 3400Journalistic Criticism and ReviewingWhat kind of expertise does a reviewer have to bring to an object of criticism? What makes a review more than a mere blurt of opinion? How does a writer both describe and comment upon a work in a limited amount of space and on a tight deadline? These...
ENG 3400HHonors Journalism CriticismWhat kind of expertise does a reviewer have to bring to an object of criticism? What makes a review more than a mere blurt of opinion? How does a writer both describe and comment upon a work in a limited amount of space and on a tight deadline? These...
ENG 3500Advanced Reporting and Writing: <br />Cyberspace, Databases, and Other SourcesThis course is concerned with the utilization of quantitative principles for decision-making in management. Primary emphasis is upon development of the concepts and criteria used in making decisions and the use of the model-building approach. Various...
ENG 3600Creative JournalismWhat must a journalist do to move beyond the bare bones of the news? How does the journalist, trained to gather facts and evidence, achieve a personal style that is both honest and imaginative? The class explores how creative journalists combine the...
ENG 3600HHonors - Creative JournalismWhat must a journalist do to move beyond the bare bones of the news? How does the journalist, trained to gather facts and evidence, achieve a personal style that is both honest and imaginative? The class explores how creative journalists combine the...
ENG 3610Workshop: Fiction WritingThis workshop aids students to craft short stories out of their creative ideas. Early emphasis is placed on journal entries, in-class exercises, and sensory writing practice. Techniques of characterization, setting, description, dialogue, and pacing...
ENG 3610HHonors - Workshop Fiction WritingThis workshop aids students to craft short stories out of their creative ideas. Early emphasis is placed on journal entries, in-class exercises, and sensory writing practice. Techniques of characterization, setting, description, dialogue, and pacing...
ENG 3615Sudden Fiction / Crafting Short Short StoriesThis workshop introduces students to the art of writing "sudden" fiction --short stories of less than 1,000 words. In addition to the basic elements of fiction, students will study symbolism, spare prose, selective omission and subtext as key devices...
ENG 3630Workshop: PlaywritingThis course provides beginning and advanced playwrights with practical techniques for developing works for the stage. Concentrating on the dynamics of live human interaction as the substance of drama, the course emphasizes the structure of action and...
ENG 3630HHonors Playwriting WorksThis course provides beginning and advanced playwrights with practical techniques for developing works for the stage. Concentrating on the dynamics of live human interaction as the substance of drama, the course emphasizes the structure of action and...
ENG 3640Elements of Poetry: Presenting Subject MatterThis is a course in using and mastering language and the art of metaphor. Students find their own poetic voices by perceiving worldly objects and then transforming those perceptions into poetic images that reflect their own deepest emotions. While s...
ENG 3645The Craft of Poetry: Form and RevisionThis is a course about form in poetry - from the line to the stanza and beyond. Students write and rewrite their poems, experimenting with freer and set forms such as sonnets, villanelles, and haiku, studying and emulating poems by writers like Dove...
ENG 3645HHonors - The Craft of Poetry: Form and RevisionThis is a course about form in poetry - from the line to the stanza and beyond. Students write and rewrite their poems, experimenting with freer and set forms such as sonnets, villanelles, and haiku, studying and emulating poems by writers like Dove,...
ENG 3650Workshop: Film WritingThis course focuses on adapting story ideas to the particular demands of moving pictures. Students learn basic film grammar and the power of the juxtaposition of images and sound in telling a story. Students write extensive character biographies, out...
ENG 3680Advanced Essay Writing: Style & Styles in ProseThe goal of this course is to expand the writer's sense of style by increasing sensitivity to tools such as metaphor, humor, irony, and voice. Through assigned readings and class discussions, individual and small group conferences with the professor,...
ENG 3685Lyrics as LiteratureThis course explores the varied ways song lyrics function as literature, within historical and social contexts. It highlights the distinctive elements this genre draws from literary techniques and traditions, and also examines new and innovative form...
ENG 3700Introduction to Linguistics and Language LearningThe course is an introduction to fundamental concepts of linguistics. Students explore the diversity, creativity, and open-endedness of language and how philosophers and language enthusiasts have for centuries attempted to understand its organization...
ENG 3710Post Colonial LitPost Colonial Lit
ENG 3720Women in LiteratureThis course examines the presence of women in literature as both authors and subjects. How do literary works represent and challenge the traditional social roles assigned to women? How have novels, poetry, and plays shaped powerful cultural myths of...
ENG 3730Literature and PsychologyLiterature has always provided psychologists a source of insights into human behavior, just as psychological theories have offered different perspectives on literature. This course will examine the interplay between psychological theories and literar...
ENG 3730HHonors - Literature and PsychologyLiterature has always provided psychologists a source of insights into human behavior, just as psychological theories have offered different perspectives on literature. This course will examine the interplay between psychological theories and literar...
ENG 3750The Structure and History of EnglishThe course covers modern analyses of the phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics of American English, and the historical developments that led it through the stages of Old,Middle, and Modern English. It describes how English sounds ar...
ENG 3770Masters of the Modern Drama: Ibsen through Tennessee WilliamsThis course examines the revolutionary plays of Ibsen, Strindberg, Chekhov, and Shaw and their achievements in destroying old forms and creating twentieth-century drama. It considers the social, political, and psychological ideas advanced by these th...
ENG 3780Contemporary Drama: The New TheatreThis course traces contemporary drama's remarkable history of experiments with new and powerful techniques of dramatizing and analyzing human behavior. The emphasis is on groundbreaking works from provocative contemporary playwrights, such as Harold...
ENG 3800Environmental ReportingThis course exposes students to an array of local, national, and international environmental issues that will serve as a basis for analysis and reporting. Students will focus on environmental problems facing metropolitan New York such as solid waste...
ENG 3810Holocaust LiteratureThe Holocaust, the destruction of European Jewry, is often termed an unspeakable,unimaginable, and unrepresentable event. Through a selection of eyewitnesstestimony, novels, stories, poetry, and art, this course examines how such workscontribute to o...
ENG 3820The American Short StoryThe history of the American short story is a remarkable record of our literary and cultural development. This course explores the popularity and ideas of this genre as reflected in such writers as Irving, Hawthorne, Poe, Melville, James, Crane, Whart...
ENG 3830Tradition and Influence in African American LiteratureThis course examines the various forms of African American literature, the traditions that they embody, and the ways in which writers perpetuate and revise these traditions. Selected readings demonstrate how early writers influence their successors e...
ENG 3835Black Women WritersThe course examines the oral and written literature of Afro-American women from the eighteenth century through the present. An exploration of the numerous genres employed by Black women writers - slave narratives, autobiography, fiction, poetry, and...
ENG 3840Literature and Philosophy of South AsiaThis course surveys the philosophical bases of the major religions that originated in South Asia (Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism) and others that were introduced into South Asia (notably, Islam, Christianity, Judaism, and Zoroastrianism) an...
ENG 3850Law and LiteratureThis course explores law in literature and law as literature. Themes of justice and bias and the limits of the law will be investigated in a range of literary texts, from Shakespeare to Melville, Wollstonecraft to Morrison, Coetzee, and Danticat. In...
ENG 3900Topics in JournalismThis course studies timely and complex journalistic issues, allowing for close, up-to-the-minute examination of their impact on reportorial decisions and their presentation in print and broadcast news. From semester to semester topics will vary; repr...
ENG 3940Topics in FilmThis course provides an opportunity to study important filmmakers, genres, national cinemas, and themes not found or only touched on in other film courses. Representative subjects include the films of Ingmar Bergman, Asian cinema, Eastern European fi...
ENG 3940HHonors - Topics in FilmThis course will explore representations and manifestations of fear, anxiety, and paranoia in American films between the end of WWII and the present. We will consider the ways in which films speak to broader cultural anxieties particular to specific...
ENG 3950Topics in LiteratureThis course provides an opportunity to study important literary themes, genres, periods, or authors not found or only touched on in other courses. This format allows for an intensive examination of these topics, which may vary from semester to semest...
ENG 3950HHonors - Topics In LiteratureThis course provides an opportunity to study important literary themes, genres, periods, or authors not found or only touched on in other courses. This format allows for an intensive examination of these topics, which may vary from semester to semest...
ENG 3960Topics in LanguageThis course provides an opportunity to study important concepts in language and linguistics not found or only touched on in other courses. This format allows for an intensive investigation of these topics, which may vary from semester to semester. Re...
ENG 4010Advanced Tech PoetryAdvanced Tech Poetry
ENG 4011Literary TheoryThis course is a historical survey of literary theory, beginning with its origins in the writings of Plato and Aristotle on poetics and rhetoric. The development of theory is traced chronologically through Renaissance hermeneutics and humanism, Roman...
ENG 4015The Globalization of EnglishThis course analyzes how the English language aids globalization and how globalization changes English. After studying the historical and geographical bases for the rise of English, we explore the implications of decolonization, diaspora communities,...
ENG 4020Approaches to Modern CriticismA study of modern theory in its relation to earlier critical concepts from Sir Philip Sidney to Edmund Wilson. Discussions of the nature of poetry, drama, and fiction, with practical criticism of specific examples in required papers.This course may s...
ENG 4020HHonors Approaches to Modern CriticismA study of modern theory in its relation to earlier critical concepts from Sir Philip Sidney to Edmund Wilson. Discussions of the nature of poetry, drama, and fiction, with practical criticism of specific examples in required papers.This course may s...
ENG 4030StylisticsStylistics
ENG 4100Early English LiteratureAn intensive examination of the literary production in England from the Anglo-Saxons to Chaucer with emphasis on religious, romantic, social, political, literary, and linguistic themes to be varied from semester to semester: The Epic Hero; The Chris...
ENG 4110Medieval LiteratureThis course surveys the literary production in Europe and the Middle East from the advent of Christianity to the fall of Byzantium, covering approximately a thousand years of linguistic evolution. Students are invited to explore medieval quests in th...
ENG 4120ChaucerThis course is devoted to an intensive study of the Canterbury Tales, a work that founds the English literary tradition. Chaucer's masterpiece contains a series of stories ranging from serious and pious to amorous and humorous. The work enriches cont...
ENG 4130Renaissance Literature: NondramaticThis course studies the development of poetry and prose in 16th and 17th-centuryEngland in relation to major and influential works and figures from continental Europe. Topics include the rise of Humanism; translation and imitation; the popularity of...
ENG 4140ShakespeareThis course surveys Shakespeare’s development of his characteristic themes and dramatic strategies through a close study of representative plays. Filmed versions of individual works may supplement class discussion when appropriate.This course may ser...
ENG 4140HHonors - ShakespeareThis course surveys Shakespeare’s development of his characteristic themes and dramatic strategies through a close study of representative plays. Filmed versions of individual works may supplement class discussion when appropriate.This course may ser...
ENG 4145Topics in ShakespeareThis course offers in-depth study of a single aspect of Shakespeare’s work, such as his use of sources, his lyric poetry, his Roman plays, his late Romances, his major tragedies, or his afterlives in adaptations or on film. Students will develop expe...
ENG 4145HHonors - Topics in ShakespeareThis course offers in-depth study of a single aspect of Shakespeare’s work, such as his use of sources, his lyric poetry, his Roman plays, his late Romances, his major tragedies, or his afterlives in adaptations or on film. Students will develop expe...
ENG 4150Renaissance DramaThis course surveys the flourishing of dramatic literature in the Renaissance. It frames drama’s development in terms of stage practices and stylistic innovations, and it tracks plays’ engagement with the period’s cultural, political, economic, and r...
ENG 4160Renaissance PoetryThis course examines the range of poetry produced in England in the sixteenth- and seventeenth centuries. It surveys Renaissance poetry in its literary, cultural, and political contexts. Readings include foundational works in poetry and poetics, expe...
ENG 4170MiltonThis course studies of the life, times, and works of John Milton from different points of view. Topics will vary from semester to semester.This course may serve as the capstone for the liberal arts English minor.
ENG 4200Business Press Coverage of Politics and PolicyThis course equips students to examine the interaction between business and government as it really occurs. Students learn to gauge the impact lobbyists, corporate support for public events, and business organizations; to track the movement of powerf...
ENG 4210The Eighteenth-Century NovelBefore the eighteenth century, the novel in English didn't exist; by the end of the century, novel reading was so popular that critics worried that readers were neglecting their jobs and families in favor of the latest bestseller. This course focuses...
ENG 4220A Century of Muckraking: Investigating Corporations, Corruption, and Governmental CrooksThis course will examine the impact, both positive and negative, of the muckraking trend in American journalism over the last century by considering work by journalists from Ida Tarbell to Michael Moore. In class discussions and short writing assignm...
ENG 4230Major Topics in Restoration and Eighteenth-Century LiteratureAn exploration of the popular literature that developed in England between 1660 and 1775; topics, which may vary from semester to semester, include Restoration comedy, Augustan satire, and the emergence of new prose forms - journalism, biography, his...
ENG 4300RomanticismThis course will study the literature of the age of the French Revolution and the Industrial Revolution (1790-1830), a period which produced powerful imaginative works probing the recesses of the psyche and envisioning radical social transformation....
ENG 4310Victorian LiteratureThis course examines nineteenth-century British poetry and prose works in cultural and historical context. Renowned for its proliferation of the novel, this period also saw a tremendous outpouring of creative energy in poetry and nonfiction prose, as...
ENG 4320The Nineteenth-Century English NovelThe novel was the most popular literary form in nineteenth-century England and continues to shape contemporary expectations of story-telling and character. Writers of the period used fiction to explore challenging issues of the day: poverty, industr...
ENG 4360Aestheticism and DecadenceThis course surveys the Aesthetic and Decadent movements, the late-nineteenth-century writers and artists who believed that the highest human value lies in art and beauty. The paradox that the sense of “decadence” and cultural decline generated new a...
ENG 4380Oscar WildeThis course considers Oscar Wilde’s life and writings in the context of late-Victorian England, renowned as much for its scandalous challenges to the status quo as for its excessive concern for propriety. Wilde’s comic masterpiece The Importance of B...
ENG 4400Brit Poetry Fr 1900Brit Poetry Fr 1900
ENG 4410Modern Irish WritersW.B. Yeats, James Joyce, Sean O'Casey, John Montague, Thomas Kinsella, and Samuel Beckett. This course will deal with, among other issues, Irish Nationalism, the Rising, the Civil War, the Border, and the Abbey Theatre. Appropriate films will be util...
ENG 4420Twentieth-Century British LiteratureA multi-genre examination of works of literary, cultural, and historical significance, this course will discuss such movements as high modernism, post-war realism, and postmodernism, as well as recent literary developments on the British Isles. Poetr...
ENG 4440Currents in the Modern NovelThis course examines remarkable innovations in the art of the modern English and American novel. Writers of the first half of the twentieth century created dazzling and challenging techniques by which to explore the society, politics, and psychology...
ENG 4440HHonors - Currents in the Modern NovelThis course examines remarkable innovations in the art of the modern English and American novel. Writers of the first half of the twentieth century created dazzling and challenging techniques by which to explore the society, politics, and psychology...
ENG 4450The Modern Short StorySignificant short stories of the twentieth century. Faulkner, Joyce, Cather, Mansfield, Kafka, and others will be studied, explicated, and discussed with emphasis on symbol, myth, and relationships to nineteenth-century forerunners in the short story...
ENG 4460The Modern Short NovelThis course analyzes short novels by writers such as James, Conrad, Lagerkvist, Camus, Gide, Mann, Wright, Bellow, Hesse, and Roth. This course may serve as the capstone for the liberal arts English minor.
ENG 4470Modern DramaModern Drama
ENG 4480TragicomedyTragicomedy
ENG 4490Amer In The MoviesAmer In The Movies
ENG 4500The Main Currents of Literary Expression in Contemporary AmericaIncluding the Jewish-American school, the Beat Generation, poetry of confession, and experimental fiction. Bellow, Malamud, Mailer, Ginsberg, Jones, Lowell, Roethke, Updike, and Nabokov are included.This course may serve as the capstone for the liber...
ENG 4510The American NovelA study of American themes selected from works of Hawthorne, Melville, Howells, Norris, Crane, James, Dreiser, Faulkner, Hemingway, Salinger, Farrell, Heller, Mailer, and others. This course may serve as the capstone for the liberal arts English mino...
ENG 4520Amer Short StoryAmer Short Story
ENG 4525Readings In Queer Literature, Media, and TheoryThis course explores queer lives,cultures, and histories asrepresented by literary authors,filmmakers, and theoreticians. Bystudying the artifacts and textsabout or attesting to the survival ofqueer people, we will come tounderstand what has given fo...
ENG 4530Black Amer LitBlack Amer Lit
ENG 4535African Diasporas: U.S., Latin America, and the CaribbeanConsidering the movement of people from Africa to the “New World” beginning with the 15th century to the present, this course examines the character of Black African diasporas in the U.S., Latin America, and the Caribbean from a variety of perspectiv...
ENG 4540Studies in American PoetryThis course focuses on American poetry, with particular emphasis on one or more of the modern and contemporary periods, and considers how American poets have responded to evolving poetic traditions and a dynamic cultural landscape. Likely topics incl...
ENG 4545Literature of the Harlem RenaissanceThis course examines the major literary works of the Harlem Renaissance and the historical, sociological, and intellectual contexts underlying the flowering of black creativity in the early decades of the twentieth century. Attention is given to a va...
ENG 4550The American Experience Through Immigrant Eyes: Jewish-American LiteratureThe course studies Jewish immigrants and first-generation Americans through works by Peretz, Cahan, Gold, Bellow, Malamud, and Roth. Background readings include works by I.B. Singer and Sholem Aleichem. This course may serve as the capstone for the l...
ENG 4560Mixed-Race LiteratureThis course is an intensive study of some of the major works of American literature focusing on the experiences of mixed-race people. The course may concentrate on literature about blackwhite biraciality or on literature about a different mixed-race...
ENG 4600Studies Ear Amer LitStudies Ear Amer Lit
ENG 4610Studies American LitStudies American Lit
ENG 4615The Global Business of LitThe Global Business of Lit
ENG 4620Ely Am Lit 1865-1900Ely Am Lit 1865-1900
ENG 4630Regional LiteratureRegional Literature
ENG 4700Insult, Abuse, and Ridicule: Satire Through the AgesThis course surveys satiric expression from classical origins to contemporary examples such as South Park, as writers for stage, page and video critique the shortcomings of their society. Readings focus on the transformation of popular traditions of...
ENG 4710Medieval Romance: A Comparative StudyRomance helped promote courtly love and chivalry, both significant preoccupations of medieval European aristocracy. This course examines a range of famous romances such as Chretien de Troyes, Lancelot, Thomas Berul's Tristan and Isolde, and Thomas Ma...
ENG 4720Existential ThemesExistential Themes
ENG 4730Journalism and the Literary ImaginationThis course examines the stylistic connections between fiction and journalism within a chronological framework. Readings span four centuries and encompass such diverse literary forms as the diary, political pamphlet, and newspaper column, in addition...
ENG 4730HHonors - Journalism and Literary ImagineThis honors course examines the stylistic connections between fiction and journalism within a chronological framework. Readings span four centuries and encompass such diverse literary forms as the diary, political pamphlet, and newspaper column, in a...
ENG 4740Gothic MysteriesThis course explores the major Gothic texts of the nineteenth century and early twentieth, including works by English, Irish, and Russian writers. It examines the spatial, architectural, and archeological features of the Gothic, as well as the tropes...
ENG 4750Investigative ReportingThis course gives students experience in investigative reporting techniques and approaches and in researching and preparing investigative reports in print (newspapers and magazines) and electronic (radio and television) media. Students review the Fre...
ENG 4810Ling & Eng GrammarsLing & Eng Grammars
ENG 4910Perspectives on Literary InterpretationThis course provides students who are completing minor or major programs in English with opportunities to sharpen their research, communication, and critical skills. In the first half of the course, a variety of interpretive questions will be explore...
ENG 4920Narrative WritingThis capstone course, in workshop format, provides each student the opportunity to produce an in-depth project: print or online journalism, a biography or extended profile, or a substantial work of creative writing, such as a series of short stories...
ENG 4950Advanced Topics in Language, Literature, or FilmThis course provides an opportunity at the capstone level to study theoretical frameworks, advanced research methods, and important subject matter not found or only touched upon in existing courses. This format allows for an intensive examination of...
ENG 5000Independent Study English ISubject or area of study is determined by the individual student and faculty advisor; it may be chosen from courses not offered in that particular academic year. For students with two other upper-level (3000-level or above) English courses, this cour...
ENG 5000HIndependent Study English ISubject or area of study is determined by the individual student and faculty advisor; it may be chosen from courses not offered in that particular academic year. For students with two other upper-level (3000-level or above) English courses, this cour...
ENG 5001Independent Study English IISubject or area of study is determined by the individual student and faculty advisor; it may be chosen from courses not offered in that particular academic year.For students with two other upper-level (3000-level or above) English courses, this cours...
ENG 5002Independent Study English IIISubject or area of study is determined by the individual student and faculty advisor; it may be chosen from courses not offered in that particular academic year. For students with two other upper-level (3000-level or above) English courses, this cour...
ENG 5003Independent Study English IVSubject or area of study is determined by the individual student and faculty advisor; it may be chosen from courses not offered in that particular academic year. For students with two other upper-level (3000-level or above) English courses, this cour...
ENG 5010Research Seminar: Problems in LiteratureThis seminar provides advanced students with opportunities for intensive study of important literary problems. Working as a group, students concentrate on the close reading of primary and secondary texts; working individually, they apply these method...
ENG 5020Research Seminar: Problems in JournalismThis seminar provides advanced students with opportunities for intensive study of important journalistic problems. Working as a group, students analyze all facets of a particular problem; working individually, they apply research and investigative me...
ENG 5050Media InternshipThe internship provides on-the-job experience for arts and sciences or business students interested in such fields as radio, network and cable TV, newspapers, magazines, wire services, business and financial journalism, and book publishing. Interns p...
ENG 5051Media Internship IIThe internship provides 10-to-12 hours weekly of on-the-job experience in print journalism, Internet and new media, publishing, film, television, radio, and other writing-related professions. Interns put their journalism classroom experience into pra...
ENG 6000Honors EnglishThe honors program in English is designed for the outstanding student. Each student conducts research in an area specific to the student's interest and works closely with a faculty advisor. Registration is by permission only from the department chair...
ENG 6001Honors Program in EnglishThe honors program in English is designed for the outstanding student. Each student conducts research in an area specific to the student's interest and works closely with a faculty advisor. Registration is by permission only from the department chair...
ENG 6001HHonors-English IThe honors program in English is designed for the outstanding student.Each student conducts research in an area specific to the student's interest and works closely with a faculty advisor. Registration is by permission only from the department chairp...
ENG 6002Honors Program in EnglishThe honors program in English is designed for the outstanding student. Each student conducts research in an area specific to the student's interest and works closely with a faculty advisor. Registration is by permission only from the department chair...
ENG 6002HHonors English IIThe honors program in English is designed for the outstanding student. Each student conducts research in an area specific to the student's interest and works closely with a faculty advisor. Registration is by permission only rom the department chairp...
ENG 6003Honors Program in EnglishThe honors program in English is designed for the outstanding student. Each student conducts research in an area specific to the student's interest and works closely with a faculty advisor. Registration is by permission only from the department chair...
ENG 6003HHonors English IIIThe honors program in English is designed for the outstanding student. Each student conducts research in an area specific to the student's interest and works closely with a faculty advisor. Registration is by permission only rom the department chairp...
ENG 7000English ElectiveEnglish Elective
ENG 7050English Int ElectiveEnglish Int Elective
ENG 7100English Lit ElectiveEnglish Lit Elective
ENG 7150Eng Lit Interm ElectEng Lit Interm Elect
ENG 7200English Comp ElectvEnglish Comp Electv
ENG 7300English Humanit ElecEnglish Humanit Elec
ENG 7350Comp I Gen Ed Req MtComp I Gen Ed Req Mt
ENG 7351Comp II Gen Ed Req MComp II Gen Ed Req M
ENG 7400English Comp ElectveEnglish Comp Electve
ENG 7450Comp I Gen Ed Req MtComp I Gen Ed Req Mt
ENG 7451Comp II Gen Ed Req MComp II Gen Ed Req M
ENG 7500Eng Lit Advanc ElecEng Lit Advanc Elec
ENG 7650Journalism ElectiveJournalism Elective
ENG 7675Journalism Inter EleJournalism Inter Ele
ENG 7690Journalism Advan ElcJournalism Advan Elc
ENG 8192Written English for International StudentsThis course will help international graduate students to sharpen and refine their English writing, reading, and speaking skills in business contexts. Topics for writing, reading, and speaking activities will emphasize case studies from international...
ENG 9501Corporations and MediaCorporations and Media
ENG 9502Evolution of the American Business Press and the Companies It CoversThis course will trace the evolution of the American business press, from colonial roots through the emergence of broadcasting and then the Internet age. From the earliest journals about shipping news and commerce, intended for businessmen and their...
ENG 9505Media AnalysisMedia Analysis
ENG 9510Legal and Ethical Issues in Business JournalismThis course offers students a basic understanding of mass media law as it pertains to the business journalist and, in doing so, an understanding of ethical issues that journalists must confront in reporting the news. The material includes the develop...
ENG 9515Graphic Design MediaGraphic Design Media
ENG 9516Tools for On-Line JournalismThis course provides students with an introduction to the basics of new media, from the hardware needed and the challenges it poses to the intellectual dynamics of interactive media. Journalism has always been shaped and enabled by technological chan...
ENG 9517New Media WorkshopThe goal of this course is to help students develop the practical skills and intellectual capacity to envision and create visual storytelling projects for the new media. Students will use reporting, writing, and research skills to collect and interpr...
ENG 9520Fin/Acc Bas For JourFin/Acc Bas For Jour
ENG 9525Advanced Business and Financial WritingThis course provides an overview of and introduction to the basic beats of business reporting and requires students to write frequently about this material. Students will learn the basics of writing news and feature articles, the art of interviewing...
ENG 9530Reptng In CyberspaceReptng In Cyberspace
ENG 9535Editing Business NewsThis course explores the different responsibilities of editors, including planning, assigning, doing a first edit, coordinating related stories, packaging the news, planning follow-ups and more. It asks students to consider the different audiences of...
ENG 9550Covering Information Technologies IndustriesThis course provides students with an understanding of how the diverse technology industries are transforming industry, public life, education, health care, and the capital markets. The course will discuss personal and corporate computing industries,...
ENG 9551Covering Wall Street and the Financial MarketsThis course provides students with an understanding of how the financial markets and Wall Street institutions work and how to cover them in an accurate and balanced fashion. The course explores the world of Wall Street, including reporting and writin...
ENG 9552Covering BankingThis course provides an understanding of how the banking and financial services industries are run and regulated and how to cover them in accurate and balanced fashion. Issues are examined from the point of view of the investors, customers and the ba...
ENG 9553Environmental ReportingThis course trains students in the rudiments of environmental reporting and the business and economic issues involved. It teaches journalists to explore the environment and business from the view of both business and environmental interests. The hist...
ENG 9554Covering the Business of Arts and CultureThis course helps journalists understand the underlying finances of the arts and culture and the business issues with which both artists and institutions must deal. Designed to enable students to research and cover art and culture in terms of for-pro...
ENG 9555Covering Labor and ManagementThis course prepares students to examine issues of negotiation and conflict and to develop articles based on a broad range of perspectives. Among the issues that are covered are U.S. labor and its history, the global flow of labor, the impact of auto...
ENG 9556International Business ReportingThis course prepares students for business reporting with a global perspective by educating them in the nuances of cross-border business and economic issues, regional and global organizations that are active in the business sphere and the particular...
ENG 9557Covering Policy IssuesWriting about policy is challenging. Unlike news events--a corporation's earnings announcement, a product introduction, a wave of layoffs--policy articles often begin with abstract ideas how to understand those ideas, find different points of view an...
ENG 9558Covering New York City BusinessThis course helps students understand and communicate to readers the broad range of businesses and industries that flourish within the city. By focusing on major New York industries--finance, publishing, entertainment, fashion, light industry, and m...
ENG 9559Investigative Business ReportingThis course trains students to dig beneath announcements and events to examine underlying conditions, and to understand the data that is available to get access to it. It prepares students to conceive, report, and write in-depth stories--generated en...
ENG 9560Topics in Business JournalismThis course studies timely and complex journalistic issues, permitting close, up-to-the-minute examinations of major trends in the business journalism field. Recent topics have included entrepreneurship, corporate governance and the business of sport...
ENG 9562Covering Economic IssuesEconomic growth is the engine of the business world, creating jobs, spurring investment, leaping across national borders. Journalists need to know where to find and how to assess reliable data. This involves obtaining economic reports from the govern...
ENG 9590Internship Bus JournInternship Bus Journ
ENG 9595Media Analysis CommMedia Analysis Comm
ENG 9599Independent StudyStudents who have successfully completed 12 credits may apply to the program director for permission to enroll in independent study with a member of the faculty, in order to explore an academic or journalistic subject in great depth and to draw on th...
ENG 972620th Cent Poetry20th Cent Poetry
ENG 9800Journalism InternshipAn internship with a professional news organization offers students an opportunity to test in the field what they have learned in the classroom, to appreciate the points of views and varying techniques of professional practitioners, and to understand...
ENGL ADVSRSee English AdvisorSee English Advisor
ENGL PRLDEPrelude To SuccessPrelude To Success
FLM 2001Hist Of Film IHist Of Film I
FLM 2002History of Film IIHistory of Film II
FLM 3001History of Film IAn introduction to the major developments in the history of film from its nineteenth-century, pre-cinematic origins through the coming of sound in the 1920s to the wartime productions of the early forties. The significant aesthetic innovations that h...
FLM 3002History of Film IIA survey of the major developments in American and international film from the mid-forties to the present. Film will be studied as a medium of artistic expression and as an increasingly significant force in reflecting and shaping social and political...
FLM 3151History of French CinemaThis course is a survey of French cinema from its beginnings until the present time. We will begin with the work of the Lumire brothers and Mli's, through the golden age of French cinema in the 1930s, the period during and after the Second World War,...
FLM 3160Latin American CinemaThis course examines major film tendencies and movements vis-à-vis the cultural, literary, and aesthetic movements in 20th and 21st- century Latin America. Special attention is given to the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema, the Cinema Novo, and the Cuban...
FLM 4100Immigration Cinema: Migrations and Border Crossings to the U.S. and EuropeThis course explores patterns of representation of the immigrant subject in recent films made in Europe, the U.S. and Latin America. It focuses on the role of cinema as a cultural and ideological apparatus representing the intersection of race, gende...
FLM 4900Critical Approaches to FilmCritical Approaches to Film provides students with an in-depth understanding of a specific film genre, filmmaker, national cinema, or critical issue. It is a communication-intensive course in which students engage theoretical and methodological topic...
FLM 4900HHonors - Critical Approaches to Film: The American Crime FilmThis course examines the postwar Hollywood crime film as the ground for the exploration of a number of central issues in contemporary film studies. Topics include the genres, links to prewar cinema, including other national cinemas and stylistic scho...
FLM 4907Film and Moving Image Culture in JapanThis course explores films and moving image works in Japan from the earliest period to the present. It also provides tools as well as concepts for examining how cinematic and other visual media work and communicate with their audiences, while enhanci...
FLM 7000Film ElectiveFilm Elective
FLM 7050Film Studies Intermediate ElectiveFilm Studies Intermediate Elective
FLM 7100Advanced Elective in Film StudiesAdvanced Elective in Film Studies
FSPA 16Study Lab In WritingStudy Lab In Writing
FSPA 17College Skills ICollege Skills I
FSPA 81Bas Col Read Non-NatBas Col Read Non-Nat
FSPA 83College Skills-Esl ICollege Skills-Esl I
FSPA 85Coll Read II Non-NatColl Read II Non-Nat
FSPC 8College Skills I ESLCollege Skills I ESL
FSPC 16Study Lab In WritingStudy Lab In Writing
FSPC 17College Skills ICollege Skills I
FSPC 18College Skills IICollege Skills II
FSPE 17Reading WorkshopReading Workshop
FSPE 100Basic Writing IBasic Writing I
FSPE 102Bsc Wrtng ESL Lvl IBsc Wrtng ESL Lvl I
FSPE 112Basic Writing-ESL IIBasic Writing-ESL II
FSPE 132Basic Writing-ESL IIIBasic Writing-ESL III
FSPE 132TBasic Writing-ESL 3 TBasic Writing-ESL 3 T
FSPE 140Academic Ltt SkillsAcademic Ltt Skills
FSPE 150Basic Writing IIBasic Writing II
FSPE 152Basic Writing ESL IIBasic Writing ESL II
FSPE 153Basic Writing Immersion (ESL) Level IVBasic Writing Immersion (ESL) Level IV
FSPE 160College LiteracyCollege Literacy
IBSIP 8Training Spoken EnglTraining Spoken Engl
IBSIP 17Reading WorkshopReading Workshop
IBSIP 100Elementary AlgebraElementary Algebra
IBSIP 132Univ Bsc Sk Prog WrtUniv Bsc Sk Prog Wrt
IBSIP 150Basic Writing IIBasic Writing II
IBSIP 152Basic Writing Esl IIBasic Writing Esl II
IBSIP 153Basic Wrtng IV RevBasic Wrtng IV Rev
IBSIP 1030College AlgebraCollege Algebra
ISPC 16Study Lab In WritingStudy Lab In Writing
TUTE 150Tutorial In WritingTutorial In Writing