Graduate Program Outcomes
Upon completion of the MA program students will be able to:
- Write effectively about a broad range of texts in English using effective compositional and rhetorical techniques.
- Assess and intervene in existing scholarly discourses in the field as a literary critic.
- Distinguish and interpret diverse experiences across various social formations (i.e., race, class, gender, sexuality, ability, etc.) as registered in literary works.
- Evaluate and apply the principles of a range of critical theories and/or textual theories, including those emerging from communities that have been historically underrepresented, in order to produce a sustained analysis of literary works.
In addition to the MA outcomes, upon completion of the PhD program students will be able to:
- Define, distinguish, and evaluate three fields of study in literature as defined by historical period, genre, critical theory, and/or single author. Employ significant developments and emergent trends in pedagogical theories, methods, and materials to effectively teach college-level composition & literature.
- Use a variety of research methods (e.g., close reading, textual criticism, linguistic analysis, archival, biographical, etc.) and interpret the findings in order to produce a sustained analysis of one or more literary works.
- Defend scholarly interpretations and interventions at a professional level, leading to internal and external conference presentations, publication, fellowships, grants, and academic employment.
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Upon completion of the MA program students will be able to:
- Write effectively about a broad range of texts in English using effective compositional and rhetorical techniques.
- Assess and intervene in existing scholarly discourses in the field as a literary critic.
- Distinguish and interpret diverse experiences across various social formations (i.e., race, class, gender, sexuality, ability, etc.) as registered in literary works.
- Evaluate and apply the principles of a range of critical theories and/or textual theories, including those emerging from communities that have been historically underrepresented, in order to produce a sustained analysis of literary works.
In addition to the MA outcomes, upon completion of the PhD program students will be able to:
- Define, distinguish, and evaluate three fields of study in literature as defined by historical period, genre, critical theory, and/or single author. Employ significant developments and emergent trends in pedagogical theories, methods, and materials to effectively teach college-level composition & literature.
- Use a variety of research methods (e.g., close reading, textual criticism, linguistic analysis, archival, biographical, etc.) and interpret the findings in order to produce a sustained analysis of one or more literary works.
- Defend scholarly interpretations and interventions at a professional level, leading to internal and external conference presentations, publication, fellowships, grants, and academic employment.