Spring Quarter 2019
Course | Title | Instructor | Day | Time | |||
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WRITING IN SPECIAL CONTEXT (DTC) | |||||||
ENG 106-1/DSGN 106-1 | Writing in Special Contexts | ||||||
ENG 106-1/DSGN 106-1 Writing in Special ContextsDesign Thinking and Communication (DTC), is a required two-quarter course for all first-year students at McCormick. It is also available to any Northwestern undergraduate student interested in design. Every section is co-taught by an instructor from the Writing Program and an instructor from engineering. Part of the Engineering First® curriculum, the course immediately puts students to work on real design problems submitted by individuals, non-profits, entrepreneurs, and industry members. In DTC, all students design for real people and communicate to real audiences. | |||||||
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EXPOSITORY WRITING | |||||||
ENG 105-0-20 | Expository Writing | TBD | TTh | 11-12:20 | |||
ENG 105-0 Expository WritingExpository Writing is designed for any student who wants a strong introductory course in college-level writing. Students write three or four extended pieces of expository writing, developing each through a process of planning, drafting, revising, and editing. Students also complete several briefer exercises in which they experiment with specific writing techniques or use informal writing as a tool for exploring ideas. Class meetings are conducted as seminar discussions and workshops. In addition, the instructor meets regularly with students in individual conferences. | |||||||
ENG 105-0-21 | Expository Writing | TBD | TTh | 2-3:20 | |||
ENG 105-0 Expository WritingExpository Writing is designed for any student who wants a strong introductory course in college-level writing. Students write three or four extended pieces of expository writing, developing each through a process of planning, drafting, revising, and editing. Students also complete several briefer exercises in which they experiment with specific writing techniques or use informal writing as a tool for exploring ideas. Class meetings are conducted as seminar discussions and workshops. In addition, the instructor meets regularly with students in individual conferences. | |||||||
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FIRST-YEAR SEMINAR | |||||||
ENG 105-6-23 | Immigrant Stories | Charles Yarnoff | MWF | 11-11:50 | |||
ENG 105-6-23 Immigrant StoriesWe live in a time when hostility towards immigrants has made many Americans forget that, as President Obama said, “We are and always will be a nation of immigrants" and has obscured the complex reality of their lives. In this course, we will study literary works by immigrants and their children in order to understand that complex reality. We will explore such questions as: How do immigrant experiences differ based on the era and country of origin, and in what ways are they similar? What happens to the relationships between parents and children through the process of acculturation into American society? How do social institutions and structures impact the lives of immigrants as they seek to pursue the American Dream? How do differences in national origin connect with other differences, particularly gender, race, ethnicity, and class? We will read novels, short stories, and poetry that were written over the last 100 years and that tell stories of immigrants from Vietnam, Mexico, Russia, Barbados, and elsewhere. | |||||||
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INTERMEDIATE COMPOSITION | |||||||
ENG 205-0-20 | Intermediate Composition | Elizabeth Lenaghan | MW | 2-3:20 | |||
ENG 205-0 Intermediate CompositionThis course is designed to help you write more clearly, coherently, and complexly about what’s important to you. You’ll write some short exercises and you’ll write and revise several essays, after feedback from classmates and from me. We'll explore a range of writing strategies for finding and developing material and shaping it into essays. We’ll take seriously the idea that writing can change us and can change the world, and we’ll aim to create interesting, illuminating, possibly transformative essays. | |||||||
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WRITING & SPEAKING IN BUSINESS | |||||||
ENG 282-0-1 | Writing & Speaking in Business | Barbara Shwom | MW | 2-3:20 | |||
ENG 282-0 Writing & Speaking in Business | |||||||
ENG 282-0-2 | Writing & Speaking in Business | Charles Yarnoff | TTh | 9:30-10:50 | |||
ENG 282-0 Writing & Speaking in Business | |||||||
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SEMINAR IN TEACHING COLLEGE COMPOSITION | |||||||
ENG 570-0 | Seminar in Teaching College Composition | Robert Gundlach | Th | 9-10:30 | |||
ENG 570-20 Seminar in Teaching College CompositionThis seminar is designed to serve two purposes. First, it offers an introduction to current theories, practices, and controversies in the teaching of writing in American colleges and universities, placing these matters in the context of various definitions of literacy in American culture. And second, it prepares teaching assistants to teach English 105, Expository Writing, here at Northwestern. Graduate students who expect to teach Expository Writing should take 570; other graduate students interested in the teaching of writing are welcome to enroll. | |||||||
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