Course Description
Continued study and practice of basic techniques of effective imaginative prose learned in
ENG 221: concrete language, conflict, characterization, point of view, narrative arc, pace and setting. Focus on fiction, but allowance for nonfiction. Employs workshop format to develop reading and feedback skills. Skills developed include close reading, close observation, craft techniques, revision, discipline and practice, giving and receiving feedback, developing access to imaginative powers. Explores ways to suggest and shape meaning in fiction. Group 2 course.
Credit Hours
3
Contact Hours
3
Lecture Hours
3
Required Prerequisites
ENG 221 or instructor permission
Recommended Prerequisites or Skills Competencies
Students should have language skills at least equivalent to
ENG 112General Education Outcomes supported by this course
Communications - Direct, Critical Thinking - Direct
Other college designations supported by this course
Degree Req:Cultural Persp/Div, Infused: Writing Intensive
Course Learning Outcomes
Knowledge:
- Identify basic prose techniques: concrete language, conflict, characterization, point of view, narrative arc, pace, tone, and setting.
- Analyze pieces of writing using the language of basic prose techniques.
Application:
- Assess the impact of basic prose techniques.
- Write imaginative prose demonstrating use of basic prose techniques.
- Apply revision techniques to their work and the work of others.
- Demonstrate informed reading of professional examples.
Integration:
- Incorporate knowledge of prose techniques into their reading and discussion of creative prose.
- Incorporate prose techniques into their writing.
- Uncover patterns and critique their own and others' creative work.
Human Dimension:
- Interact productively in giving and receiving constructive feedback.
- Achieve a deeper understanding of human emotion, desire, belief, and motivation as expressed via basic prose techniques.
- See the world from other points of view.
- Come to see themselves as actors guided by a set of beliefs.
Caring - Civic Learning:
- Write ethically.
- Consider alternative values presented in texts and life.
- Recognize alternative meanings presented in texts and life.
- View the world vis-a-vis potential for story and creative engagement.
Learning How to Learn:
- Use the tools of basic prose techniques to recognize how a piece of writing has been constructed.
- Imagine new possibilities for their own and other's creative work.
- Experience how creative processes engage with deeply held values and beliefs.
- Recognize the difference between working in creative community and working in solitude and how these conditions impact their creative process.