Resources
Quick Links
Searching for something? Check out shortcuts to English's most-used resources.
Departmental Information
Access key information and review student learning goals.Each year, the English Department appoints student representatives whose job it is
to represent the interests of English majors and minors. They attend monthly department
meetings, where they have voting rights (with the exception of issues regarding personnel).
Feel free to get in touch with one or all of them if you have questions, concerns,
or ideas about how the English Department can better fulfill its mission.
The representatives for the 2025-2026 school year are:
- Merritt Baldwin is a senior from Charleston, South Carolina. In addition to reading, she is passionate about hiking and climbing. She also likes to knit. She is a member of the Outing Club and Tbreds Raising Pups, and she can't wait for her first fall in New York!
- Gray Birchby is a sophomore from Lincoln, Massachusetts. He is passionate about a variety of esoteric topics. He is the secretary of AccessMore and Zine Club. When he isn’t writing, Gray can be found doing gymnastics, rock climbing, and participating in local government.
- Kit Simpson is a junior English major and classics minor from Berkshire County, Massachusetts. They are a member of 91±¬ÁĎ’s Audubon Society and serve as editor in chief of the Theater Department’s newsletter. In their free time, they enjoy reading, crocheting, going to the theater, and spending time with their family!
EN 103
In this one-semester course, students will be introduced to the following learning
objectives to begin their development as college writers and prepare them to complete
the college expository writing requirement. Learning to write well, however, is a
lifelong process that continues beyond our one-class requirement. Through the practice
of writing, students will:
- Build skills and confidence in speaking and writing.
- Compose essays that reflect an awareness of academic conventions, including a strong central thesis, organizational strategies, and genre patterns.
- Learn strategies for reading published texts critically and carefully as an essential part of the writing process.
- Develop strategies for reading and responding critically to prose written by peers as well as the student’s own writing.
- Gather, evaluate, and integrate various types of evidence to frame or support a discussion, claim, or argument.
- Build a range of effective, flexible, and individual techniques to draft, edit, and revise a text.
- Write and revise sentences that apply the principles of grammar and style.
- Apply lessons about writing and communication to the student’s academic goals, including the college expository writing requirement.
EN 105
In this one-semester course, students will be introduced to the following learning
objectives to begin their development as college writers. Mastery of these skills,
however, is a lifelong process that continues beyond our one-class requirement. Through
the practice of writing and engagement with course themes, students will learn how
to:
- Compose essays that are organized to support a strong thesis.
- Integrate various types of appropriate evidence to frame or support a discussion, claim, or argument.
- Read prose critically and carefully — their own as well as that of classmates — and offer constructive criticism about the choices authors make.
- Develop a range of effective, flexible, and individual techniques to draft, edit, and revise a text.
- Write and revise sentences with particular attention to grammar and style.
- Apply lessons about writing to academic questions and real-world situations beyond the classroom.
EN 105H
In this one-semester Honors course, students will pursue the following course goals
with thoughtfulness, depth, and independence to strengthen their development as college
writers. Learning to write well, however, is a lifelong process that continues beyond
our one-class requirement. Through rigorous practice and engagement with the course
themes, students will:
- Compose essays that are organized to support a strong thesis.
- Integrate various types of appropriate evidence to frame or support a discussion, claim, or argument.
- Read prose critically and carefully — their own as well as that of classmates — and offer constructive criticism about the choices authors make.
- Develop a range of effective, flexible, and individual techniques to draft, edit, and revise a text.
- Write and revise sentences with particular attention to grammar and style.
- Apply lessons about writing to academic questions and real-world situations beyond the classroom.
EN 110
Students should begin to demonstrate the ability to:
- Frame questions about how we read and write within the discipline of literary studies.
- Read closely and attend to the complexity of language.
- Formulate questions about an author’s formal choices and draw inferences from patterns (of language, verse, imagery).
- Craft and support a thesis.
- Recognize historical and cultural contexts and their bearing on literary meanings.
- Engage with secondary readings pertinent to the texts and questions of the course.
- Advance class conversation through active listening and appropriately informed contributions
and familiarity with:
- The conventions of specific genres.
- Literary terms.
- Critical perspectives, methods, and theories.
- The conventions of written literary analysis and documentation.
- Periods of literary history.
- Library resources.
100-Level Literature Courses
In 100-level classes, students should demonstrate the ability to:
- Read texts with attention to the choices that authors make.
- Identify and distinguish between formal and thematic elements within a text, as well as understand the relationship between form and content.
- Formulate arguments about the social or historical meanings of a text, both in class and in written work.
200 Level
In addition to developing greater sophistication in the goals listed at the 100 level,
students in literature courses should demonstrate the ability to:
- Situate a text in relation to forms/genres/literary periods.
- Define a topic independently.
- Engage the work of other critics and scholars, both in class discussion and in written work.
- Carry out basic research appropriate to literary studies.
Students in creative writing courses should demonstrate the ability to:
- Critique both professional writing and the work of their peers in workshop settings.
- Write fiction, poems, and essays that demonstrate fluency in the appropriate conventions.
300 Level
In addition to developing still greater sophistication in the goals listed at the
100 and 200 level, students in literature courses should demonstrate the ability to:
- Read and interpret a work of literature independently, in dialogue with a range of secondary critical or theoretical material.
- Sustain a complex argument.
- Conduct research in support of a sustained analytical paper.
Students in creative writing courses should demonstrate the ability to:
- Write with technical sophistication in relation to formal conventions.
Capstone Experience
Students in capstone courses will:
- Take the initiative to plan and organize their projects.
- Work independently to sustain projects through their various stages. (Ic, IIa)
- Produce a major project that synthesizes and reflects back upon work already completed in the major.
- Demonstrate awareness of the wider critical or artistic context that informs the project being completed.
- Participate in a community of other writers and artists whose work they will be expected to critique in an engaged and constructive way.
Information Literacy
Our students develop facility with information as they move through the 100, 200,
and 300 levels, a developmental arc that culminates with their capstone. We narrate
that arc of development thus: Students will be able to differentiate among various
classification schemes, literary forms, and aesthetic categories; will develop the
ability to evaluate the merit of secondary sources and incorporate sources in written
work and oral presentation; will be able to decipher scholarly arguments and enter
the “conversation” among scholars on a select topic; will be able to create bibliographies
and document properly; will be able to navigate the proliferation of “knowledge” in
global and digital contexts. These are our learning outcomes pertaining to information
literacy, and various courses within our major introduce our students to these, or
reinforce them and permit opportunities for practice; demonstration of mastery is
expected at the exit level (aka. the capstone). (Ia, Ic, IIb, IIIc)
Visual Literacy
Our students develop facility with visual materials as they move through the 100,
200, and 300 levels, a developmental arc that culminates with their capstone. We narrate
that arc of development thus: Students will be able to close read visual objects in
a range of media; will be able to analyze visual objects in relation to differences
in medium; will be able to analyze the social and political means of visual objects;
will be able to situate visual objects within cultural and historical frameworks;
will be able to understand the role that visual material plays in shaping the meanings
of written text. These are our learning outcomes pertaining to visual literacy, and
various courses within our major introduce our students to these, or reinforce them
and permit opportunities for practice; demonstration of mastery is expected at the
exit level (aka. the capstone). (Ia, Ib, IIb, IId, IIIc)
Technology Literacy
Our students develop facility with technology as they move through the 100, 200, and
300 levels, a developmental arc that culminates with their capstone. We narrate that
arc of development thus: Students will be able to use technology as an aid to research
(navigating databases, digital archives, searchable texts, citation software); will
be able to assess the credibility of online information; will be able to collaborate
and communicate digitally (file-sharing systems, discussion forums, blogs); will be
able to distinguish technologies of form (graphic narratives, hypertexts, history
of print texts); will be able to manage their digital presence. These are our learning
outcomes pertaining to technology literacy, and various courses within our major introduce
our students to these, or reinforce them and permit opportunities for practice; demonstration
of mastery is expected at the exit level (aka. the capstone). (Ia, Ic, IIb, IIc, IIIc,
possibly IIId)
Oral Communication
Our students develop facility with oral communication as they move through the 100,
200, and 300 levels, a developmental arc that culminates with their capstone. We narrate
that arc of development thus: Students will be able to make meaningful contributions
to class discussions; will be able to hold discussions in smaller groups with minimal
guidance of the instructor; will be able to prepare and deliver formal presentations;
will be able to respond to questions about their work; will be able to recite portions
of a text in class. These are our learning outcomes pertaining to oral communication,
and various courses within our major introduce our students to these, or reinforce
them and permit opportunities for practice; demonstration of mastery is expected at
the exit level (aka. the capstone). (IIc, IId, IIIc, IIId)
Written Communication
As the English Department, we identify written communication as the beating heart
of all that we do. We study the written communications of others, of one another,
and we write a lot, requiring our students to workshop, to critique their writing,
to revise, to polish their grammar and prose styles, and to develop their voices as
writers of various kinds (critic, fictionist, nonfictionist, poet, and so forth).
When our students aren’t writing themselves, they are studying the writing of others.
(Ia, Ic, IIa, IIc, IIe, IIIa, IIIb, IIIc, IIId — though every single College learning
goal could be listed here.)
- Registrar's forms: Here you can find the major declaration and minor declaration forms.
- : (on the Registrar's website) For students intending to complete an independent study. To be completed in conjunction with student’s academic advisor and independent study sponsor.
- Prep for Senior Thesis (PDF form): Required for senior English majors planning on pursuing an independent, faculty-guided senior thesis for the capstone requirement. Outlines the student’s aims and subject area, as approved by the student’s faculty advisor and thesis supervisor. To be completed within the first week of classes.
- Senior Thesis or Senior Project (PDF form): Application for those seniors intending to complete a senior thesis or senior project as a way to fulfill the capstone requirement. Preliminary document outlining the student’s plan of study, schedule, and supervisor’s endorsement of the project. To be completed within the first week of classes.
- Study Sponsor (PDF form): All English majors who intend to pursue an independent study, senior thesis, senior project, or honors plan must have a study sponsor. To be completed by the student’s study sponsor, this form outlines how the study sponsor will supervise and assess the student’s work. To be completed within the first week of classes.
- Senior Thesis (including Prep) or Senior Project Registration (PDF form): Required for registration in a senior thesis or senior project. To be completed during the registration period prior to the semester in which the thesis or project will be undertaken.