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EH 111: College Writing emphasizes
shorter units of composition (sentences and paragraphs)
and includes significant attention to matters of grammar, punctuation, usage,
spelling, and mechanics. Students are usually
placed in EH 111 so that they can brush up on the skills essential to success in
EH 121. Students earn credit toward graduation with EH
111 and generally take EH 121 after completing EH 111. Dr. Terri Witek, Dr
John Pearson, Dr Michael Barnes, and Dr Megan O'Neill frequently teach this
course.
EH 121: Research & Argumentation emphasizes
defining audience and purpose with greater precision and developing
appropriate strategies of argument. We require students to write a research
paper of substantial length as a "capstone" project for the course; the
project allows students to demonstrate their abilities at research and
argumentation in one important essay. See here
for the usual and customary grading expectations and here
for the basic research project requirements.
All our department faculty teach this essential course.
EH 131: Analytical Reading & Writing emphasizes
writing which derives from
close analytical reading of a variety of texts. Students analyze texts,
develop analytical and interpretive approaches, and use textual evidence to
support those readings. Note: this course may not (although it often does)
focus on literature. Our focus in this course is to emphasize critical approaches
to text itself, and "text" can mean many things, including literature,
film and television, photographic image, public discourse, and civic discourse.
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