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Education Student Teaching
Student Teaching is required in all three licensure areas. This is the culminating experience in the Teacher Education Program and consists of a full-time, twelve-week supervised teaching experience in a setting appropriate to the areas of licensure. In addition, participation in the Student Teaching Seminar, held one evening a week throughout the entire semester, is required of ALL student teachers. During the Fall semester, Student Teaching placement begins on the first day of the public school’s academic year (usually one week before the College begins) and continues through mid-November. Student teachers are expected to be available during the week prior to placement for orientation activities. The remaining five weeks of the semester are dedicated to Independent Study and Student Teaching Seminar. If completed in the Spring semester, students dedicate the first four weeks of the semester to Independent Study and Student Teaching Seminar, and then begin the Student Teaching placement in early February. If the student is completing Student Teaching as a post-graduate and the Independent Study requirement is fulfilled, the dates for Student Teaching and requirement of Student Teaching Seminar remain the same. The student teacher is responsible for providing his/her own transportation throughout the Student Teaching experience. Enrollment in this course is typically limited to seniors or recent post-graduates. Prerequisite: All professional Education courses and mostto- all content-related coursework. Annually. Fall and Spring.
Global/Urban Student Teaching
Students may also elect to student teach in a global or urban setting through Educators Abroad- a college-endorsed study-abroad program. Students participating in this program must attend Student Teaching Seminar in the semester prior to their student teaching experience and complete all of the College of Wooster student teaching requirements and forms. Students interested in pursuing this placement option should inform the Field Director two-semesters prior to the semester they wish to student teach.
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• EDUC 49000 - Early Childhood Student Teaching and Seminar
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• EDUC 49100 - Early Childhood Student Teaching and Seminar
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• EDUC 49200 - Early Childhood Student Teaching and Seminar
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• EDUC 49300 - Adolescent/Young Adult Student Teaching and Seminar
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• EDUC 49400 - Adolescent/Young Adult Student Teaching and Seminar
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• EDUC 49500 - Adolescent/Young Adult Student Teaching and Seminar
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• EDUC 49600 - Multiage Student Teaching and Seminar
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• EDUC 49700 - Multiage Student Teaching and Seminar
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• EDUC 49800 - Multiage Student Teaching and Seminar
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English Culture
A culture is a complex set of expressions and structures consisting of beliefs, expectations, actions, and institutions. Among the most important expressions of a culture are the texts that are written and read within it. These texts are deeply embedded in and shaped by the beliefs and practices of the cultures in which they were first written and by the beliefs and practices of later cultures in which they are read and written about.
Text
Texts are integral to and shaped by cultures, but as parts of culture, texts significantly shape and change cultures as well. The courses in this category inquire particularly into how the reading and writing of texts contribute to changing and defining cultures and individuals.
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• ENGL 12000 - Language, Literature and Culture
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• ENGL 12001 - Imagining America
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• ENGL 12005 - Modern Selves
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• ENGL 12006 - Gods & Monsters
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• ENGL 12007 - LLC: Lunatics, Lovers, and Poets
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• ENGL 12008 - The Gothic Imagination
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• ENGL 12015 - Animals in Literature
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• ENGL 12016 - Unreal Cities
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• ENGL 12018 - Writing in the Age of Terror
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• ENGL 12019 - The Watery Part of the World
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• ENGL 12020 - Stuff: Lit & Material Objects
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• ENGL 12021 - Hoards & Other Stuff: Lit & Material Obj
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• ENGL 12022 - Intro Lit. Studies Nature, Text and Body
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• ENGL 12023 - LLC: Popular Religion in Literature
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• ENGL 12024 - Anti-Fascism: Art & Politics
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• ENGL 12025 - LLC: Looking Behind Paradise
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• ENGL 12026 - LLC: From Beowulf to Bestsellers
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• ENGL 12027 - LLC: Memory & Gender in Caribbean Lit.
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• ENGL 16000 - Introduction to Non-Fictional Writing
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• ENGL 16002 - Autobiographical Writing (Memoir)
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• ENGL 16003 - Nature and Environmental Writing
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• ENGL 16004 - Critical/Creative Non-Fiction
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• ENGL 16006 - Non Fiction Writing: Middle Eastern Women’s Memoirs
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• ENGL 16007 - Travel Writing
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• ENGL 16008 - Non-Fiction Wrtg: Creative Nonfiction
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• ENGL 16100 - Introduction to Poetry and Fiction Writing
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• ENGL 19900 - Apprenticeship in Editing A Literary Magazine
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• ENGL 20000 - Investigations in Literary and Research Methods
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• ENGL 21000 - Gender, Race, and Ethnicity
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• ENGL 21002 - Black Women Writers
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• ENGL 21004 - Empire Boys (pre 1900)
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• ENGL 21008 - Gender, Sex, and Texts, 350-1500
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• ENGL 21009 - Post/Colonial Literature and Film
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• ENGL 21014 - Religion in Black Film and Literature
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• ENGL 21018 - Sex and Gender in the Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Literature
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• ENGL 21022 - Global Anglophone Literature After 1900
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• ENGL 21023 - Black Modernisms and Global Modernities
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• ENGL 21025 - Shakespeare to Wilde (pre-1900)
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• ENGL 21026 - Lit, Cul & Environment Crisis
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• ENGL 21027 - Who Runs the World? Girls in Contemp Lit
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• ENGL 21028 - Cyborgs and A.I.: Asian American-Lit.
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• ENGL 21029 - Asian-American Literature
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• ENGL 22000 - Writers
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• ENGL 22001 - Shakespeare
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• ENGL 22002 - William Faulkner
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• ENGL 22011 - James Baldwin and Toni Morrison
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• ENGL 22013 - Chaucer
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• ENGL 22014 - Shakespeare (pre 1800)
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• ENGL 23000 - Special Topics: History
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• ENGL 23002 - Survey of African American Literature
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• ENGL 23004 - Literature of the Cold War
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• ENGL 23007 - Revolution and Reform: Nineteenth-Century British Literature
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• ENGL 23011 - Literature of the Beat Generation
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• ENGL 23012 - Poetry Since World War Ii
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• ENGL 23026 - The Early American Novel
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• ENGL 23028 - Contemporary Autobiographical Fiction
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• ENGL 23029 - American Literature to 1865
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• ENGL 23030 - Modern British Fiction and Poetry
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• ENGL 23035 - American Literature As World Literature 1990-Present
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• ENGL 23036 - The Global and the Intimate: Heartbreak and Masculinity in World Literature
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• ENGL 23038 - Narratives of the African Diaspora
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• ENGL 23039 - Renaissance Bromance
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• ENGL 23041 - Modernist Literatures
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• ENGL 23042 - British Literature to 1800
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• ENGL 23044 - the Novel and Its Secrets
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• ENGL 23045 - American Literature
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• ENGL 23046 - Shakespeare to Milton
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• ENGL 23047 - Paper Trail in Victorian Lit (pre-1900)
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• ENGL 24002 - Narrative and the Real World
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• ENGL 24003 - the Odyssey of James Joyce’s Ulysses
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• ENGL 24017 - the American Film
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• ENGL 24018 - Fidelity and Betrayal: the 19th Century British Novel On Film
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• ENGL 24019 - Medieval Literature: the Place of the Premodern
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• ENGL 24021 - Before the Novel
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• ENGL 24022 - Green Romanticism
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• ENGL 24023 - Black Women Writers
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• ENGL 24027 - Mimic Forms: Imitative Literature in the Eighteenth Century
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• ENGL 24030 - Experimental Fiction After World War Ii
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• ENGL 24033 - Women Writing Science Fiction
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• ENGL 24034 - Science Fiction and American Culture
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• ENGL 25003 - Children As Readers: the Texts of Childhood and Adolescence
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• ENGL 25005 - Eighteenth-Century Texts: Readers and Meanings
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• ENGL 26001 - News Writing and Editing
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• ENGL 26002 - The Magazine: Writing, Editing, Design
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• ENGL 26100 - Advanced Fiction and Poetry Writing
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• ENGL 26101 - Advanced Fiction and Poetry Writing
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• ENGL 26102 - Advanced Fiction Writing: the Story Cycle
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• ENGL 26103 - Advanced Poetry Writing
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• ENGL 26104 - Flash Fiction
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• ENGL 26105 - Advanced Poetry Writing in Fixed and Open Forms
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• ENGL 26106 - Writing the Novel
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