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Since its founding in 1980, Bowling Green State University’s program
has been committed to preparing students for faculty careers in rhetoric and
composition. It has done this, in part, by building a strong curriculum which
emphasizes writing instruction and encourages students to pursue their research
interests by working with a wide range of dissertation topics. The Rhetoric & Writing
PhD Program has evolved over nearly three decades so that students and faculty
here utilize the range of intellectual approaches--rhetorical, cultural, empirical,
technological--that characterize the field of rhetoric and composition in the
twenty-first century. The program's goals-based assessment is linked to the
development of web-based portfolios highlighting academic and professional
accomplishments.
Core Courses - Electives - Department/University Requirements
Studies Timeline - Assistantships
Description - Candidacy Checklist
Core
Rhetoric & Writing Program Courses (24
sem hours)
As the core of the Rhetoric & Writing PhD Program, the eight courses
described in this section may not be waived or substituted.
•
Introduction to Rhetoric and Composition as a Discipline (ENG 62X [Currently,
680])
•
History of Rhetoric and Written Discourse (ENG 722)
Survey of major figures/developments in the history of rhetoric with
special reference to their relevance to written discourse. The course
will include topics such as attitudes toward and development of written
literacy, contributions of non canonical rhetoricians, and institutionalization
of writing instruction. Special attention will be given to methods of
historical research and historiography.
• Issues in Historical Rhetoric (72X [Currently, 780])
•
Rhetoric and Written Discourse (ENG 724)
Survey of rhetorical theory about writing from antiquity to present.
Topics include theories of invention, arrangement, and style; kinds and
purposes of discourse; the effects of literacy; and the epistemology
of writing and reading processes.
•
Research in Rhetoric & Writing (ENG 726)
Research methods and the study of the social, cognitive, behavioral,
and physiological processes of writing. Topics include evaluation of
writing, the composing process, computers and literacy, dialect and writing,
grammar and writing.
•
Computer Mediated Writing: Theory & Practice (ENG 728)
Designed to explore current computer issues in the field of rhetoric
and composition covering such topics as computer-aided composition instruction,
the nature of rhetorical voice in a computer setting, and questions of
authorship.
•
Publication in Rhetoric & Writing (ENG 729)
Designed to help students initiate, revise, and prepare scholarly works
for publication and professional careers. Students will produce a portfolio
of work appropriate to their specialty. The major work will usually be
an article submitted to a scholarly journal.
• Special Topic R&W Seminar (at least one 780 besides Issues in Historical
Rhetoric)
Seminars in Rhetoric Topics vary each semester. Usually two different
780s are taught each year. As such a 780 course may be repeated if the
topic is different. Recent topics include: Writing Administration, Advanced
Writing Courses, Cultural Studies in Composition, Writing Across the
Curriculum, Advanced Writing Pedagogy, Basic Writing, Voice, Online Teaching
of Writing.
In addition, the Composition Instructor's Workshop (ENG 602) is required
of all first-year teaching assistants. Comprised of theories, approaches,
methods and techniques designed to guide prospective teachers of composition
in selecting those most appropriate to her/his goals.
Elective
Rhetoric & Writing Program Courses (9
to 15 hours required)
Students take three to five additional Rhetoric & Writing Program Courses
(depending on whether they need to take ENG 607 and 615--see below). Students
may take more electives if they wish. Example courses: 620, additional
780s, other special-topic R&W courses, Readings courses, Research Group,
Practicum. A course emphasizing advanced writing pedagogy is recommended.
This is the standard elective approach for the Rhetoric & Writing PhD
Program, one intended to help students develop strong backgrounds in a
complex field.
Option 2: Students with MAs in composition and rhetoric may, with faculty
approval, take cognate courses (up 12 hours) relevant to their teaching,
research, or other career interests (e.g.: courses in Technical Writing,
Higher-Education Administration, Literature, Women’s Studies, Speech
Communication, Ethnic Studies).
General
Department & University Requirements
Overall, the Program requires at least 90 seminar hours,
up to 30 hours of MA credit and at least 60 hours of courses, exam preparation
and dissertation work beyond the MA. This includes the following:
ENG 607 Theory & Methods of Criticism or equivalent in the MA program
ENG 615 Modern English Linguistics or equivalent in the MA program
ENG 798 Study for Prelims (3-6 sem hours)
ENG 799 Dissertation Research (16-21 sem hours)
Foreign Language Requirement
ENG 602 Composition Instructor's Workshop does not count toward required
hours.
Rough
and Incomplete Time Line of Studies
Students take courses during the first four or five semesters
(not counting summers).
Toward the end of the second year, students set up Preliminary Exam Committees
and start studying for Prelims. Often, students utilize the summer following
the second year for intense study and take Exams during the fall semester of
the third year. There are two Preliminary Exams. The General Exam, written
over a weekend, is based on the General Exam Reading List. The Specialized
Exam is
a portfolio including a revising/editing project based on a seminar paper,
a curriculum project including a course syllabus and discussion of principles
that
inform it, an initial dissertation reading list, and a bibliographic essay
based on that list.
The semester following completion of Preliminary Exams, students give their
Graduate Lectures (our approach to dissertation topic approval). Students work
with Committee
chairs as they develop substantial proposals and working bibliographies. They
submit the work to the Committee two or more weeks before the Graduate Lecture.
Then they give compact lectures based on the proposal, and they interact with
Committee members and others who come to the public presentation.
Following topic approval, students work on dissertation research and writing
in close contact with their dissertation advisors (AKA Committee chairs). Typically,
they share chapters or other segments of the dissertation with the rest of
the committee when the chair advises them to.
When dissertations are complete, students give copies to all Committee members
well in advance of the public Dissertation Defense. Following the Defense,
students usually have some revision/editing to complete before submitting the
dissertation
electronically
.
Assistantships
Assistantships are available on a competitive basis and for 2007-08
carry a stipend of $11,765. First-year assistantship duties typically involve
a two-course teaching load in the General Studies Writing (GSW) program spread
over two semesters. Second, third, and fourth year assistants teach three courses
a year; they often satisfy their teaching responsibilities in part by serving
in administrative, supervisory, research, or editing positions. Approximately
five new doctoral assistantships are awarded each year.
•
Assistantships carry a tuition waiver of all instructional, general, out-of-state,
and parking fees. Summer opportunities for funding are also competitively available,
determined by staffing needs and a seniority system administered by the department's
Graduate Student Committee.
•
Students in the Ph.D. program may expect four years of funding as long as academic
work and assistantship duties are fully satisfactory.
•
Funded students receive intensive in-service training in the classroom teaching
of writing in English 602, Composition Instructors' Workshop, during their first
semester of work.
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