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The Young Adult Writing Project (YAWP) Fees Middle School Writing Center Information for Student Teachers ASU English Education Photo: Jim Blasingame |
Early during the second semester of your sophomore year, you should go to the Office of Student Services (Payne B-7) to complete the necessary application forms
English Majors who plan to teach in secondary schools have two advisors -- one in the Office of Student Services (Payne B-7) in the College of Education, one in the English Department (LL 215) in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
First-year students should meet an advisor in the College of Education when formal admission from ASU is received. Your advisor will help you plan your work in general studies. Transfer students will need to meet an advisor from the College of Education to determine what courses will apply to ASU's general studies.
There are two advisors: Alleen Nilsen, Director (LL215), and James Blasingame (LL218). You can stop by the English Education office, located in LL215, call (480) 965-3224, or email to make an appointment with one of these advisors.
Just as soon as you decide to become an English major and decide you want to teach in junior or senior high school. Your English Education advisor will help you plan your work in English.
Bring your college transcripts and your unanswered questions.
These advisors are in the Office of Student Services, College of Education (Payne B-7).
You must take 45 hours of English -- 36 required and 9 elective. These
are the 36 required hours: Elective hours must be taken from English Department offerings. Six (6) of the nine (9) hours must be taken from upper-division (300-400) courses.
Only ENG 480 and 482 have a specific prerequisite and even these courses can be taken in reverse order. However, we recommend that you take the courses in the order they are listed because the more advanced courses build upon knowledge you will have gained in the introductory courses. For example, you should take ENG 200 (Critical Reading and Writing) as your first course because it will help prepare you for most of the courses that follow. Nonetheless, you are not required to take these 45 semester hours in any specific order.
The prerequisite is either ENG 312 (English in Its Social Setting) or ENG 314 (Modern Grammar).
All English courses must be completed before you student teach. Since teachers in these three courses assume you have a good background in English, you should have at least 30 hours in English before taking any of these courses.
No, that is a University requirement, not part of your major.
No, but presumably you will have taken many literature courses.
It is a course that isn't required. You should choose electives to: (1.) fill-in areas of English you need, or (2.) take more work in areas you enjoy. The following are not allowed for English Education majors: ENG 110 (Intro. to Literature), ENG 204 (Literature of Today), ENG 218 (Writing about Literature), and ENG 320 (Intro. to Shakespeare). Consult your English Education advisor for help.
See your English Education advisor (bring a copy of your undergraduate and graduate transcripts) for the English Education requirements, and see your advisor in Payne B-7 for your education requirements. If you are a post-bac student, ENG 471, ENG 480, and ENG 482 should be taken under the graduate number ENG 598. See your English Education advisor for help with this.
You may take ENG 358 (Afro-American Literature), ENG 359 (American Indian Literature), ENG 461 (Women and Literature), ENG 462 (20th Century Women Authors), and ENG 333 (Ethnic American Literature). Other courses are being developed and will be added to this list at a later date.
In the English Education office in LL 215.
You are an English major getting your Bachelor's degree in the College of Education, just as friends of yours may be English majors getting their degrees in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Your friends aren't liberal arts majors, and you're not an education major.
You'll need an application from the Office of Professional Field Experiences (Payne B-2) and complete it. You'll then need to make an appointment for an interview in the English Education Office (LL 215) in the English Department where your course preparation will be checked. Your application should then be returned to the Office of Professional Field Experiences.
You must have a grade of 'C' or better in all of the required English courses. We would not feel confident in recommending you to teach if the best grade you could earn is a 'D.' |
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