May 23, 2024  
2021-2022 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2021-2022 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


 

Engineering

  
  • ENGR 5193 - Special Topics


    Credits: 1

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5194 - Special Topics


    Credits: 1

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5195 - Special Topics


    Credits: 1

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5196 - Special Topics


    Credits: 1

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5197 - Special Topics


    Credits: 1

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5198 - Special Topics


    Credits: 1

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5199 - Special Topics


    Credits: 1

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5290 - Special Topics


    Credits: 2

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5291 - Special Topics


    Credits: 2

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5292 - Special Topics


    Credits: 2

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5293 - Special Topics


    Credits: 2

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5294 - Special Topics


    Credits: 2

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5295 - Special Topics


    Credits: 2

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5296 - Special Topics


    Credits: 2

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5297 - Special Topics


    Credits: 2

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5298 - Special Topics


    Credits: 2

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5299 - Special Topics


    Credits: 2

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5390 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5391 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5392 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5393 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5394 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5395 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5396 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5397 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5398 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGR 5399 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Individual or group study of selected topics in engineering. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.

English

The courses are numbered by the final two digits as follows.

Writing and Reasoning ENGL 1300, WRTR 1311, WRTR 1312, WRTR 1313, WRTR 2303, WRTR 2304, WRTR 2305, WRTR 2306
Expository Writing (00–09) ENGL 3301, ENGL 3308
Genre, Method, Criticism (10–19) ENGL 2310, ENGL 2311, ENGL 2312, ENGL 2313, ENGL 2314, ENGL 2315, ENGL 2318, ENGL 3310, ENGL 3318, ENGL 4310, ENGL 4397
Pre-1775 (20-39) ENGL 1320, ENGL 1330, ENGL 3320, ENGL 3329, ENGL 3330, ENGL 3331, ENGL 3332, ENGL 3335, ENGL 4321, ENGL 4323, ENGL 4330, ENGL 4332, ENGL 4333, ENGL 4336, ENGL 4339
Post-1775 (40-69) ENGL 1360, ENGL 1363, ENGL 1365, ENGL 3340, ENGL 3341, ENGL 3344, ENGL 3345, ENGL 3346, ENGL 3347, ENGL 3348, ENGL 3350, ENGL 3355, ENGL 3360, ENGL 3362, ENGL 3363, ENGL 3364, ENGL 3365, ENGL 3366, ENGL 3367, ENGL 4340, ENGL 4341, ENGL 4343, ENGL 4346, ENGL 4349, ENGL 4350, ENGL 4351, ENGL 4360, ENGL 4369
Other Literature/Language Courses (70–89) ENGL 1380, ENGL 1385, ENGL 3189, ENGL 3370, ENGL 3371, ENGL 3374, ENGL 3376, ENGL 3377, ENGL 3379, ENGL 3381, ENGL 3383, ENGL 3384, ENGL 3385, ENGL 3389, ENGL 4370
Creative Writing (90–99) ENGL 2390, ENGL 3390, ENGL 4390

Writing and Reasoning

English

  
  • ENGL 1300 - Foundations for Rhetoric


    Credits: 3

    Writing paragraphs and short, analytic, thesis-directed essays in response to texts. Work on reading comprehension, principles of effective sentence construction, and punctuation.
  
  • ENGL 1320 - Cultures of Medieval Chivalry


    Credits: 3

    The development of the ideal of chivalry from its origins in the medieval legends of King Arthur to modern literature.
  
  • ENGL 1330 - The World of Shakespeare


    Credits: 3

    Introductory study of eight or nine of Shakespeare’s important plays, placed in historical, intellectual, and cultural contexts.
  
  • ENGL 1360 - The American Heroine


    Credits: 3

    Images of the American heroine in popular and traditional literature, studied in terms of their reflection of the evolving roles of American women.
  
  • ENGL 1363 - The Myth of the American West


    Credits: 3

    The myth and reality of the American West as seen through key works of history, folklore and fiction, including study of the serious Western novel and the subliterary Western.
  
  • ENGL 1365 - Literature of Minorities


    Credits: 3

    Representative works of African-American, Asian-American, gay, Hispanic-American, and Native American literature, in their immediate cultural context and against the background of the larger American culture.
  
  • ENGL 1372 - English Studies Abroad


    Credits: 3

    SMU credit for English courses taken in University-approved programs abroad. Departmental consent required.
  
  • ENGL 1380 - Introduction to Literature


    Credits: 3

    An introduction to the study of literature including a range of literary genres and periods, varying by term.
  
  • ENGL 1385 - Power, Passion, and Protest in British Literature


    Credits: 3

    A survey of the history of British literature, from its medieval beginnings to the 20th century, with emphasis on literature as an instrument of power and desire.
  
  • ENGL 1400 - Developmental Reading and Writing


    Credits: 4

    Students will receive explicit, systematic instruction in reading comprehension and apply fundamental reading skills to narrative and expository texts as well as to coordinated writing assignments of varying lengths.
  
  • ENGL 2102 - Spreadsheet Literacy: Excel for Students in the Humanities and Natural and Social Sciences


    Credits: 1

    An introduction to Excel as it is commonly used in the workplace. Students will learn to organize and analyze data, use and link worksheets, create tables and charts, and communicate results of their analyses in clear, readable prose.
  
  • ENGL 2302 - Business Writing


    Credits: 3

    Introduction to business and professional communication, including a variety of writing and speaking tasks, and the observation and practice of rhetorical strategies, discourse conventions, and ethical standards associated with workplace culture. Prerequisite: WRTR 1312 , WRTR 2303 , or WRTR 2305 .
  
  • ENGL 2306 - Honors Humanities Seminar II


    Credits: 3

    A study of ethical questions derived from history, literature, psychology, and philosophy that focuses on what constitutes a meaningful life. The course also explores historical challenges to the bases of ethics. Prerequisite: WRTR 2305 .
  
  • ENGL 2310 - Imagination and Interpretation


    Credits: 3

    An introduction to literary studies based on topics that vary from term to term.
  
  • ENGL 2311 - Poetry


    Credits: 3

    Analysis, interpretation, and appreciation of poetry, with attention to terms and issues relevant to the genre.
  
  • ENGL 2312 - Fiction


    Credits: 3

    Analysis, interpretation, and appreciation of fiction, with attention to terms and issues relevant to the genre.
  
  • ENGL 2313 - Drama


    Credits: 3

    Analysis, interpretation, and appreciation of dramatic works, with attention to terms and issues relevant to the genre.
  
  • ENGL 2314 - Doing Things With Poems


    Credits: 3

    Introduction to the study of poems, poets, and how poetry works, focusing on a wide range of English and American writers. Some attention to matters of literary history. Open only to students in the University Honors Program.
  
  • ENGL 2315 - Introduction to Literary Study


    Credits: 3

    An introduction to the discipline for beginning English majors, covering methods of literary analysis in selected texts spanning a range of genres and historical periods.
  
  • ENGL 2318 - Literature and Digital Humanities: An Introduction


    Credits: 3

    Examines how technology can advance our understanding of language, literature, and culture. A hands-on introduction to applying cutting-edge technologies including text mining, digitization, metadata, and mapping to analyze literature.
  
  • ENGL 2372 - English Studies Abroad


    Credits: 3

    SMU credit for English courses taken in University-approved programs abroad. Departmental consent required.
  
  • ENGL 2390 - Introduction to Creative Writing


    Credits: 3

    Workshop on the theory and techniques of writing fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction.
  
  • ENGL 3189 - Directed Studies


    Credits: 1

    Directed readings in a coherent area of a student’s choice to be approved by the director of undergraduate study and the instructor.
  
  • ENGL 3285 - Internship in English Studies


    Credits: 2

    Work experience related to English studies, with instruction in professional communication. Workshop format and one-on-one consultation with instructor. Requires 90 hours of internship work. Prerequisite: Open only to junior and senior English majors by permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGL 3301 - Advanced Expository Writing


    Credits: 3

    Emphasis on styles and formats appropriate to academic writing, and on individual problems and needs.
  
  • ENGL 3308 - Internship in English Studies


    Credits: 3

    Work experience related to English studies, with instruction in professional communication. Workshop format and one-on-one consultation with instructor. Requires 135 hours of internship work. Prerequisite: Open only to junior and senior English majors by permission of instructor.
  
  • ENGL 3310 - Research and Critical Writing for Literary Studies


    Credits: 3

    Gateway course designed as an intensive introduction to the study of nineteenth and twentieth century literary texts that explores several key questions: What is a text? What are some of the approaches thoughtful critics have taken in recent years to the analysis of texts? How do we as readers make sense both of texts and of their critics? How, in practice, do we progress from the reading to the written analysis of texts? Employs a combination of lecture, discussion group activity, and writing exercises with the goal of refining critical thinking, reading, and writing skills. Prerequisite: WRTR 1313 , WRTR 2304 , or WRTR 2306 .
  
  • ENGL 3318 - Literature as Data


    Credits: 3

    Examines a range of theoretical and technological approaches that allow us to think about literature as data and what that means for literary interpretation. By interrogating theoretical and practical approaches to using technology to analyze literary texts and comparing these with traditional literary scholarship, this course taps into big questions about how – if at all – digital methods change literary studies, and the extent to which thinking about literature as data really is a new idea. Recommended prerequisite: ENGL 2318 .
  
  • ENGL 3320 - Topics in Medieval Literature


    Credits: 3

    Study of a theme, issue, or topic in English literature from its beginnings to 1500, varying by term. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3329 - Courtly Cultures and King Arthur


    Credits: 3

    Study of Britain’s greatest native hero and one of the world’s most compelling story stocks: the legends of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table.
  
  • ENGL 3330 - Topics in Early Modern Literature


    Credits: 3

    Study of a theme, issue, or topic in British literature c. 1500–1775, varying by term. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3331 - British Literary History I: Chaucer to Pope


    Credits: 3

    Introduction to earlier periods of English literature through the study of major authors in their historical context and from varied critical and thematic perspectives.
  
  • ENGL 3332 - Shakespeare


    Credits: 3

    Studies of Shakespeare’s major works in context with English history, society, and culture, including literary and theatrical conventions and practices. Topics vary by term; may be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3335 - Transatlantic Encounters I


    Credits: 3

    Comparative studies in British and American literature during the early modern period (c. 1500–1775), with attention to issues of first contact, colonization, and cultural interrelations. Topics vary by term; may be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3340 - Topics in British Literature in the Age of Revolutions


    Credits: 3

    Study of a theme, issue, or topic in British literature c. 1775–1900, varying by term. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3341 - British Literary History II: Wordsworth Through Yeats


    Credits: 3

    Introduction to later periods of English literature through the study of major authors in their historical context and from varied critical and thematic perspectives.
  
  • ENGL 3344 - Victorian Gender and Sexuality


    Credits: 3

    Through an exploration of fiction, poetry, drama, and other writing from the Victorian period, this course considers why so much of the literature of Victorian England still speaks meaningfully and directly about what it means to be a man or woman. The course focuses on the way writing of the period reflects, questions, and protests the gender distinctions that Victorians understood as the foundation of the social world.
  
  • ENGL 3345 - Transatlantic Encounters II


    Credits: 3

    Comparative studies in British and American literature during the Age of Revolutions (c. 1775–1900), with attention to cultural interrelations during a period of rapid social change. Topics vary by term; may be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3346 - American Literary History I


    Credits: 3

    Introduction to earlier periods of American literature through the study of major authors in their historical context and from varied critical and thematic perspectives.
  
  • ENGL 3347 - Topics in American Literature in the Age of Revolutions


    Credits: 3

    Study of a theme, issue, or topic in American literature c. 1775–1900, varying by term. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3348 - History of Print and Digital Culture in America


    Credits: 3

    An overview of the history of written communications in America from the introduction of the first printing press in the English colonies to the present era of digital and multimedia culture. Moves across four centuries of writing to introduce students from various disciplinary tracks to the sprawling multidiscipline of the history of the book in its basic theoretical, methodological, and practical dimensions. Examines 1) a literary history of the United States; 2) a narrative of the history of the cultural production, dissemination, and consumption of writing - broadly and inclusively defined - in North America; 3) communications issues crucial to American culture, such as literacy, intellectual property, and freedom of speech; and 4) the formation of the institutions (including schools, libraries, bookstores, print shops, publishing houses, and houses of worship), laws (especially copyright and freedom of speech laws), and technologies that have mediated America’s communications history and given rise to American literature, culture, and society. Major topics include the history of American literature; local, regional, and national formation through print; print and race, ethnicity, and gender; the history of authorship, reading, and publishing; the history of journalism; censorship versus freedom of speech; the uses of literacy; the formations of lowbrow, middlebrow, and highbrow culture; and the history of libraries and archives, with and without walls.
  
  • ENGL 3350 - Topics in Modern and Contemporary British Literature


    Credits: 3

    Study of a theme, issue, or topic in British literature c. 1900 to the present, varying by term. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3355 - Transatlantic Encounters III


    Credits: 3

    Comparative studies of British and American writing in the period of modern and contemporary literature (c. 1900 to the present), with attention to cultural interrelations during the period. Topics vary by term; may be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3360 - Topics in Modern and Contemporary American Literature


    Credits: 3

    Study of a theme, issue, or topic in American literature c. 1900 to the present, varying by term. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3362 - African–American Literature


    Credits: 3

    Major African–American writers and their works, and various social and historical influences.
  
  • ENGL 3363 - Chicana/Chicano Literature


    Credits: 3

    A broad examination of major 20th–century Mexican–American writers and their works in the context of various social, geographic, political, and historical influences. Some knowledge of Spanish is helpful to students but is not a prerequisite for the course.
  
  • ENGL 3364 - Women and the Southwest


    Credits: 3

    A study and exploration of women writers, artists, and thinkers in the American Southwest and their vision of this region as singularly hospitable to women’s culture.
  
  • ENGL 3365 - Jewish–American Literature and Culture


    Credits: 3

    An interdisciplinary introduction to Jewish culture through literature, especially in the American environment, as well as to the issues in studying any distinctive ethnic and cultural literature.
  
  • ENGL 3366 - American Literary History II


    Credits: 3

    Introduction to later periods of American literature through the study of major authors in their historical context and from varied critical and thematic perspectives.
  
  • ENGL 3367 - Ethical Implications of Children’s Literature


    Credits: 3

    Examination of children’s literature with emphasis on notions of morality and evil, including issues of colonialism, race, ethnicity, gender, and class.
  
  • ENGL 3370 - Special Topics


    Credits: 3

    Examination of a subject that includes material from a range of historical periods. Topics vary by term; examples include pastoral literature; Shakespeare in England and India; and irony, satire, and politics. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3371 - Joan of Arc: History, Literature, and Film


    Credits: 3

    The life and later reception of the extraordinary peasant girl Joan of Arc (c. 1412–1431), who in the 2 years before she was burned at the stake changed the course of European history.
  
  • ENGL 3372 - English Studies Abroad


    Credits: 3

    SMU credit for English courses taken in University-approved programs abroad. Departmental consent required.
  
  • ENGL 3374 - Literature of Religious Reflection


    Credits: 3

    Issues of faith and doubt in British and American literature, drawn from texts reflecting Christian humanism, secular rationalism, individualistic romantic faith, and scientific modernism and other modern alternatives.
  
  • ENGL 3376 - Literature of the Southwest


    Credits: 3

    Includes 19th– and 20th–century Anglo, Hispanic, and Native American literature of the southwestern United States.
  
  • ENGL 3377 - Literature and the Construction of Homosexuality


    Credits: 3

    Examination of same–sex desire in modern literature, as considered in the context of philosophical, religious, and scientific texts since the ancient world.
  
  • ENGL 3379 - Literary and Cultural Contexts of Disability: Gender, Care, and Justice


    Credits: 3

    An examination of disability as a cultural construct, with attention to how literary, ethical, and political representations bear upon it, and in relation to gender, race, and class issues.
  
  • ENGL 3381 - Semiotics of Culture


    Credits: 3

    Analysis of form, technique, and meaning in literary and textual representation, in comparison or in conjunction with other representational media such as painting, photography, and cinema. Topics vary by term; may be repeated for credit under a different subtitle.
  
  • ENGL 3383 - Literary Executions: Imagination and Capital Punishment


    Credits: 3

    The literary treatment of capital punishment in drama, poetry, novel, and biography.
  
  • ENGL 3384 - Literature and Medicine


    Credits: 3

    How literature reveals the experiences, ethics, and values of those who suffer and their healers.
  
  • ENGL 3385 - Literature of the Holocaust


    Credits: 3

    Explores the literature of the Holocaust and issues of the possibility of aesthetic portrayal of this horrific event. It considers Holocaust literature and post–Holocaust literature.
  
  • ENGL 3386 - The Gothic Novel


    Credits: 3

    Students will write four analytic essays on principal works in the genre of the Gothic Novel. The course will continuously reflect on questions of emerging modernity in science, political change, industrialization, immigration, etc., and its uncanny relation to the past. It will also follow changes in the conception of the psyche from the revolutionary individual of the late 18th century through post-Freudian conceptions of contemporary culture.
  
  • ENGL 3389 - Directed Studies


    Credits: 3

    Directed readings in a coherent area of a student’s choice, to be approved by the director of undergraduate studies and the instructor.
  
  • ENGL 3390 - Creative Writing Workshop


    Credits: 3

    Focuses on a single genre such as fiction, creative nonfiction, or poetry, but may cover multiple genres. Drawing on the lessons of ENGL 2390 , students write and revise creative work, and critique that of their classmates. Students read brilliant texts and in so doing educate their taste. At the heart of this course is a respect for the Nabokovian standard of “aesthetic bliss.” Prerequisite: ENGL 2390 .
  
  • ENGL 4310 - Studies in Literary Theory and Criticism


    Credits: 3

    An advanced study of a theoretical or critical problem in literary study and interpretation. Topics could include questions of history, major theoretical movements, and cultural studies. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle. Prerequisites: ENGL 2311  or ENGL 2314 , ENGL 2315 , and two additional ENGL courses (excluding ENGL 1300 , ENGL 1400 , ENGL 2302 ) or instructor approval.
  
  • ENGL 4321 - Studies in Medieval Literature


    Credits: 3

    Advanced study of medieval literature focused on a specified problem, topic, or theme. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle. Prerequisites: ENGL 2311  or ENGL 2314 , ENGL 2315 , and two additional ENGL courses (excluding ENGL 1300 , ENGL 1400 , ENGL 2302 ) or instructor approval.
  
  • ENGL 4323 - Chaucer


    Credits: 3

    Advanced studies in the poetry of Geoffrey Chaucer in relation to historical contexts, medieval poetics, and Middle English language. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle. Prerequisites: ENGL 2311  or ENGL 2314 , ENGL 2315 , and two additional ENGL courses (excluding ENGL 1300 , ENGL 1400 , ENGL 2302 ) or instructor approval.
  
  • ENGL 4330 - Renaissance Writers


    Credits: 3

    Intensive study of one or two major writers from the period in context with English social and cultural history. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle. Prerequisites: ENGL 2311  or ENGL 2314 , ENGL 2315 , and two additional ENGL courses (excluding ENGL 1300 , ENGL 1400 , ENGL 2302 ) or instructor approval.
  
  • ENGL 4332 - Studies in Early Modern British Literature


    Credits: 3

    Advanced study of British literature c. 1500-1775, focused on a specific problem, topic, or theme. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle. Prerequisites: ENGL 2311  or ENGL 2314 , ENGL 2315 , and two additional ENGL courses (excluding ENGL 1300 , ENGL 1400 , ENGL 2302 ) or instructor approval.
  
  • ENGL 4333 - Shakespeare


    Credits: 3

    Advanced studies in Shakespeare’s poetry and plays, in historical, cultural, and theatrical contexts. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle. Prerequisites: ENGL 2311  or ENGL 2314 , ENGL 2315 , and two additional ENGL courses (excluding ENGL 1300 , ENGL 1400 , ENGL 2302 ) or instructor approval.
  
  • ENGL 4336 - Studies in Early Modern American Literature


    Credits: 3

    Advanced study of American literature c. 1500-1775, focused on a specified problem, topic, or theme. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle. Prerequisites: ENGL 2311  or ENGL 2314 , ENGL 2315 , and two additional ENGL courses (excluding ENGL 1300 , ENGL 1400 , ENGL 2302 ) or instructor approval.
  
  • ENGL 4339 - Transatlantic Studies I


    Credits: 3

    Intensive study of a theme, genre, or topic in transatlantic literature in English from the early modern period (c. 1500-1775). May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle. Prerequisites: ENGL 2311  or ENGL 2314 , ENGL 2315 , and two additional ENGL courses (excluding ENGL 1300 , ENGL 1400 , ENGL 2302 ) or instructor approval.
  
  • ENGL 4340 - Romantic Writers


    Credits: 3

    Intensive study of one or two major British writers from the period. May be repeated for credit under a different subtitle. Prerequisites: ENGL 2311  or ENGL 2314 , ENGL 2315 , and two additional ENGL courses (excluding ENGL 1300 , ENGL 1400 , ENGL 2302 ) or instructor approval.
 

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