| ENG0113 | Intro to Lang & Lit | No Description Set |
| ENGL1101 | Common Skills | No Description Set |
| ENGL1107 | Topics in Creative Writing | An introduction to the foundational principles of one of three creative writing genres: poetry, fiction, or creative non-fiction. Major emphasis is on the composition of poems, short fiction, personal narrative, and/or reflective journaling. The clas... |
| ENGL1107SB | Topics in Creative Writing | An introduction to the foundational principles of one of three creative writing genres: poetry, fiction, or creative non-fiction. Major emphasis is on the composition of poems, short fiction, personal narrative, and/or reflective journaling. The clas... |
| ENGL1301 | Composition and Rhetoric I | A course for students to develop skills in writing and reading. Major emphasis is on the composition of multi-paragraph essays, using a variety of rhetorical devices. The selected readings are employed to illustrate effective writing and to develop c... |
| ENGL1301CS | Intro to Lang/Lit Christian ScholarsAcademy | No Description Set |
| ENGL1301HR | Honors Introduction to Language andLiterature I | A course for students enrolled in the Honors Program to develop skills in writing and reading. Major emphasis is on the composition of multi-paragraph essays, using a variety of rhetorical devices. The selected readings are employed to illustrate eff... |
| ENGL1301HS | Composition and Rhetoric I | A course for students to develop skills in writing and reading. Major emphasis is on the composition of multi-paragraph essays, using a variety of rhetorical devices. The selected readings are employed to illustrate effective writing and to develop c... |
| ENGL1302 | Composition and Rhetoric II | A continuation of English 1301/1401 emphasizing analytical reading, research, writing, revision, and critical thinking. |
| ENGL1302CS | Introduction to Language andLiterature Christian Scholars | No Description Set |
| ENGL1302HR | Honors Introduction to Language andLiterature II | A continuation of English 1301HR emphasizing analytical reading, research, writing, revision, and critical thinking. Fall, Spring, Summer, Online. Prerequisite: ENGL 1301 or 1401 |
| ENGL1302HS | Composition and Rhetoric II | A continuation of English 1301/1401 emphasizing analytical reading, research, writing, revision, and critical thinking. For Honors Scholars Academy students only. |
| ENGL1391 | Travel Study in England | An individualized study of selections of British literature and of British culture in conjunction with a tour of literary, historical, and religious sites in Great Britain. |
| ENGL1392 | Juvenile Lit in Film | No Description Set |
| ENGL1393 | Survey of Juvenile Lit | No Description Set |
| ENGL1401 | Composition and Rhetoric I (Non-nativeEnglish Speakers) | A course for non-native English-speaking students to develop skills in writing and reading. Major emphasis is on the composition of multi-paragraph essays using a variety of rhetorical devices. Extra time is given to the development of English vocabu... |
| ENGL1401 | Intro to Lang and Lit I | A course for non-native speaking freshmen to develop skills in writing and reading. Major emphasis is on the organization of multi-paragraph essays, using a variety of rhetorical devices. Extra time is given to development of English vocabulary and... |
| ENGL2191 | Independent Study in English | Independent Study courses are devised by professors to permit students to explore material not offered in regularly scheduled courses (juniors or seniors only). |
| ENGL2301 | World Literature I | An introduction to world masterpieces from the earliest periods through the Renaissance. Attention is given to the historical context of these works and their contributions to the development of civilization. |
| ENGL2301HS | World Literature I | An introduction to world masterpieces from the earliest periods through the Renaissance. Attention is given to the historical context of these works and their contributions to the development of civilization. For Honors Scholar Academy students only. |
| ENGL2302 | World Literature II | An introduction to world masterpieces from the Enlightenment to the present. Attention is given to the historical context of these works and their contributions to the development of civilization. |
| ENGL2302HS | World Literature II | An introduction to world masterpieces from the Enlightenment to the present. Attention is given to the historical context of these works and their contributions to the development of civilization. For Honors Scholar Academy students only. |
| ENGL2390 | Independent Study in English | Independent Study courses are devised by professors to permit students to explore material not offered in regularly scheduled courses (juniors or seniors only). |
| ENGL2391 | Hebrew Literature in Context | 2009 spring break trip with D. McCollister |
| ENGL3214 | British Literature II | No Description Set |
| ENGL3290 | Independent Study in English | Independent Study courses are devised by professors to permit students to explore material not offered in regularly scheduled courses (juniors or seniors only). |
| ENGL3301 | American Literature I | An advanced-level survey of American literature from the Colonial Period through the Civil War. Emphasis is on the literary significance of selected writers and the social context in which they wrote. |
| ENGL3302 | American Literature II | An advanced-level survey of American literature from the Reconstruction Era to the present. Emphasis is on the literary significance of selected writers and the social context in which they wrote. |
| ENGL3303 | Modern Poetry | An intensive study of the creative techniques of major poets of the twentieth century, including Hopkins, Yeats, Pound, Eliot, Robinson, Amy Lowell, Frost, Sandburg, Wilbur, Robert Lowell, LeRoi Jones, and Ferlinghetti. These poets are viewed as a... |
| ENGL3304 | Shakespeare | A study of repersentative histories, comedies, and tragedies by Shakespeare with attention to the sources and backgrounds of his plays, to the Elizabethan scene, and to the significance of his works. Fall, even-numbered years. |
| ENGL3305 | Advanced Written Communication | Study of rhetorical situation, audience analysis, genre theory, and technical writing theories will provide a basis for ascertaining appropriate and ethical strategies for community building and civic discourse. Reflection in Biblical scripture in re... |
| ENGL3306 | Advanced Rhetoric | Study of key principles of rhetoric will provide a complex understanding of rhetoric's history, relationship with faith, and connections to culture, literature, and vocation. Major emphasis is on a Christian evaluation of the theory and application o... |
| ENGL3307 | Creative Writing | Theory and practice of creative writing in a variety of genres including nonfiction, short fiction, and poetry. This course will provide a foundation for critiquing, polishing, and marketing creative writing that incorporates Christian faith and Bib... |
| ENGL3308 | Modern Novel | An examination of representative novels and novelists from Britain, America, France, Germany, Russia. Concentration on the significant literary modes and styles characterizing the contemporary novel. Spring, odd-numbered years. |
| ENGL3312 | C.S.Lewis | This course is designed to acquaint students with C.S.Lewis' works concerning the following subjects: myth, allegory, nature, the afterlife, miracles, prayer, pain, ethics, education, the arts, sehnsucht, the numinous, style, literary criticism, etc... |
| ENGL3313 | British Literature I | This upper-level survey course acquaints students with selected masterpieces of British literature from its origins to the eighteenth century. The course requires reading of and research into the ideas and styles that dominated Old English, Middle En... |
| ENGL3314 | British Literature II | A continuation of English 3313 with emphasis on the major British writers from Blake to the present. The course requires reading of and research into the ideas and styles that dominated the Romantic Movement, the Victorian Period, Modern and Postmode... |
| ENGL3315 | Seminar in English | This course is designed as a capstone class for the English major and the English secondary education major. The course is designed to enable the student to analyze key issues in the fields of English and English education. Fall Prerequisites: Juni... |
| ENGL3320 | Internship in English | A supervised field placement that provides the student with the opportunity of integrating theory and classroom learning with actual field experience. This course contains a field-based service-learning component. |
| ENGL3390 | Independent Study in English | Independent Study courses are devised by professors to permit students to explore material not offered in regularly scheduled courses (juniors or seniors only). |
| ENGL3390 | Independent Study in World LiteratureSince 1700 | No Description Set |
| ENGL3391 | Themes of Faith in Literature | This is an experimental course and is not listed,in the current version of the Dallas Baptist,University Undergraduate Catalog or Graduate,Catalog. Experimental courses are identified by a,'9' as the third digit of the course number (e.g.,,ENGL 2390)... |
| ENGL3392 | Southern Literature | No Description Set |
| ENGL3393 | Independent Study in English | No Description Set |
| ENGL3394 | Literature of the South | An advanced level study of the development and characteristics of Southern literature from the Colonial Period through the twentieth century. General survey emphasizes works by selected wri- ters who are particularly representative of the late ninete... |
| ENGL3395 | English Teaching & Methodology | No Description Set |
| ENGL3396 | Independent Study in Engl | No Description Set |
| ENGL3397 | Classical Background/Italian Literature | No Description Set |
| ENGL3398 | Seminar in English | This course is designed as a capstone class for the English major and the English secondary education major. The course is designed to enable the student to analyze key issues in the fields of English and English education. |
| ENGL4190 | Independent Study in English | Independent Study courses are devised by professors to permit students to explore material not offered in regularly scheduled courses (juniors or seniors only). |
| ENGL4190 | Independent Study in English | No Description Set |
| ENGL4290 | Independent Study in English | No Description Set |
| ENGL4294 | Studies in Jane Austen | Will read four of Jane Austen's novels and evaluate her contributions to the English Novel. Furthermore, the student will view at least three film adaptations of the novels and will review the popularity of Jane Austen's works in light of the rece... |
| ENGL4301 | Introduction to Linguistics | An introduction to the core linguistic areas of morphology, phonology, pragmatics, semantics, syntax and related topics -- with an emphasis on syntax and its application in stylistic analysis. |
| ENGL4302 | Introduction to Linguistics | An introduction to the four core areas of linguis- tics - morphology, phonology, semantics and syntax - and to transformational grammar and sociolin- guistics. Spring Prerequisites: ENGL 2301 or ENGL 2302 Drosslisted: COMA 4302 |
| ENGL4303 | Modern Drama | An examination of representative plays from Ibsen to the present, with emphasis on the development of drama in Western civilization. Prerequisite: ENGL 2301 or 2302. |
| ENGL4303 | Studies in Drama | May concentrate upon a specific era or specific genre of drama. May be repeated for credit when content changes. Grade replacement for these courses may only be accomplished under courses with the same topic and content. |
| ENGL4304 | British Literature I | A study of British literature from its origin to the beginning of the Romantic movement with some consideration of the historical background. Fall, odd-numbered years. |
| ENGL4305 | British Literature II | A continuation of English 4304 with emphasis on the major British writers from Blake to the present. Spring, even-numbered years. |
| ENGL4306 | Seminar in English | This course is designed as the capstone class for English majors and the English secondary education majors. Students will analyze key issues in the field of English and English will be: critical thinking skills, grammar and editing procedures, wri... |
| ENGL4307 | Creative Christian Writing | A seminar designed for persons who want to learn how to share the message of Christ through the printed word. This course acquaints the student with writing and marketing techniques for curriculum pieces, feature articles, and books.... |
| ENGL4308 | Milton & Bunyan | Major works of Milton and Bunyan will be studied as examples of Puritan literature. Offered periodically Prerequisite: ENGL 2301 or 2302. |
| ENGL4309 | Studies in Fiction | May concentrate upon a specific era or specific genre of novels or short stories. May be repeated for credit when content changes. Grade replacement for these courses may only be accomplished under courses with the same topic and content. |
| ENGL4309 | The Novel Before 1900 | A study of the development and the characteristics of the novel from its beginning through the nineteenth century. Prerequisites: ENGL 2301 or 2302 |
| ENGL4309HR | Honors Studies in Fiction | For the students enrolled in the Honors Program: May concentrate upon a specific era or specific genre of novels or short stories. May be repeated for credit when content changes. Grade replacement for these courses may only be accomplished under cou... |
| ENGL4310 | Victorian Prose and Poetry | A survey of representative novels, essays and poetry of the English Victorian Period. Prerequisite: ENGL 2301 or 2302 offered periodically. |
| ENGL4311 | Modern Poetry | An upper-level survey of modern and contemporary poetry. Major figures, literary trends, and movements will be surveyed as they relate to the development of poetry during the twentieth century. Prerequisite: ENGL 2301 or 2302 |
| ENGL4311 | Studies in Poetry | May concentrate upon a specific era or specific genre of poetry. May be repeated for credit when content changes. Grade replacement for these courses may only be accomplished under courses with the same topic and content. |
| ENGL4312 | Shakespeare | A study of representative histories, comedies, and tragedies by Shakespeare with attention to the sources and backgrounds of his plays and to the significance of his works. |
| ENGL4312HR | Honors Shakespeare | No Description Set |
| ENGL4313 | Modern Novel | An examination of representative novels and novelists from throughout the world. Concentration on the significant literary modes and styles in the twentieth century. Prerequisite: ENGL 2301 or 2302 |
| ENGL4314 | Modern Christian Authors | This course will acquaint students with one or more Modern Christian authors and their works. The students will be called upon to respond, in oral and written formats, to selected authors. May be repeated for credit when content changes. |
| ENGL4314HR | Honors C.S. Lewis | This course will acquaint students with a wide range of C. S. Lewis' works. The students will be called upon to respond, in oral and written formats, to Lewis' works. Students will also explore the idea of a shared literary fellowship as modeled by t... |
| ENGL4315 | Studies in Non-Fiction | May concentrate upon a specific era or specific genre of nonfiction. May be repeated for credit when content changes. Grade replacement for these courses may only be accomplished under courses with the same topic and content. |
| ENGL4316 | Special Topics in English | Concentrates on specialized areas of literature. May be repeated for credit when content changes. Grade replacement for special topics courses may only be accomplished under special topics courses with the same topic and content. |
| ENGL4317 | Studies in Global Literature | A study of selected texts from global literature with an emphasis upon texts from non-western regions. May be repeated for credit when content changes. Grade replacement for these courses may only be accomplished under courses with the same topic a... |
| ENGL4317HR | Honors Studies in Global Literature | No Description Set |
| ENGL4318 | Intro to Literary Theory | No Description Set |
| ENGL4319 | Introduction to Literary Theory | This course is an introduction to major currents in contemporary literary theory and their practical application to the study of literature. Topics may include structuralism, New Criticism, deconstruction, psychoanalytic theory, gender theory, post-c... |
| ENGL4354 | Literature of East Asia | This course will explore selected masterpieces of China, Japan, and Korea from the earliest periods through the nineteenth century. |
| ENGL4390 | Independent Study in English | Independent Study courses are devised by professors to permit students to explore material not offered in regularly scheduled courses (juniors or seniors only). |
| ENGL4390HR | Honors Independent Study | For students enrolled in the Honors Program: Independent Study courses are devised by professors to permit students to explore material not offered in regularly scheduled courses (juniors or seniors only). |
| ENGL4391 | Cultural Contexts for British Literature | An individualized study of selections of British literature for upper level students in conjunction with a tour of literary, historical and religious sites in Great Britain. |
| ENGL4392 | Literature and Film | This upper-level survey reviews film as a medium for literature. An introduction to basic filming techniques provides a foundation for specific study of representative novels adapted into film. Prerequisite: English 2301 or English 2302. |
| ENGL4394 | Readings in British Lit. Religion & Phil | No Description Set |
| ENGL4395 | British Literture in Context | No Description Set |
| ENGL4396 | Alaskan Trip Summer 2006 | No Description Set |
| ENGL4397 | Advanced Poetry Writing | This is an experimental course and is not listed in the current version of the Dallas Baptist University Undergraduate Catalog or Graduate Catalog. Experimental courses are identified by a '9' as the third digit of the course number (e.g., ENGL 2390)... |
| ENGL5302 | Introduction to Linguistics | An introduction to the core linguistic areas of morphology, phonology, pragmatics, semantics, syntax, and related topics - with an emphasis on syntax and its application in stylistic analysis. This 5000-level course is cross-listed with a 4000-level... |
| ENGL5303 | Modern Drama | Significant development in modern British, American, and European drama, naturalism, neoclassicism, romanticism, symbolism, expressionism, and existentialism; reading of representative plays from Ibsen to the present. Fall, even-numbered years. |
| ENGL5319 | Introduction to Literary Theory | This course is an introduction to major currents in contemporary literary theory and their practical application to the study of literature. Topics may include structuralism, New Criticism, deconstruction, psychoanalytic theory, gender theory, post-c... |
| ENGL5340 | Studies in Global Literature | A study of literature that has emerged outside the western tradition, allowing for an examination of the rich diversity that comes from literature from other cultures around the globe. The majority of texts will be from non-western regions. Students... |
| ENGL5341 | Modern Christian Authors | This course will acquaint students with one or more Modern Christian authors and their works. The students will be called upon to respond, in oral and written formats, to selected authors. May be repeated for credit when content changes. This 5000-le... |
| ENGL5342 | Slct Topics in Linguistics | A study of historical and description linguistics as a basis for examining problems in oral and wirtten communication. This course explores correlations between linguistics and speech therapy and the support that linguistics can provide for the st... |
| ENGL5343 | Mstpc. in the Modern Novel | An examination of representative novels and novelists from Britian, America, France, Germany, Russia. Concentration on the significant literary modes and styles characterizing the contemporary novel. |
| ENGL5344 | Studies in Fiction | May concentrate upon a specific era or specific genre of novels or short stories. May be repeated for credit when the content changes. Grade replacement for these courses may only be accomplished under courses with the same topic and content. This 5... |
| ENGL5346 | The Puritan Tradition: Milton and Bunyan | Major works of Milton and Bunyan will be studied as examples of Puritan literature. Attention will be paid to significant scholarship and criticism pertaining to the authors and the Puritan tradition in literature. The biblical and religious c... |
| ENGL5346 | Special Topics in English | Concentrates on specialized areas of literature. May be repeated for credit when content changes. Grade replacement for special topics courses may only be accomplished under special topics courses with the same topic and content. This 5000-level cou... |
| ENGL5347 | Studies in Drama | May concentrate upon a specific era or specific genre of drama. May be repeated for credit when the content changes. Grade replacement for these courses may only be accomplished under courses with the same topic and content. This 5000-level course i... |
| ENGL5347 | Studies in Modern Drama | A study of modern drama as reflected in the works of selected American, British, and European authors beginnig with the nineteenth century literary giant Henry Ibsen. Emphasis will be placed upon the role of drama in communication, history, and... |
| ENGL5348 | Studies in Poetry | May concentrate upon a specific era or genre of poetry. May be repeated for credit when content changes. Grade replacement for these courses may only be accomplished under courses with the same topic and content. This 5000-level course is cross-list... |
| ENGL5349 | Shakespeare | A study of representative histories, comedies, and tragedies by Shakespeare with attention to the sources and backgrounds of his plays, to the Elizabethan scene, and to the significance of his works. |
| ENGL5349 | Shakespeare | A study of representative histories, comedies, and tragedies by Shakespeare with attention to the sources and background of his plays, to the Elizabethan scene, and to the significance of his works. Emphasis is placed upon research in critical and ba... |
| ENGL5350 | Critical Thinking/Rsch Methods | Through careful use of ERIC files, Internet, and computer- assisted research strategies, the student will discover the basic resources available for research. Research projects will explore critical thinking theory and its relationship to practica... |
| ENGL5351 | Composition Theory | This course will provide an overview of the major theories in the rhetoric and composition with emphasis on current studies and trends in composition. Issues of grading, error, collaborative writing, peer revision, teacher as writer and student, an... |
| ENGL5390 | Independent Study in English | Independent Study courses are devised by, professors to permit students to explore material, not offered in regularly scheduled courses. |
| ENGL5397 | Advanced Study of the Novel Before 1900 | No Description Set |
| ENGL6305 | Master's Thesis I | This course involves a scholarly, researched treatment of a topic of interest to the student, guided by an advising professor in tutorial fashion. This process includes attending a seminar to help the student identify research questions, to choose th... |
| ENGL6306 | Master's Thesis II | This course is a continuation of ENGL 6305 and involves a scholarly, researched treatment of a topic of interest to the student, guided by an advising professor in tutorial fashion. The resulting thesis or project portfolio will typically be from 55-... |
| ENGL6390 | Independent Study in English | Independent Study courses are devised by, professors to permit students to explore material, not offered in regularly scheduled courses. |
| ENGL6391 | Independent Study in English | Independent Study courses are devised by, professors to permit students to explore material, not offered in regularly scheduled courses. |
| ENGLELEC | English Elective | A generic course used for the External Transcript Equivalency Process. If the course does not have an equivalency but will meet subject area, the ELEC is used along with the appropriate department to state the course is accepted with in the subject... |