| The
M.A. Program in English Education is designed to prepare candidates to
serve as curriculum leaders or master teachers. The students who enter
the program are already teachers who want to engage in a process of professional
development and to prepare themselves for more responsibility as educators.
The program requires 30 hours of graduate course work and a written comprehensive
exam. No thesis is required. Application and Admission Application
materials for the M.A.program may be obtained through the
Office of Student Services, N310 Lindquist Center. Students applying
to the program must include transcripts of all post-secondary course
work, at least three letters of recommendation, and a personal statement
explaining their goals for their graduate studies. Applicants must also
take the Graduate Record Exam. The Program The only
required course in the M.A. program is the M.A.Seminar in English Education,
a course offered every fall semester at a time in the evening when practicing
teachers can attend class. Candidates design the rest of their program
themselves, in consultation with their advisor. They are free to choose
courses from the wide range of offerings in the College of Education
and in the English Department, but they can also choose courses in related
disciplines such as Psychology, Anthropology, and American Studies.
Candidates who are teaching full- or part-time can complete their programs
over several years, taking courses in the evenings and in the summers
as their schedule allows. Candidates who are not currently teaching
can usually finish their programs within 3 or 4 semesters. Near the
end of their program, students are required to take a written comprehensive
exam. The exam consists of two 3-hour sections or three 2-hour sections.
At least two members of the three-person committee should be asked to write questions for the exam. The procedure for writing these questions is as follows: One area
of the exam will be designated "English Education," and will
address broad issues and trends in the field. For this portion, the
student asks one member of the committee to write the question(s) and,
in consultation with that member, develops a reading list of about 12
to 15 texts drawn largely from the course work that the student has
already completed. That reading list will serve as a foundation for
this segment of the exam. All three members of the exam committee read the exam. Students are informed of the results through the mail. There is no oral portion of the exam.
|