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WHAT CAN YOU DO WITH AN ENGLISH MAJOR? |
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After Whittier
English majors go into a great variety of fields after
graduation. The major is not designed to prepare for a
specific career, but the skills it develops in reading
carefully and writing precisely are going to be useful in
most professions. Many English majors do choose careers in
which writing and oral communication are important, and you
might bear this in mind in choosing both your courses and
your extracurricular activities. Working on the Quaker
Campus or the Acropolis, seeking out both on and off campus
internships in public relations, and working as a tutor in
the Writing Center are all ways to polish skills that will
make you valuable to future employers.
Graduate School: If you are considering graduate work in
English, pay particular attention to the above advice on
foreign languages. Also be particularly careful to take a
wide range of literature courses --your particular passion
may be for, let us say, postmodern America, but the Graduate
Record examinations are going to ask you about seventeenth
century England and the Victorians too. There are bound to
be gaps in your knowledge--you’d hardly need graduate school
if there weren’t-- but try to avoid chasms. And do study for
the exams. The kinds of paper assignments and examinations
we use may not be the best possible preparation for multiple
choice examinations; we are not about to change what we
think it is the best way to teach people to deal
intelligently with literature, but the GREs are an obstacle
you will need to surmount.
Working your way through a major anthology like the Norton
is a good way to prepare. Pay particular attention to the
critical introductions that give you a comprehensive
overview of an entire period. If there is a major area that
you have been unable to schedule any course work in, ask
faculty members for copies of syllabi so that you can plan
your own reading intelligently. Make every effort to include
History of Literary Criticism among your courses. In
addition, you should pay particular attention to how you
supplement your major work with appropriate courses in other
areas of the humanities, especially philosophy (all courses,
but Philosophy of Art would be particularly good), drama,
history, religion, and art history.
Teaching: Many of you are considering either elementary or
secondary teaching. You will need to consult a member of the
Education Department about credential requirements, but you
can work with your English department advisor on them too.
English is one of the easiest majors to fit in with the
distribution requirements for elementary certification,
since it is one of the four areas in which students are
required to take between 18 and 21 credits. The others are
Math and Science, Social Sciences, and Humanities. Yes, we
think English is a "humanity" too, but we’re talking about
the State of California here. As we pair extensively,
particularly with other humanities departments, it’s easy to
combine liberal education requirements, major courses, and
distribution requirements for the credential, as long as you
plan carefully. Pay particular attention to the above advice
on foreign language study --those courses also count in the
humanities category for the credential. We strongly
recommend that prospective elementary teachers meet their
English major requirement in the language area by taking
English 313 Linguistics.
Secondary teaching candidates are required to meet that
requirement with Linguistics. In addition to the 36 credits
required for the Whittier College English major, they must
take an additional 9 credits in what the State refers to as
breadth and perspective studies. Any English course not
included in the 36 credits required for the major may be
included here. In addition, you may choose from the
following extra-departmental courses:
Education 262 Children’s Literature
English 201 Introduction to Journalism
Interdisciplinary 33 Teaching Expository Writing
Spanish 225 Southern California Chicano Literature *
Theatre Arts 101 Basic Oral Communication
Theatre Arts 200 Theatrical Creativity
Theatre Arts 250 The Theatre
Theatre Arts 280 Introduction to Cinema
Theatre Arts 372 World Theatre
*Also listed as English 225; you may enroll in it as either.
Note that the State requires study a minority literature, a
requirement that can be filled by this course, by Asians in
America, or by African American Literary Tradition.
One additional literature course from the Department of
Foreign Languages may be included in this area.
You needn’t try to take a bit of everything here; the idea
is to develop competence in areas that support your own
interests. However, it is worth noting that few high schools
can afford to hire people who only teach drama or
journalism. Plays are usually directed and newspapers
advised by English teachers. Course work in these areas
(including Acting and Directing as well as the classes
listed above), participation in plays, and working on the
Quaker Campus or the Acropolis
make you all the more employable.
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