College of Arts & Sciences English Department
UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES GRADUATE CURRENT COURSES FIRST-YEAR ENGLISH FACULTY DEPARTMENT HOME
Careers in History

 

 

 

First-Year English — Critical Literacies

Winner of a 2006 CCCC Writing Program Certificate of Excellence


           The First-Year English Program at Marquette University is designed to help students learn to communicate effectively. To that end, the program develops students' reading, writing, speaking, and listening skills via critical literacy, which is the ability to express ideas, values and beliefs effectively in a variety of situations.  To foster Critical Literacy, the FYE Program offers a two-course writing sequence: Rhet/Comp 1, Academic Literacy, and Rhet/Comp 2, Public Sphere Literacy.

Textbooks                 Jesuit Mission                 Writing Resources

Learning Outcomes

Rhetoric and Composition 1, Academic Literacy            Details

Students learn to

1. Recognize & analyze literacy practices in academic disciplines

2. Assume the ethos of a university student who can enter academic conversations and assert his/her own stance

3. Employ strategies of exposition, analysis, argument, & interpretation

4. Write academic essays that are well organized, well reasoned, and well supported with evidence

5. Address academic audiences

6. Find, evaluate & integrate sources into papers

7. Document sources according to MLA citation conventions

8. Write clear, concise sentences in appropriate academic style


Rhetoric and Composition 2, Public Sphere Literacy      Details

Students learn to                                      

1. Recognize & analyze multiple literacy practices in the public sphere

2. Assume the ethos of a citizen who can engage public debates for the greater good of all

3. Write in multiple genres (e.g., thesis-support essays, journalistic essays, business documents, oral presentations) that are well organized, well reasoned, and well supported with evidence

4. Address non-academic audiences (e.g., general readers of Newsweek and workplace supervisors)

5. Find, evaluate & integrate sources into papers, using APA citation conventions (required starting 2006-07)

6. Write clear and concise sentences in a style appropriate to public contexts and audiences

7. Compose and deliver oral presentations for a listening audience

     
Jesuit Mission

Marquette University's FYE Program offers students ways of understanding the world and acting within their communities, via language, for the greater good of all. Thus, the FYE Program serves MU’s Jesuit mission of creating women and men for others.

Contact Information: 
Dr. Virginia Chappell, Director of FYE           
Virginia.chappell@marquette.edu                
Coughlin 330; 414.288.6859 

Christina Williams, Assistant Director of FYE

Christina.Williams@marquette.edu

Coughlin 329; 414.288.1553                   

home Marquette University Home
©2007 Marquette University.
P.O. Box 1881 · Milwaukee, Wis. USA · 53201-1881