Professional Writing and Rhetoric A.B.

Chair, Department of English: Associate Professor Proudfit

Coordinator: Assistant Professor Maynard

A Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in Professional Writing and Rhetoric requires the completion of the Elon Core Curriculum as well as the Major Requirements listed below.

 

The AB major in Professional Writing and Rhetoric (PWR) reflects a national trend in higher education, as well as a long tradition within the discipline of rhetoric, to more clearly connect the liberal arts to worlds beyond the walls of academia. Rhetoric, one of the oldest liberal arts and developed in ancient Greece to prepare citizens for active participation in democratic society, has long been focused on connecting itself to “the life of the polis.”

Though distinctly not a pre-professional program, PWR prepares students to be successful communicators in their daily lives and, primarily, workplace and or civic contexts. Alumni pursue careers as writers, editors, and information designers in the non-profit and government sectors, publishing, science writing, law, marketing, and many other industries.

PWR graduates are liberally educated, critically reflective about the roles writing and writers play in our world, civically minded, and well prepared to assume active roles within the workplace.

Major Requirements:

Students also are required to prepare a capstone portfolio, submitted for external review during fall semester of the senior year. Elements of the portfolio are scaffolded in courses throughout the degree program, and students are asked to share drafts of portfolio items at each advising appointment for course registration.

Students who major in Professional Writing and Rhetoric cannot minor in Professional Writing Studies.

Core Courses: 20 sh

PWR 2110PROFESSIONAL WRITING AND RHETORIC

4 sh

PWR 2100PROFESSIONAL WRITING AND TECHNOLOGY STUDIO

4 sh

PWR 2170WRITING AS INQUIRY

4 sh

PWR 3110UNDERSTANDING RHETORIC

4 sh

PWR 4970PWR SENIOR SEMINAR

4 sh

PWR 0070SENIOR COMPREHENSIVE EVALUATION

0 sh

Professional Writing and Rhetoric Electives: 8 sh

Select 2 electives from the following list totaling 8 sh.  

PWR 2130PUBLISHING AND EDITING I

4 sh

PWR 2120MULTIMEDIA AND VISUAL RHETORICS I

4 sh

PWR 3130PUBLISHING AND EDITING II

4 sh

PWR 3120MULTIMEDIA AND VISUAL RHETORICS II

4 sh

PWR 3190SPECIAL TOPICS IN PROFESSIONAL WRITING AND RHETORIC

4 sh

PWR 3210WRITING GRANTS

4 sh

PWR 3220WRITING SCIENCE

4 sh

PWR 3230WRITING CIVIC ACTION

4 sh

ENG 3090Writing Center Workshop

4 sh

Literacies and Language in English: 4 sh

Select one literacy themed English elective.

ENG 2040Language in Society

4 sh

ENG 2050Grammar

4 sh

ENG 3060Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL): Theory and Practice

4 sh

ENG 2090Writing Studies Survey

4 sh

ENG 3010Introduction to Linguistics

4 sh

ENG 3020History of the English Language

4 sh

Outside Electives: 8 sh

Students should consult with their advisor to choose two 4 sh courses in a discipline other than PWR, which can include courses in the Department of English as well as any other program in the university. These elective choices will be approved by the PWR program coordinator.
Students with a declared minor, double major, or dual degree automatically fulfill these outside elective credits.

Experiences: 4 sh

Students must take at least one PWR 3985 2 sh internship and 2 sh of PWR 4999 research experience.  Research hours can be taken at the same time or as 1 sh projects in two different semesters. 

PWR 3985PROFESSIONAL WRITING AND RHETORIC INTERNSHIP

1-4 sh

PWR 4999RESEARCH IN PROFESSIONAL WRITING AND RHETORIC

1-4 sh

Research hours can double count with Elon College Fellows or Honors Fellows research hours only if the project is mentored by a PWR faculty member.

Total Credit Hours: 44

 

Program Outcomes

Students will understand that writing participates in socially constructing the worlds within which we live, work, play, etc.

Students will show an ability to integrate theoretical knowledge and professional practice.

Students will learn, often through working hands-on with actual clients, how to analyze, reflect on, assess, and effectively act within complex contexts and rhetorical situations.

Students will adopt a disciplinary identity as a writer and see themselves as experts (i.e., professional writers/rhetors) who bring rhetorical ways of seeing and acting in and on the world around them.

Students will learn to approach a wide variety of communication practices (e.g., visuals, multimedia, collaboration, and research) from the perspective of writing and rhetoric.

Students will study a wide variety of rhetorical techne (i.e., strategies) and, by working within and reflecting on actual rhetorical contexts, learn to adapt and develop rhetorical strategies and heuristics appropriate to specific situations.

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