Fall 2024 Courses

Notes:

  1. If a course is designated as low-cost, the course materials will cost $40 or less.
  2. If a course is designated as no-cost, students do not need to purchase any course materials.
  3. Course descriptions are subject to change based on instructor submissions. If the instructor has not submitted a course description, please refer to the PSU Bulletin for more information.

Fall 2024: Undergraduate English Courses

ENG 201 001 INTRODUCTION TO SHAKESPEARE

Instructor: Jonathan Walker
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 204 001 SURVEY OF BRITISH LIT I

Instructor: John Smyth
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

ENG 260 001 INTRO TO WOMEN'S LIT

Instructor: Susan Reese
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 299 001 SPST: INTRO CREATVE INDUSTRIES

Instructor: Rachel Noorda
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 300 001 LIT FORM AND ANALYSIS

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 300 002 LIT FORM AND ANALYSIS

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 300 003 LIT FORM AND ANALYSIS

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

ENG 304 001 CRITICAL THEORY OF CINEMA

Instructor: Matthew Ellis
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 305U 001 TOP IN FLM: HITCHCOCK

Instructor: Michael Clark
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 305U 002 TOP: CINEMA OF US/MEX BORDER

Instructor: Marcel Brousseau
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

ENG 306U 001 TOP: LATINX COMICS

Instructor: Marcel Brousseau
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

ENG 309U 001 INDIGENOUS NATIONS LITERATURE

Instructor: Marcel Brousseau
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 310U 001 TOP: CHILD/YOUNG ADULT LIT

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 326 001 LIT, COMMUNITY, DIFFERENCE

Instructor: Anoop Mirpuri
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 327 001 CULTURE, IMPER, GLOBALIZATION

Instructor: Sarah Lincoln
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 330U 001 JEWISH & ISRAELI LITERATURE

Instructor: Michael Weingrad
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

ENG 331U 001 INTRO RHETORIC & COMP

Instructor: Dan DeWeese
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 332U 001 HST CINEMA & NARRATIVE MEDIA I

Instructor: Matthew Ellis
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

ENG 335U 001 TOP: AFTERLIVES OF SLAVERY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 340U 001 MEDIEVAL LITERATURE

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 342U 001 EIGHTEENTH CENTURY LITERATURE

Instructor: Bill Knight
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 343U 001 ROMANTICISM

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 351U 001 AFRICAN AMERICAN LIT I

Instructor: Anoop Mirpuri
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 367U 001 TOP: GHOSTS AND HAUNTINGS

Instructor: Michael Clark
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 369U 001 ASIAN AMERICAN LITERATURE

Instructor: Marie Lo
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 371 001 THE NOVEL

Instructor: John Smyth
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

ENG 372U 001 TOP: LESBIAN&WOMXN IDS IN LIT

Instructor: Sally McWilliams
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 383U 001 TOP: GIANTS IN COMICS & MANGA

Instructor: Jon Holt
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 385U 001 CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE

Instructor: Susan Reese
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 399 001 SPST: INTERACTIVE FICTION

Instructor: Kathi Berens; Bart Massey
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 413 001 TEACHING & TUTORING WRITING

Instructor: Hildy Miller
Instructional Method: Online - Scheduled Meetings

ENG 422 001 AFRICAN FICTION

Instructor: Sarah Lincoln
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 497 001 COMICS HISTORY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

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Fall 2024: Graduate English Courses

ENG 500 001 PROBLEMS AND METHODS

Instructor: Jonathan Walker
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 507 001 SEM: COSMOPOLITANISM

Instructor: Bill Knight
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 513 001 TEACHING & TUTORING WRITING

Instructor: Hildy Miller
Instructional Method: Online - Scheduled Meetings

ENG 518 001 TEACHING COLLEGE COMPOSITION

Instructor: Kate Comer
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 522 001 AFRICAN FICTION

Instructor: Sarah Lincoln
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

ENG 531 001 TOP: THE FIELD OF ENGLISH

Instructor: Josh Epstein
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

This one-credit course is designed to support first-year graduate students as they adjust to graduate-level work. Our meetings and assignments will buttress your development as a critical reader, thinker, writer, and researcher in the field of English. We will meet every other week to discuss your progress and review some core skills in support of your work for other classes, particularly ENG 500.

(Students in or beyond their second year in the program should sign up for 531-002: Colloquium.)

ENG 531 002 COLLOQUIUM

Instructor: Josh Epstein
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

This one-credit class is designed to support returning M.A. in English students as they continue and complete their program. Our meetings and assignments will provide opportunities for you to continue honing your critical writing and researching skills, building upon strengths and addressing gaps and challenges. The course intends to support both your current term's coursework and your preparation for the field exam (the supplementary written notes and oral exam), the M.A. essay (if you are choosing that option), or other goals that you have for your intellectual and professional development.

(Students in their first year of the program should enroll instead in ENG 531-001: The Field of English.)

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Fall 2024: Undergraduate Writing Courses

WR 121Z 001 COMPOSITION I

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 121Z 002 COMPOSITION I

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 121Z 003 COMPOSITION I

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 121Z 004 COMPOSITION I

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 199 001 SPST: INTRO CREATIVE WRITING

Instructor: Paul Collins
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

An introduction to writing poetry, fiction, and nonfiction, as well as to the community of writing events and literary quarterlies. Majors and non-majors alike are welcome; no prior experience is required.

Texts:

  • Bird by Bird – Anne Lamott (978-0385480017)

WR 210 001 GRAMMAR REFRESHER

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 212 001 INTRO FICTION WRITING

Instructor: Janice Lee
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

If writing is language and language is desire and longing and suffering, and it is capable of great passion and also great nuances of passion- the passion of the mind, the passion of the body- and if syntax reflects state of desire, is hope, is love, is sadness, is fury … if the motion of line is about desire and longing and want; then why when we write, when we make shapes on paper, why then does it so often look like the traditional straight models?

–Carole Maso

In this class we will explore the practice of writing fiction as an experience that not only includes putting words to page and telling stories, but also listening, observing, giving attention, feeling, moving, walking, meditating, and sensing. The course will work as a creative laboratory, giving the students the opportunity to experiment and investigate within the realm of fiction. Our work will be guided by writing exercises, readings by diverse contemporary authors, and discussions of core craft elements such as point of view, character, plot, and setting. There will also be some discussion of student work. Throughout, we will explore what it means to articulate via language, to be challenged by language, to recreate intimacy with language, and to see differently because of and via language.

WR 212 002 INTRO FICTION WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 213 001 INTRO POETRY WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 213 002 INTRO POETRY WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 214 001 INTRO NONFICTION WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 222 001 WRITING RESEARCH PAPERS

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 222 002 WRITING RESEARCH PAPERS

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 227Z 001 TECHNICAL WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 227Z 002 TECHNICAL WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 227Z 003 TECHNICAL WRITING

Instructor: Sidouane Patcha
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 227Z 004 TECHNICAL WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 228 001 MEDIA WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 301 001 WIC: CRITICAL WRTING ENGLISH

Instructor: Kate Comer
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 301 002 WIC: CRITICAL WRTING ENGLISH

Instructor: Hildy Miller
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 312 001 INTERMED FICTION WR

Instructor: Justin Hocking
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 312 002 INTERMED FICTION WR

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 312 003 INTERMED FICTION WR

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 313 001 INTERMEDIATE POETRY WRITING

Instructor: Consuelo Wise
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 323 001 WRITING AS CRITICAL INQUIRY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 323 002 WRITING AS CRITICAL INQUIRY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 323 003 WRITING AS CRITICAL INQUIRY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 323 004 WRITING AS CRITICAL INQUIRY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 323 005 WRITING AS CRITICAL INQUIRY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Hybrid

WR 323 006 WRITING AS CRITICAL INQUIRY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 323 007 WRITING AS CRITICAL INQUIRY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 323 008 WRITING AS CRITICAL INQUIRY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 323 009 WRITING AS CRITICAL INQUIRY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 323 010 WRITING AS CRITICAL INQUIRY

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 327 001 TECHNICAL REPORT WRITING

Instructor: Sidouane Patcha
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 327 002 TECHNICAL REPORT WRITING

Instructor: W. Tracy Dillon
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

This course prepares students for writing as professionals in engineering, scientific and other technical disciplines. Topics covered include technical and workplace genres of writing, such as proposals and reports, oral presentation, writing about and with data, effective language practices, writing collaboratively and ethics. Emphasis (and the ultimate end-product) will be a short but formal technical report based on your own personal interests and experience. The report will propose a solution to a problem to decision makers who have the authority to act on your recommendations.

What about textbooks? Due to the cross-disciplinary nature of students taking this course for their program requirements or electives, no one-size-fits-all textbook will work for us. Course lectures should be sufficient to help you complete assignments. In short, no textbook is required. However, if you want to purchase a textbook, the course materials identify options for each major.

Should be fun!

Any questions? Ask: dillont@pdx.edu

WR 327 003 TECHNICAL REPORT WRITING

Instructor: W. Tracy Dillon
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

This course prepares students for writing as professionals in engineering, scientific and other technical disciplines. Topics covered include technical and workplace genres of writing, such as proposals and reports, oral presentation, writing about and with data, effective language practices, writing collaboratively and ethics. Emphasis (and the ultimate end-product) will be a short but formal technical report based on your own personal interests and experience. The report will propose a solution to a problem to decision makers who have the authority to act on your recommendations.

What about textbooks? Due to the cross-disciplinary nature of students taking this course for their program requirements or electives, no one-size-fits-all textbook will work for us. Course lectures should be sufficient to help you complete assignments. In short, no textbook is required. However, if you want to purchase a textbook, the course materials identify options for each major.

Should be fun!

Any questions? Ask: dillont@pdx.edu

WR 331 001 BOOK PUBLISHING FOR WRITERS

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 398 001 WRITING COMICS

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 410 001 TOP: LITERARY MAGAZINES

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

This course introduces students to the local and national world of literary magazines. By analyzing various submission, editing, and publishing processes, this class will promote critical thinking and insight regarding the practices of literary magazines. Students will also gain industry experience by reading and discussing Portland Review’s fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and mixed-genre submissions, as well as write reviews and essays with the goal of publication. Students interested in creative writing and publishing, whether they are new or experienced in these fields, are welcome.

During this class, students will...

  • Gain practical, vocational experience in the fields of editing and publishing
  • Identify crafted effects in published and unpublished creative prose and poetry 
  • Build familiarity with Portland Review's editors, as well as publishers and art organizations in the Portland community and beyond
  • Analyze and reflect on ethical practices in literary publishing
  • Pursue personal goals related to literary magazines

About Portland Review:

Founded in 1956, Portland Review publishes prose, poetry, art, and translations reflecting a wide spectrum of aesthetic styles and voices. Produced by the graduate students in Portland State University’s Department of English, Portland Review is proud to publish both established and emerging writers, as well as showcase a diverse spectrum of literary and artistic engagement across genres and disciplines. To learn more, visit portlandreview.org.

WR 412 001 ADVANCED FICTION WRITING

Instructor: Laura Scott
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 412 002 ADV FICTION WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 416 001 SCREENWRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 425 001 ADVANCED TECHNICAL WRITING

Instructor: Sarah Read
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 426 001 DOCUMENT DESIGN

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 434 001 SCIENCE WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 457 001 PERSONAL ESSAY WRITING

Instructor: Justin Hocking
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 460 001 INTRO TO BOOK PUBLISHING

Instructor: Robyn Crummer
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

Course Description:

This course offers an introduction to the book publishing industry. Students will be introduced to the history and current state of the agents and processes that constitute the book publishing industries in the US. Students will work together as mock publishing houses to produce a portfolio.

Course Objectives:

  • Converse intelligently about the book publishing industry
  • Deliver engaging oral presentations
  • Work effectively and professionally in a group
  • Write in various formats (from marketing material to research papers) 

WR 461 001 BOOK EDITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 462 001 BOOK DESIGN SOFTWARE

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 466 001 DIGITAL SKILLS

Instructor: Kathi Berens
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 474 001 PUBLISHING STUDIO

Instructor: Robyn Crummer
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

Publishing Studio & Lab are crosslisted and split listed courses, which means they run concurrently and enrollment depends on whether you need a one-credit or four-credit course as an undergraduate or graduate student for your individual degree requirements. There are no prerequsites.

Publishing Studio & Lab are the courses for hands-on learning at Ooligan Press. Designed to give students the freedom and responsibility of running a real-world trade publishing house, students are assigned to projects where they will work on a variety of publishing tasks. Project teams will work collaboratively to assess, plan, and execute editorial, design, digital content, marketing, and sales tasks throughout the term.

Publishing Studio: Graduate students in Publishing Studio should expect assignments to take approximately 12 hours per week; undergraduate students in Publishing Studio should expect 9 hours per week.

Publishing Lab: Graduate students in Publishing Lab should expect assignments to take approximately 4 hours per week; undergraduate students in Publishing Lab should expect 3 hours per week.

By the end of this course, students will be able to:

  • explain and understand the book production cycle;
  • competently use industry-standard terminology;
  • analyze disruptions to their project as they arise and actively problem-solve to address issues;
  • track, maintain, and update project management software, in the form of Trello;
  • communicate efficiently through email and face-to-face meetings;
  • complete assigned tasks efficiently as an individual and within a group; and
  • perform various tasks at a professional level, as assigned by a team manager.

WR 475 001 PUBLISHING LAB

Instructor: Robyn Crummer
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

Publishing Studio & Lab are crosslisted and split listed courses, which means they run concurrently and enrollment depends on whether you need a one-credit or four-credit course as an undergraduate or graduate student for your individual degree requirements. There are no prerequsites.

Publishing Studio & Lab are the courses for hands-on learning at Ooligan Press. Designed to give students the freedom and responsibility of running a real-world trade publishing house, students are assigned to projects where they will work on a variety of publishing tasks. Project teams will work collaboratively to assess, plan, and execute editorial, design, digital content, marketing, and sales tasks throughout the term.

Publishing Studio: Graduate students in Publishing Studio should expect assignments to take approximately 12 hours per week; undergraduate students in Publishing Studio should expect 9 hours per week.

Publishing Lab: Graduate students in Publishing Lab should expect assignments to take approximately 4 hours per week; undergraduate students in Publishing Lab should expect 3 hours per week.

By the end of this course, students will be able to:

  • explain and understand the book production cycle;
  • competently use industry-standard terminology;
  • analyze disruptions to their project as they arise and actively problem-solve to address issues;
  • track, maintain, and update project management software, in the form of Trello;
  • communicate efficiently through email and face-to-face meetings;
  • complete assigned tasks efficiently as an individual and within a group; and
  • perform various tasks at a professional level, as assigned by a team manager.

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Fall 2024: Graduate Writing Courses

WR 502 001 INDEPENDENT STUDY

Instructor: Sarah Read
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 507 001 SEM: DOCUMENTARY POETRY/PROSE

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 507 002 SEM: FICTION

Instructor: Gabriel Urza
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 521 001 MFA CORE WORKSHOP FICTION

Instructor: Janice Lee
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

If writing is language and language is desire and longing and suffering, and it is capable of great passion and also great nuances of passion- the passion of the mind, the passion of the body- and if syntax reflects state of desire, is hope, is love, is sadness, is fury … if the motion of line is about desire and longing and want; then why when we write, when we make shapes on paper, why then does it so often look like the traditional straight models?

–Carole Maso

[T]he disassociation of voice from language is not just a philosophical choice. It is also political. The voice is not always a freeing form of self-expression. It can prove to be a difficult transaction, a construction of fragments, as much conflicted demurral as actual communication, as much about what is unspeakable as about what is speakable.

–Cathy Park Hong

In this workshop we will examine the entire spectrum of the writing process, exploring the relationship between our own expectations of fiction, story, and narrative and the values we weave into our own writing. We will read various essays on craft, writing, language, and ways of engaging with the world, and also work on our own definitions & reconceptions of major craft concepts, training ourselves to read and “listen” more deeply to form and language as expression. This workshop will be a generative workshop, meaning we will work on generating new writing, as well as collaborating on generative revision exercises where we will apply a variety of of revision procedures to our work while re-envisioning the structural frameworks that shape not only our stories, but also our language at the micro-level of sentence and paragraph. Finally we will think critically about writing as a unique and collaborative process of becoming, and engage in critical analyses and discussions of peers’ work. This term, we’ll focus on rethinking the cultural values of craft alongside the core text for the class: Craft in the Real World by Matthew Salesses.

WR 522 001 MFA CORE WORKSHOP POETRY

Instructor: Consuelo Wise
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 523 001 MFA CORE WORKSHOP NONFICTION

Instructor: Paul Collins
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

This core workshop in nonfiction will be themed around Locality. We'll develop and workshop writing that focuses on the use of setting and community, with readings that explore the interplay of residents and unusual and little-noticed urban, domestic, and wild spaces.

Texts:

  • Soil -- Camille Dungy (978-1982195311)
  • Gone to New York -- Ian Frazier (978-0312425043)
  • Two Trees Make a Forest -- Jessica J. Lee (978-1646220007)
  • Flight Path -- Hannah Palmer (978-1938235283)

WR 525 001 ADVANCED TECHNICAL WRITING

Instructor: Sarah Read
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 526 001 DOCUMENT DESIGN

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 534 001 SCIENCE WRITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 540 001 TECH WRITING PORTFOLIO

Instructor: Sarah Read
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 550 001 PORTLAND REVIEW

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: Online - No Scheduled Meetings

WR 560 001 INTRO TO BOOK PUBLISHING

Instructor: Robyn Crummer
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

Course Description:

This course offers an introduction to the book publishing industry. Students will be introduced to the history and current state of the agents and processes that constitute the book publishing industries in the US. Students will work together as mock publishing houses to produce a portfolio.

Course Objectives:

  • Converse intelligently about the book publishing industry
  • Deliver engaging oral presentations
  • Work effectively and professionally in a group
  • Write in various formats (from marketing material to research papers) 

WR 561 001 BOOK EDITING

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 562 001 BOOK DESIGN SOFTWARE

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 566 001 DIGITAL SKILLS

Instructor: Kathi Berens
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 574 001 PUBLISHING STUDIO

Instructor: Robyn Crummer
Instructional Method: Online - Scheduled Meetings

Publishing Studio & Lab are crosslisted and split listed courses, which means they run concurrently and enrollment depends on whether you need a one-credit or four-credit course as an undergraduate or graduate student for your individual degree requirements. There are no prerequsites.

Publishing Studio & Lab are the courses for hands-on learning at Ooligan Press. Designed to give students the freedom and responsibility of running a real-world trade publishing house, students are assigned to projects where they will work on a variety of publishing tasks. Project teams will work collaboratively to assess, plan, and execute editorial, design, digital content, marketing, and sales tasks throughout the term.

Publishing Studio: Graduate students in Publishing Studio should expect assignments to take approximately 12 hours per week; undergraduate students in Publishing Studio should expect 9 hours per week.

Publishing Lab: Graduate students in Publishing Lab should expect assignments to take approximately 4 hours per week; undergraduate students in Publishing Lab should expect 3 hours per week.

By the end of this course, students will be able to:

  • explain and understand the book production cycle;
  • competently use industry-standard terminology;
  • analyze disruptions to their project as they arise and actively problem-solve to address issues;
  • track, maintain, and update project management software, in the form of Trello;
  • communicate efficiently through email and face-to-face meetings;
  • complete assigned tasks efficiently as an individual and within a group; and
  • perform various tasks at a professional level, as assigned by a team manager.

WR 575 001 PUBLISHING LAB

Instructor: Robyn Crummer
Instructional Method: Online - Scheduled Meetings

Publishing Studio & Lab are crosslisted and split listed courses, which means they run concurrently and enrollment depends on whether you need a one-credit or four-credit course as an undergraduate or graduate student for your individual degree requirements. There are no prerequsites.

Publishing Studio & Lab are the courses for hands-on learning at Ooligan Press. Designed to give students the freedom and responsibility of running a real-world trade publishing house, students are assigned to projects where they will work on a variety of publishing tasks. Project teams will work collaboratively to assess, plan, and execute editorial, design, digital content, marketing, and sales tasks throughout the term.

Publishing Studio: Graduate students in Publishing Studio should expect assignments to take approximately 12 hours per week; undergraduate students in Publishing Studio should expect 9 hours per week.

Publishing Lab: Graduate students in Publishing Lab should expect assignments to take approximately 4 hours per week; undergraduate students in Publishing Lab should expect 3 hours per week.

By the end of this course, students will be able to:

  • explain and understand the book production cycle;
  • competently use industry-standard terminology;
  • analyze disruptions to their project as they arise and actively problem-solve to address issues;
  • track, maintain, and update project management software, in the form of Trello;
  • communicate efficiently through email and face-to-face meetings;
  • complete assigned tasks efficiently as an individual and within a group; and
  • perform various tasks at a professional level, as assigned by a team manager.

WR 579 001 RESEARCHING BOOK PUBLISHING

Instructor: Rachel Noorda
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

WR 582 001 LIT AGENTS AND ACQUISITIONS

Instructor: STAFF 
Instructional Method: In-Person Meeting

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