TABLE OF CONTENTS ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES

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TABLE OF CONTENTS ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 1

TABLE OF CONTENTS ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 TABLE OF CONTENTS Graduate Program Personnel 4 Program Directors 4 Graduate Studies Committee 4 Graduate Faculty 5 Assistantships 8 Guidelines for Certificate in TESOL 11 Summary Checklist 12 Application and Admission 12 Admission Qualifications and Materials 13 Application Forms and Fees 13 Teacher Certification Disclaimer 13 Graduate College Rules and Regulations 13 Advisor 14 Plan of Study and Certificate Completion 14 Checklist for Submitting a Plan of Study 14 Course Requirements 14 Student Tenure 15 Appeals and Petitions 15 Guidelines for MA in English 17 Summary Checklist 18 Application and Admission 19 Graduate College Rules and Regulations 20 Adviser and Advisory Committee 20 Plan of Study 21 Checklist for Submitting a Plan of Study 21 MA Degree Plan Course Requirements 21 Language Requirement 24 MA Qualifying Exam 25 Thesis 26 Final Examination: Thesis Defense 27 Student Tenure 28 Length of Financial Support for Teaching Assistants 28 Ineligibility for the MA Degree 28 Appeals and Petitions 28 Guidelines for MA in English with TESL Option 29 Summary Checklist 30 Application and Admission 31 Admission Qualifications and Application Materials 31 Teacher Certification Disclaimer 32 Graduate College Rules and Regulations 32 Adviser and Advisory Committee 32 Plan of Study 33 Checklist for Submitting a Plan of Study 33 Course Requirements 33 Language Requirement 36 1

TABLE OF CONTENTS ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 Guidelines for MA in English with TESL Option Cont d MA Qualifying Examination in TESL 36 Thesis (optional) 37 Thesis Defense (optional) 38 Student Tenure 38 Length of Financial Support for Teaching Assistants 39 Ineligibility for the MA Degree 39 Appeals and Petitions 39 Guidelines for MA in English with Professional Writing Option 40 Summary Checklist 41 Application and Admission 42 Admission Qualifications and Application Materials 42 Graduate College Rules and Regulations 43 Adviser and Advisory Committee 43 Plan of Study 43 Checklist for Submitting a Plan of Study 44 Course Requirements 44 Language Requirement 47 MA Qualifying Examination for Professional Writing Option 48 Thesis (optional) 49 Thesis Defense (optional) 50 Student Tenure 50 Length of Financial Support for Teaching Assistants 50 Ineligibility for the MA Degree 50 Appeals and Petitions 51 Guidelines for MFA in Creative Writing 52 Summary Checklist 53 Application and Admission 54 Admission Qualifications and Application Materials 54 Graduate College Rules and Regulations 55 Adviser and Advisory Committee 55 Plan of Study 55 Checklist for Submitting a Plan of Study 56 Course Requirements 56 Thesis 58 Student Tenure 58 Length of Financial Support for Teaching Assistants 59 Ineligibility for the MFA Degree 59 Appeals and Petitions 59 Guidelines for PhD in English 60 Summary Checklist 62 Application and Admission 63 Admission Qualifications and Application Materials 63 Graduate College Rules and Regulations 64 First Year PhD Examination 64 Adviser and Advisory Committee 65 Plan of Study 66 Checklist for Submitting a Plan of Study 66 Course Requirements 67 Creative Writing Curriculum 69 Literature Curriculum 69 2

TABLE OF CONTENTS ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 Guidelines for PhD in English Cont d Linguistics Curriculum 69 Language Requirement 69 PhD Qualifying Assessment 70 PhD Qualifying Examination 71 PhD Qualifying Papers 72 Dissertation 74 Final Examination: Dissertation Defense 75 Student Tenure 75 Length of Financial Support for Teaching Assistants 75 Ineligibility for the PhD Degree 75 Appeals and Petitions 76 3

GRADUATE PROGRAM PERSONNEL ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 Graduate Director Graduate Program Personnel Assistant to the Graduate Director Andrew Wadoski Brenda Maxwell 405-744-6222 308A Morrill 405-744-9469 308 Morrill wadoski@okstate.edu brenda.maxwell@okstate.edu Graduate Office email: englishgrad@okstate.edu English Department Head Associate Department Head Richard Frohock Ron Brooks 405-744-6140 205B Morrill 405-744-8368 104C Morrill richard.frohock@okstate.edu ron.brooks@okstate.edu TESL/Linguistics Program Directors Rhetoric and Professional Writing Carol Moder Ron Brooks 405-744-9471 211C Morrill 405-744-8368 104C Morrill carol.moder@okstate.edu ron.brooks@okstate.edu Literature Creative Writing Martin Wallen Lisa Lewis 405-744-9472 207B Morrill 405-744-6235 201A Morrill martin.wallen@okstate.edu lisa.lewis@okstate.edu Screen Studies Jeff Menne 405-744-6228 311A Morrill jeff.menne@okstate.edu Graduate Studies Committee The Graduate Studies Committee consists of a representative from each of three areas: Area A: Literature Area B: TESL/Linguistics, Composition and Katherine Hallemeier Rhetoric, Professional Writing 405-744-5487 302C Morrill Joshua Daniel-Wariya katherine.hallemeier@okstate.edu 405-744-6837 309 Morrill Hall joshua.daniel-wariya@okstate.edu Area C: Screen Studies, Creative Writing Sarah Beth Childers 405-744-6226 109E Morrill sarah.beth.childers@okstate.edu The Graduate Director is a non-voting member. 4

GRADUATE FACULTY ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 The Graduate Faculty See the English Department online faculty directory for office and telephone information: http://english.okstate.edu/faculty/faculty-profiles Linda Austin, PhD linda.m.austin@okstate.edu University Of Rochester Ron Brooks, PhD ron.brooks@okstate.edu University of Oklahoma Nancy Caplow, PhD nancy.caplow@okstate.edu University of California, Santa Barbara An Cheng, PhD an.cheng@okstate.edu Pennsylvania State University Sarah Beth Childers, MFA sarah.beth.childers@okstate.edu West Virginia University Joshua Daniel-Wariya, PhD Joshua.daniel-wariya@okstate.edu Texas Christian University William Decker, PhD william.decker@okstate.edu University of Iowa Randi Eldevik, PhD randi.eldevik@okstate.edu Harvard University Richard Frohock, PhD richard.frohock@okstate.edu University of California, Santa Barbara Toni Graham, MFA toni.graham@okstate.edu San Francisco State University Cultural Studies in the Long 19 th Century Composition Rhetoric Literacy Linguistics Phonetics Phonology Writing Theories & Practices Applied Linguistics Creative Writing: Nonfiction Composition Rhetoric Literacy 19th Century Literature American Literature Nonfiction Early British Literature 18th Century Studies Transatlantic and Early American Literature Creative Writing: Fiction Elizabeth Grubgeld, PhD British and Irish Literature Post 1900 elizabeth.grubgeld@okstate.edu Life Writing University of Iowa Gene Halleck, PhD gene.halleck@okstate.edu Pennsylvania State University TESL Linguistics 5

GRADUATE FACULTY ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 Katherine Hallemeier, PhD katherine.hallemeier@okstate.edu Queens University Postcolonial Literature Lisa Hallenbach, PhD American Poetry post 1900 University of Wisconsin Edward Jones, PhD edward.jones@okstate.edu Ohio University Janine Joseph, PhD University of Houston Lisa Lewis, PhD lisa.lewis@okstate.edu University of Houston Lynn Lewis, PhD lynn.lewis@okstate.edu University of Oklahoma Stephanie Link, PhD steph.link@okstate.edu Iowa State University Jeff Menne, PhD jeff.menne@okstate.edu Vanderbilt University Carol Moder, PhD carol.moder@okstate.edu The State University of New York, Buffalo Timothy Murphy, PhD tim.murphy@okstate.edu University of California, Los Angeles Aimee Parkison, MFA aimee@okstate.edu Cornell University Dennis Preston, PhD dennis.preston@okstate.edu University of Wisconsin-Madison Lindsey Smith, PhD lindsey.smith@okstate.edu University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Stacy Takacs, PhD stacy.takacs@okstate.edu Indiana University Renaissance British Literature, Milton Creative Writing: Poetry Creative Writing: Poetry Visual Rhetoric, Literacy, Multimodal Composition, Critical Pedagogy and Technology TESL Applied Linguistics Screen Studies American Linguistics TESL Post 1900 Literature and Cultural Studies, Critical Theory Creative Writing: Fiction Linguistics Sociolinguistics and Dialectology American and American Indian Literatures American Cultural Studies Television Studies 6

GRADUATE FACULTY ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 Graig Uhlin, PhD graig.uhlin@okstate.edu New York University Andrew Wadoski, PhD wadoski@okstate.edu University of Rochester Jeffrey Walker, PhD jeffrey.walker@okstate.edu Pennsylvania State University Martin Wallen, PhD martin.wallen@okstate.edu Vanderbilt University Screen Studies Renaissance Literature Spencer Colonial and 19th Century American Literature, Film, Textual Editing Romanticism Literary Theory 7

ASSISTANTSHIPS ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 ASSISTANTSHIPS 8

ASSISTANTSHIPS ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 ASSISTANTSHIPS The English Department employs a large number of graduate teaching assistants each year. Assistantships are thus available to most students who qualify for them and apply early. Depending on their levels of experience and areas of emphasis, teaching assistants may tutor in the Writing Center or teach their own sections of firstyear composition, composition for international students, technical writing, creative writing, or literature. Teaching Methodology Courses: All teaching assistants, regardless of experience, must take an appropriate pedagogy course or courses during their first year of teaching at OSU. Depending on the area of emphasis and teaching assignment, they may take: ENGL 5213: Composition Theory and Pedagogy ENGL 5223: Professional Writing Theory and Pedagogy ENGL 5243: Teaching English as a Second Language First-year Teachers: Teaching assistants who have not previously taught English typically spend the first semester or year of their assistantships as tutors in the Writing Center. During this year, they also take an appropriate pedagogy course (see above) and observe experienced teachers. Course Load: Each fall and spring semester a teaching assistant teaches six credit hours (two 3-hour courses) or works twenty hours per week in the Writing Center. A few assistantships are available for students who assist in editing the Cimarron Review, American Indian Quarterly, Milton Quarterly or with the International Teaching Assistant (ITA) program. Customarily, teaching assistants take no more than six to seven hours of graduate course work per semester. After candidacy, doctoral students may drop to two hours per semester. Requests to take more than six hours must be made in writing to the department head. Some assistantships are available in the summer, during which a teaching assistant teaches three hours and enrolls in at least two hours. Tuition Waivers: All students with assistantships pay in-state tuition rates; that is, the University waives the non-resident portion of their tuition. The University will also pay the remaining resident tuition for up to nine hours of qualifying courses each fall and spring semester. In addition, teaching assistants also receive a monthly stipend during the academic year and single-person health insurance. Students are responsible for resident tuition for courses taken in excess of this limit and for all fees. Time Limits: A teaching assistant not on academic probation is eligible for financial support under the following conditions. MA and MFA students receive three years of funding. PhD students receive five years of funding. Funding is contingent upon satisfactory progress toward the degree. If exceptional circumstances exist, a student in the last year of funding may, with the support of his or her advisor, petition the Head of the English Department for an additional year's funding. Such cases will be judged on an individual basis and in light of Departmental policies and staffing needs. Under no circumstances will a seventh year of support be available. 9

ASSISTANTSHIPS ENGLISH GRADUATE GUIDELINES 2016-2017 Non-native Speakers of English: To be eligible for a teaching assistantship, students whose native language is not English must submit passing scores for the Speaking Skills section of the TOEFL ibt (26 or higher)) for their application to be considered. They must also attend the International Teaching Assistant (ITA) orientation, which is administered on campus before the beginning of each semester. To Apply: Prospective students who wish to apply for assistantships should do so as instructed on the admission application. Students normally apply for assistantships at the time of admission. However, applications may also be considered from current students who should write a brief letter of application to the Graduate Director. The letter should indicate preferences (if any) for Writing Center, First-Year Composition, Technical Writing, or TESL Composition. The letter should also identify any prior teaching experience. Assistantships begin in the fall semester, and most are awarded during the January admission process. 10