English (English Language Arts), Bachelor of Arts

CIP Code

23.0101.00

Program Overview

The English degrees at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, which include the BA in English, MA in English, MA in English as a Second Language, and MA in Interdisciplinary Studies, cultivate in students scholarly and creative achievement through graduate and undergraduate courses in literature, language, rhetoric and composition, creative writing, and secondary English language arts. We promote student literacy – specifically the abilities to read, write, and think critically – as well as an appreciation for the English language. We encourage faculty to pursue excellence in teaching, foster collegiality, contribute scholarly research, and engage in service to the university and Rio Grande Valley community. The English degrees, as a collaboration among the Department of Literatures and Cultural Studies, the Department of Writing and Language Studies, and the Creative Writing Program in the College of Fine Arts, support culturally responsive pedagogy and community engagement. A student with an English major possesses skills in critical thinking, writing, and reading. English majors can enter professions such as teaching, writing, editing, media production, the law, public service, and advocacy, and they are prepared for continued graduate or professional study.

Core Curriculum - 42 hours

The Core Curriculum serves as a broad foundation for the undergraduate degree. All candidates for a bachelor’s degree must achieve core student learning outcomes, including communication, critical thinking, empirical and quantitative skills, teamwork, personal responsibility and social responsibility, by completing courses within each category or component area of the Core Curriculum as outlined below.

The University has approved specific courses that satisfy Core Curriculum Requirements. Approved courses can be found on the Core Curriculum Page. Students seeking the most efficient way to complete the core curriculum and major or minor requirements are advised to take approved courses that can fulfill both requirements. Although core curriculum courses can also be used to fulfill major or minor requirements, earned credits hours are only applied once.

Major Requirements – 48 Hours

Required Courses - 12 hours

English Foundation - 6 hours

CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3300Introduction to English Studies
ENGL 4390Senior English Capstone

Linguistics - 3 hours

CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3362English Grammar

Creative Writing - 3 hours

CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3351Creative Writing I

Prescribed Electives - 15 hours

This degree plan includes courses that appear in more than one section of the degree plan. Except for core curriculum courses, such courses can only be used to fulfill one requirement on the degree plan and credit hours will only be applied once.

Literature - 9 hours

Literature Survey - Choose one from:
CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3301Survey of British Literature I
ENGL 3302Survey of British Literature II
ENGL 3303Survey of American Literature I
ENGL 3304Survey of American Literature II
ENGL 3305Survey of World Literature
Genre /Theme - Choose one from:
CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3307Introduction to Film Studies
ENGL 3308Literature and Film Adaptation
ENGL 3309Introduction to Cultural Studies
ENGL 3315The English Novel to 1850
ENGL 3316The English Novel from 1850 to Present
ENGL 3320Development of the American Novel
ENGL 3328The Short Story and the Novella
ENGL 3329Science Fiction
ENGL 3335Women's Literature
ENGL 4300Advanced Topics in Literature and Cultural Studies
ENGL 4308Topics in International Film
ENGL 4309Special Topics in Film
ENGL 4314Advanced Topics in Contemporary Poetry
ENGL 4315Advanced Topics in World Literature
ENGL 4316Beat Generation
ENGL 4318South Texas Literature
ENGL 4320Literature and Psychoanalysis
Period/Single Author - Choose one from:
CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3310Medieval Literature
ENGL 3311English Renaissance Literature
ENGL 3312The Eighteenth Century
ENGL 3313The Romantic Period
ENGL 3314The Victorian Period
ENGL 332119th-Century American Literature
ENGL 3322Hemingway
ENGL 3326Modern Poetry
ENGL 4310Chaucer
ENGL 4311Shakespeare
ENGL 4312Milton
ENGL 4313Topics in Single Author
ENGL 4322The Brontë Sisters

Linguistics - 3 hours

Choose one from:

CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3360Introduction to Language Studies
ENGL 3361Introduction to Descriptive Linguistics
ENGL 3370Language and Culture
ENGL 4365History of the English Language

Rhetorical Writing - 3 hours

Choose one from:

CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3340Survey Rhetorical Theory
ENGL 3345Studies in Literacy
ENGL 4343Composition Theory and Pedagogy

English Language Arts Concentration - 21 hours

Certain courses below appear in more than one section of the degree plan. The courses and related credit hours can only be applied only once to the degree.

English Language Arts Core - 6 hours

CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3337Children's and Adolescent Literature
ENGL 4338Teaching Secondary School Literature

Restricted Language Elective - 3 hours

Choose from:

CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3370Language and Culture
ENGL 3375Introduction to English as a Second Language
ENGL 4360Fundamentals of Language Development
ENGL 4362Contrastive Grammar
ENGL 4370Introduction to Border Language
ENGL 4375Language Acquisition

Writing - 3 hours

Choose from:

CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3345Studies in Literacy
ENGL 4342Assessing and Responding to Writing

Literature Survey - 3 hours

Choose from:

CourseCourse Name
ENGL 3301Survey of British Literature I
ENGL 3302Survey of British Literature II
ENGL 3303Survey of American Literature I
ENGL 3304Survey of American Literature II
ENGL 3305Survey of World Literature

English or Education Electives - 6 hours

Choose from additional English (ENGL), Reading (READ), or Education (EDUC) courses

Free Electives - 30 hours

The B.A. in English with English Language Arts Concentration requires free elective credit hours.

Advanced hours will vary to meet the minimum 42 advanced institutional credit hour requirement for a bachelor’s degree.

Total Credit Hours: 42

Total Credit Hours: 120

View this program’s recommended roadmap to graduation.

UTRGV Roadmaps are a suggested sequence of courses designed to assist students in completing their undergraduate degree requirements. This is a term-by-term sample roadmap of courses required to complete the degree. Students must satisfy all requirements in their catalog including, but not limited to course prerequisites, grade point average and course grade benchmarks, progression requirements, and graduation requirements.

Students should meet with their academic advisor every semester to discuss their individualized path toward completion. Degree progress within this roadmap depends upon such factors as course availability, individual student academic preparation and readiness, student time management, work and personal responsibilities, and financial considerations. Students may choose to take courses during summer terms to reduce course loads during long semesters.