Course Content and Outcome Guide for WR 242
- Date:
- 23-APR-2012
- Posted by:
- Curriculum Office
- Course Number:
- WR 242
- Course Title:
- Creative Writing (Poetry)
- Credit Hours:
- 4
- Lecture hours:
- 40
- Lecture/Lab hours:
- 0
- Lab hours:
- 0
- Special Fee:
Course Description
Focuses on the writing and submitting of poetry for class discussion and analysis in a workshop setting. Introduces the techniques, structures, and styles of established poets. Prerequisites: WR 115 and RD 115 or equivalent placement test scores. Audit available.Intended Outcomes for the course
Upon completion of the course, students should be able to:
1. Continue to read a wide range of established poets, particularly American and contemporary poets, to learn techniques demonstrated in their work.
2. Employ the various techniques and elements of poetry such as imagery, metaphor, linebreaks, alliteration, assonance, and meter to write poems.
3. Use self-reflection and techniques for employing the imagination to generate new poems and then to revise the poems, using techniques for “re-entering” or “re-seeing” a piece of writing.
Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)
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Recognize the value and purpose and power of poetry and how it gives shape to human experience.
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Read poems by a wide variety of established poets, and be able to read them well. Students may give brief presentations on the poetry of established poets.
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Recognize the function of basic elements of poetry such as imagery, metaphor, line breaks, meter, lyric forms, alliteration and assonance, rhyme.
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Demonstrate ability at using images in writing their poems
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Demonstrate ability at using the concept of “the line” in writing their poems
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Use their understanding of the elements of poetry to critique others' poems constructively, and receive and use workshop criticism of their own poems.
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Use techniques for employing the imagination to generate poems.
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Develop an awareness of the oral nature of poetry.
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Understand that poetry is a plastic art and emerges through a process which includes revision: “the art is in the revision” (Picasso).
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Use techniques for “re-entering” or “re-seeing” a poem they’ve written
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Develop a sense of audience.
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Prepare and submit manuscripts for publication or performance.
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abstraction
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accent
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alliteration
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allusion
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ambiguity
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American idiom
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anaphora
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Anglo Saxon
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archaic diction
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assonance
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audience
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blank verse
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clarity
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compression
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concision
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concrete images
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confessional poetry
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connotation
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cover letter
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denotation
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diction
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end rhyme
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extended metaphor
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figurative language
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form
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formal poetry
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free verse
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full rhyme
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image
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imagination
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internal rhyme
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irony
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Latinate
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line
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lyric poetry
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metaphor
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meter
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multiple submissions
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narrative poetry
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negative capability
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objective correlative
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paradox
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personae
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point of view
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pre and free writing
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revision
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rhythm
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scansion
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simile
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slant rhyme
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stanza
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symbolism
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tenor
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tension
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tone
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turns and leaps
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vehicle
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voice