University Composition Program
Courses
University Composition Program
Course Offerings
The University Composition Program offers a range of lower and upper division writing courses including required and elective classes. You can explore new communication approaches, hone technical skills, and experiment with language and style in courses focused on academic writing skills, argument, digital design, and public engagement.
In CO130: Academic Writing, you will develop and practice how to read and write for academic audiences. In order to effectively communicate in academic contexts, you will learn how to identify rhetorical situations, learn how to identify and revise purposes for writing, practice writing in a variety of genres, and read and research various topics and texts. Since the process of reading and writing is just as important as the final written product, you will practice drafting, outlining, writing, revising, summarizing, analyzing, close reading, and research. These are skills that you will use throughout your time at CSU as well as in the workplace. CO130 will support your learning and work with other classes, audiences, and writing situations.
In CO150: College Composition, you will be introduced to many of the key writing, reading, research, and communicating practices you need for success as a university student, professional, and citizen. In this course, you will learn to critically read and respond to a variety of texts, to write for a variety of rhetorical situations and audiences, to dialogue about different experiences and perspectives, and to develop and apply effective writing practices. You will have opportunities to practice the drafting, revising, peer editing, and polishing stages of writing and will produce several polished academic texts as well as lots of informal written reflections in this course.
In CO300: Writing Arguments, you will expand your argumentative skills in your specific academic, professional, public, and personal contexts. We use contemporary rhetorical theory to develop sophisticated understandings of effective communication as we write various persuasive texts. We explore the nuances of the rhetorical situation, audience analysis, and Rogerian argument. To help prepare you to write in increasingly digital environments, we may also practice visual, aural, and multimodal arguments. In order to practice advanced reading, note-taking, researching, writing, and revising arguments, you will write to annotate, reflect, inquire, respond, inform, and persuade. You will write as scholars, aspiring professionals, citizens, and consumers/co-creators of culture. CO300 is a writing- and reading-intensive course, and you can expect to have lots of opportunities to read critically, engage in conversations about writing, and produce arguments for a variety of audiences over the course of the semester.
In CO301A: Writing in the Disciplines--Arts and Humanities, you will focus (primarily) on writing for a range of public audiences interested in issues and content of the arts and humanities. Thus, the specialized discourse emphasized in this course is characterized by strategies that frame for, and appeal to readers outside academe (focused narrative, description, definition and elaboration of key critical terms, illustration as well as critical analysis, evaluation, and argument). CO301A provides you with multiple opportunities to extend your writing skills. In particular, you will begin the course analyzing selected texts in terms of rhetorical context, framing, target audiences, kinds and arrangements of evidence, uses of source material, genre conventions, stylistic options, format, etc. You will extend their rhetorical knowledge by practicing oral and written analysis and critique of issues important to audiences within the arts and humanities. In addition to a focus on deepening your understanding of composition as rhetorical practice and ability to produce effective discourse about/in the humanities for varied public contexts, you will have opportunities to transform content knowledge about the arts and humanities into discourse that educates, enlightens, provokes, influences, and connects with audiences beyond the classroom. You will also have opportunities to explore stylistic elements such as the virtues of the writing (clarity, correctness, appropriateness, and distinction), diction, figures of speech, schemes, rhythm, or types of styles as we produce writing for specific audiences.
In CO301B: Writing in the Disciplines--Sciences, you will write about complex scientific topics for diverse audiences, especially non-specialists. Audiences beyond scientific disciplines are often interested in scientific research for a variety of reasons, from entertainment to seeking information to inform making decisions in their daily lives. In CO301B you will write about science (including medicine and technology) for publications such as The New York Times and Scientific American, with particular attention to making choices about focus, structure, detail, and word choice with respect to what non-specialist audiences know and don’t know, want to know and need to know. In addition to learning practical strategies, you will think critically and strategically about how we consume science writing and their goals and purposes as science writers. You will also learn about rhetorical approaches to the function and structure of science writing, reading and analyzing articles from rhetoric and from the scholarship of science communication alongside many real-world examples.
In CO301C: Writing in the Disciplines--Social Sciences, you will focus on 1) developing a nuanced rhetorical understanding of disciplinary writing within various fields of the social sciences, 2) studying contexts for professional and non-expert social science writing, and 3) practicing similar kinds of writing for non-academic audiences and purposes. This course offers you multiple opportunities to both read and analyze varieties of social science writing and to research, write, and revise their own compositions on social science topics relevant to their majors and their emerging areas of expertise. You will have opportunities to develop an advanced understanding of rhetorical analysis, non-agonistic argumentation, and other rhetorical and writing strategies. In CO301C you will be introduced to and practice writing a series of texts that represent the ways that social sciences writing circulates within popular, workplace, and/or academic contexts.
In CO301D: Writing in the Disciplines--Education, you will read and explore current issues in literacy and English education and consider examples of professional writing both in print and in multimodal form. You will explore and practice a wide range of written genres in order to refine your existing theories of education, to develop your educational philosophies, and to engage in professional conversations in the field. Formal and informal writing assignments will give you space both to self-reflect and to write for others in your discipline. Teachers write to know, and they write to learn. The goal of this course is to prepare you to advance your own thoughts about classroom practice, pedagogy, and educational theory and to advance educational change.
In CO302: Writing Online, you will learn how to analyze and create texts that are written and read only in electronic formats, such as hypertexts, sites on the World Wide Web, Internet discussion groups and forums, electronic mail, social media, etc. Additionally, you will explore the rhetorical and cultural contexts in which these texts occur, and learn and practice strategies for producing and interpreting these texts. CO302 will also prepare you to write as members of a society in which increasing amounts of public and social discourse takes place online.
In CO401: Writing and Style, you will develop your ability to adapt your writing to a broad range of non-academic writing situations as well as to foster the development of your individual writing voice within conventional contexts through public and academic writing. We will pay close attention to the finer points of writing and style and, in the process, master a set of advanced practices of writing and argument with broad applicability. In addition, we will spend a good deal of time on genre, envisioned not as a set of forms to be learned, but rather as a tool that can help us understand why writers and speakers make the choices they do, and then be smarter and more reflective about our own choices. Rather than learning genres by rote, you will learn techniques for understanding and mastering new genres. You will have opportunities to learn about publication processes including submission techniques and editorial processes.
In CO402: Principles of Digital Rhetoric and Design, you will have opportunities to design fun and creative digital compositions ranging from short-movies or documentaries, digital storytelling pieces, mashups, photo-essays, digital poetry, and visual arguments to podcasts, websites, literal videos, and other multi-genre-digital projects. Classroom time features time to discuss and explore digital design principles and rhetorics, engage in collaborative design and feedback activities, and experiment with authoring, editing, and design software and hardware to develop applied practical strategies and competencies necessary for creating web-based texts. You will perform individual and group-based learning experiments experiment with both open source and proprietary digital composing tools (e.g., Adobe Creative Cloud; Audacity; BBEdit). You’ll also be introduced to digital writing languages for front-composing on the web (e.g., CSS; HTML; jQuery; JavaScript). We will engage in an advanced exploration of the rhetorical contexts which shape the consumption and production of online texts, publishing, and communication. Together, we will think and read about how core concepts such as ownership, copyright, remix, usability, accessibility, and multimodality impact the ways that audiences, authors, and designers write and consume in this digital age.
See Course Offerings in the Course Catalog
Where to Begin
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Other Writing Courses in the English Department
- E210: Intro to Creative Writing
- E305: Principles of Writing and Rhetoric
- E320: Intro to Study of Language
- E402: Teaching Composition
- E403: Writing the Environment
- E406: Topics in Literacy
- E501: Theories of Composition
- E502: The Politics of Literacy
- E503: Investigating Classroom Literacies
- E603: Critical Digital Rhetoric
- E605: Critical Studies in Reading and Rhetoric
- E637: Histories of Writing and Rhetoric