2019-2020 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Department of Modern Languages and Literature
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Dr. James Lu
Chair
Ms. Rosemary Welsh
Department Secretary
Phone 951.343.4590
FAX 951.343.4661
rwelsh@calbaptist.edu
Faculty Information
The Modern Languages and Literature Department offers a variety of courses in language acquisition, composition, literature, critical theory, cultural studies, linguistics, digital literary studies, and creative writing.
The English and Creative Writing Programs are dedicated to fostering students’ interests and abilities. English and Creative Writing provide students across disciplines with dynamic General Education opportunities to develop foundations in reading, writing, critical thinking, and interpretation. English and Creative Writing majors are drawn to our undergraduate curriculum because it prepares them for future careers embracing a wide range of professions and ministries: to become teachers in secondary education; to go into journalism, library science, or publishing; to embark on Christian missions; to work in commerce, industry, and government; to succeed as creative writers; or to further education by attending graduate schools of law, medicine, business, literature, etc. As a double-major or minor, English and Creative Writing provides students a valuable means of enriching their future professions. The department also offers a masters program in English. Liberal Studies majors may seek a concentration in English, which affords them an area of specialization within the Multiple Subjects credential. Students interested in teaching English at secondary schools or to speakers of other languages are encouraged to contact program instructors or advisors.
The program in Spanish currently serves students seeking a major or minor in Spanish as well as fulfilling General Education requirements. Our primary goal is to enable students, through carefully-designed course sequences, to gain a bilingual proficiency and multicultural adaptability so that they are well-equipped for future professional and ministerial careers where linguistic and cultural knowledge in Spanish is imperative. Lower-division courses train students in basic communication skills. Upper-division classes guide students into areas where special attention goes to interactions between and among language, history, culture, politics, economics, psychology and all other aspects of real life. Students who have taken two or more years of Spanish in high school or college may choose to take a placement test administered by the department in order to be exempt from lower-division requirements. (Note: in this case, however, no credit shall be given for placing out of lower-division courses.) For those who begin the program with a linguistic ability above the intermediate level, it is wise to consult program instructors or advisors for an appropriate, well-constructed academic plan.
ProgramsMajor Minor Other Programs
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