These are
more detailed course descriptions than those provided by PeopleSoft.
To see when courses are available, consult the schedule of classes
(via the Pitt portal) for the term you are interested in.
Engcmp
0400 Written Professional
Communication
In this course we will examine the contexts for and rhetorical
dimensions of a variety of professional documents, including those
documents students produce in the course itself. Major assignments
include a set of career materials (resume, cover letter, career
report); a correspondence packet that addresses a conflict; a
proposal; and a longer report based on research and analysis.
As we engage in this work we will explore the nature of professionalism,
common features and efforts (enabling and disabling) of professional
discourse, and strategies for negotiating the "borders"
of specialized and non-specialized discourse. This course is offered
Fall, Spring, and Summer terms and during both Summer sessions.
Prerequisite: Students must have completed their Composition requirement
(EngCmp0200 or equivalent) before taking this course.
Engcmp
410 Writing in the Legal Professions
This course focuses on the rhetoric of law and the ways that legal
texts create a culture and a world through the language and arguments
they employ. Students interested in law, rhetoric, and questions
of cultural construction should find this course of interest.
The course will use literacy texts and the works of legal scholars
to consider how arguments, evidence, testimony, assertions, assumptions
and judgments constitute a set of public issues and values. This
course is offered during Fall and Spring terms. Prerequisites:
Students must have completed their Composition requirement (EngCmp0200
or its equivalent) before taking this course.
Engcmp 420 Writing for the Public
This course explores the theory and practice of writing that serves
the public interest. Public writing is crucial in the nonprofit
sector, serving every kind of cause: safety and health, political
activism, the environment, animal rights, the arts. It also takes
the form of writing that facilitates communication between government
and its policies and those people who are impacted by those policies.
Many of those who write for the public are working to make a difference
in the world. The course will explore the ethics of writing for
the public, the impact of rhetorical contexts on writing, and
how writing and revision can allow you to understand a problem
or issue in a new way. We'll use examples of public writing, theoretical
articles, and the work of students in the class to inform our
discussion. Students can expect to write proposals; press kits;
editorials; informational Web sites; articles; and complex documents
that incorporate photos and other visual elements, sidebars, and
feature articles. Since we will see writing as part of a conversation
with a larger world, students will report on an event they attend,
interview a professional in a field that interests them, and identify
and regularly read on or more sources of information: professional
journals, media outlets, research studies, or other materials.
This course is offered during Fall and Spring terms. It is also
offered as a summer session course occasionally. Prerequisite:
Students must have completed their composition requirement (EngCmp
0200 or its equivalent) before taking this class.
Engcmp
510 Narratives of the Workplace
This course invites students to examine, in writing and
through class discussion, the diverse workplace narratives that
appear in poetry, non-fiction, fiction, and contemporary film
and television. Students will write about the ways in which these
narratives apply to, or affect, the contemporary world of work,
addressing questions such as: Where do our ideas and perceptions
about work come from? What do we learn about the culture of certain
work, professional or otherwise, from these narratives? What are
the distinctions between professional and working class positions
and do they still apply? What role do corporate narratives play
in contemporary society and how do they serve to govern the workplace
and the educational experiences students gain in school and in
college? The course will also ask students to consider the kinds
of work and workplace cultures they expect to enter when they
graduate, and to explore the implicit connections between education
and work. This course fulfills a W requirement. Coursework includes
a series of papers, annotated readings, and a final documentary
project. This course is offered during Fall term. Prerequisite:
Students must have completed their composition requirement (Engcmp
200 or its equivalent) before taking this class.
EngCmp
515 Persuasive Writing in Advertising and Fundraising
How can we best communicate with others in order to persuade
them? How can we promote a position or product while maintaining
high ethical standards? Advertising and fundraising require the
same kinds of persuasive work, though they serve different rhetorical
contexts; advertising takes place in for-profit settings, while
fundraising takes place in nonprofit settings. Both attempt to
influence the decisions people make about the money they spend,
the attitudes they have, and the issues that shape our society.
In this course, students will analyze and create the kinds of
persuasive writing used in the fields of fundraising and advertising.
Coursework will involve readings, discussion, brief papers that
analyze and critique work done in the fields, a presentation to
the class, and an original written project that can become part
of a student's portfolio to show prospective employers. Students
will have opportunities to have their work reviewed in class,
to participate in discussions with people currently working in
the fields, and to revise their written pieces for a final portfolio.
This course is offered during Fall and Spring terms. Prerequisite:
Students must have completed their composition requirement (Engcmp
200 or its equivalent). It is strongly recommended that you also
take Engcmp 400, 410, or 420 before you take this class.
Engcmp
550. Topics in Public and Professional Writing
Course catalog description: This topics course is intended for
students beginning the Public and Professional Writing Certificate,
and as a writing-intensive course for students fulfilling general
education requirements or interested in writing as a subject as
well as a mode of instruction. The course will focus on varied
topics, addressing different forms and environments for public
and professional writing. Possible topics include: "Rhetorics
of Health and Welfare," "Writing and Environmental Politics,"
and "Electronic Publishing." Students will read examples
of public and professional writing, as well as texts selected
to raise questions about the public sphere, the work environment,
and forms of writing. Students will work closely with the written
texts prepared by their colleagues. Students will write regular
short responses to assigned readings or distributed student papers,
three 5-6 page essays (submitted as draft, then revised in response
to instructor and peer comments), and prepare a final portfolio
with a reflective essay on writing. This course is offered occasionally,
with varied focus on specific topics in Public and Professional
Writing. Prerequisite: Students must have completed their composition
requirement (Engcmp 200 or its equivalent). It is strongly recommended
that you also take Engcmp 400, 410, or 420 before you take this
class.
EngCmp
1100 Language of Business & Industry
Companies communicate with diverse audiences - including
customers, current and future employees, investors, government
officials, and the media. They reach their audiences through various
means - advertising, annual reports, brochures, intranets, memos,
mission statements, newsletters, press conferences, and websites,
for example. They use these methods to talk about their brand,
vision, values, products or services, employment benefits, or
financial results, depending on the audience and the purpose.
A myriad of factors separate those companies that communicate
effectively from those that fall short. The use of plain English
rather than jargon and acronyms is one factor that influences
communication results. In this course, students will actively
explore the "languages" of employment, business culture,
internal communications, external communications, and organizational
change through readings, discussion, and writing assignments.
The writing assignments range from in-class writing (explaining
a professional term without using jargon) to formal writing (doing
an investigative report on a pertinent business language issue).
Students will use several techniques--writing a theses statement,
creating an idea map to generate content, revising, and giving
and receiving feedback--as they practice professional writing.
This course is offered during Spring term. Prerequisite: Satisfactory
completion of EngCmp 0400, 0410, or 0420 or permission of the
instructor.
EngCmp
1101 Language of Science and Technology
This course allows students to develop the communication skills
needed to present scientific and technological information clearly
and accurately to a variety of audiences. The course will draw
on fundamental principles of effective communication, such as
audience analysis and information design. Students will write
and revise proposals, technical reports, user instructions, and
news releases for both expert and lay audiences. The course will
also explore the ways successful writers use emerging technologies
and methods such as hypertext, structured markup languages, content
management systems, and multimedia. This course is appropriate
for students who have some experience with written professional
communication, and who are interested in developing skills needed
for writing technical reports, software documentation, and other
technical communication. This course is offered during Fall term.
Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of EngCmp 0400, 0410, or
0420 or permission of the instructor.
Engcmp
1250. Advanced Topics in Public and Professional Writing
This advanced topics course is intended for juniors and seniors
who are pursuing the Public and Professional Writing Certificate,
as well as other students interested in courses in advanced writing.
The course will focus on varied topics, addressing theoretical,
social, or historical issues of writing in public and professional
environments. Possible topics include: “Polemic and Public
Discourse,” “Work and Rhetorics of Class,” “Writing
in an Electronic Age,” “Women, Writing, and the Public
Sphere.” Students will read a range of texts selected to
contextualize concerns about writing, rhetoric, professional discourses,
and the public. Students will write short responses to assigned
readings, two 5-6 page essays, and will develop a project leading
to a substantial written essay and an oral presentation. The course
will also focus intensively on the students’ writing. This
course is offered occasionally, with varied focus on specific
topics in Public and Professional Writing. Prerequisite: Satisfactory
completion of EngCmp 0400, 0410, or 0420 or permission of the
instructor.
Engcmp
1400. Grant and Proposal Writing
In today's marketplace, proposals produce billions of dollars
to help solve problems and support causes that people care about.
Grant proposals make possible important research in the natural,
behavioral, and social sciences; they enable many to benefit from
civic and educational projects; and they benefit community development
and fund artistic achievement. Other types of proposals allow
people to start businesses, create change on the job, and define
projects that meet the needs of particular audiences. This course
will allow students to understand the functions and conventions
of proposals, the types of research that they require, and the
processes that generate them and lead to approval. Students will
focus on two main issues: developing a proposal (which includes
activities such as defining needs, reviewing existing projects
and literature, and, if seeking a grant, researching sources of
funds) and writing a proposal with a specific audience in mind.
Coursework will help students develop an understanding of proposal
writing from an initial idea through final submission. Students
will complete a variety of written pieces leading up to the final
proposal, which may be valuable in their employment portfolios.
Upon completion of this course, students will have acquired the
research and writing skills necessary to write successful proposals.
This course is offered during Spring Term. Prerequisite: Satisfactory
completion of EngCmp 0400, 0410, or 0420 or permission of the
instructor.
Engcmp 1410. Advanced Research and Documentary Writing
Course catalog description: This course will focus on research
as it supports those who write professionally. In particular,
we are going to explore long projects that take up a subject and
study it in some depth using observation, interviews and surveys
as well as online and library research. The term "research"
refers to substantially different activities in different professional
settings. We will spend time looking at three particular types
of research: literary journalism devoted to creating social change;
research-based projects that attempt to create change in corporate
practices such as management, customer relationships, and ethics;
and documentary work that is designed to raise awareness, provoke
conversation, and honor human and humane activity. All three of
these areas yield many long and short projects—books and
articles and scripts—that are created in the hope that the
final product will have a real impact in the world. You will study
some examples of research as it plays out in several books, articles,
and a film documentary, and you'll plan and carry out a research
project of your own. This course is offered occasionally. Prerequisite:
Satisfactory completion of EngCmp 0400, 0410, or 0420 or permission
of the instructor.
Encmp
1900 Internship: Publc/Professnl Writ
Public and Professional Writing (PPW) internships offer you a
productive, substantive writing experience in which you learn
from and contribute to the sponsoring agency, company, or project.
You will also learn more about theoretical, social, or historical
issues of writing in public and professional environments through
your work in one-on-one meetings with administrators from the
PPW program. And you'll have the valuable experience of presenting
your reflections on your internship in some form to your peers.
PPW interns spend at least 50 percent of their on-site time writing.
They keep a journal, write about their experience, meet regularly
with the associate director or director of the PPW program, and
work with a Writing Center consultant on their final presentation.
Interns can access a discussion board that allows them to share
their reflections on their experiences and prepare for their presentations.
Students commit a minimum of 12-15 hours per week to the internships
and are expected to perform as reliable and responsible professionals.
Students who are employed may petition to create their own internship,
provided that it encompasses a new and distinct project and is
not a part of a traditional workload. Prerequisites: You may apply
for these competitive internship opportunities if you are a junior
or senior, are resident in the PPW Certificate program, are in
good academic standing ("B" average or better), and
have completed coursework toward the Public and Professional Writing
Certificate, including one of these three courses: EngCmp 400,
410, or 420 (EngCmp 500 Special Topics in Composition: Writing
for the Public counts as EngCmp 420). Download a PPW internship
application at www.english.pitt.edu/undergraduate/ppw/internapp.pdf.
Students must apply for an internship the term before they would
like to serve and must meet with the PPW internship coordinator
(ppw@pitt.edu) before registering. If you are accepted as an intern,
the PPW internship coordinator will help you complete your learning
agreement and give you a special permission slip to register for
the course. This course is offered during Fall and Spring terms.
1902
Independent Study in Public and Professional Writing (1 to 6 credits)
The independent study option permits students in good academic
standing to design Public and Professional Writing (PPW) courses
of their own with the approval of a department faculty member.
The independent study must integrate both the theory and practice
of some aspect of public and/or professional writing, and the
student must conduct research that will allow him or her to contextualize
the writing forms and content being studied. Students typically
write at least 30 pages (or 7,500 words) over the course of the
term, and revision plays a significant role in the student's work.
In addition, the student and sponsoring faculty member define
a reading list and other required research, which may include
interviews or surveys. The student and faculty member will agree
on other work, such as essays or documents and a journal or other
response to the research. Whenever possible, the student will
create a final document that can be used by an intended audience
or in a professional portfolio. Students are required to submit
a proposal to a faculty member of their choice--usually, this
faculty member is comfortable with the subject matter of the study
and has worked with the student in the past. The specific form
for requesting this faculty approval can be obtained from the
Director or Associate Director of PPW in M-2 Thaw Hall. The form
requires a description of the project you are proposing, what
you expect to learn from it, the reading and research you will
do, the products you will create as a result of your study, and
the ways in which your sponsor will engage with your work. You
should expect to meet with your sponsor at least eight times during
the term. Please note that the study proposed must not duplicate
the content of regularly offered courses. The purpose of this
option is to complement a student's program by permitting him
or her to design a course not covered by the curriculum. It is
not designed to permit students to avoid taking regularly offered
courses. This course is offered during Fall and Spring terms.
Prerequisite: Students must have completed their composition requirement
(Engcmp 200 or its equivalent) and at least 6 credits above the
300-level in the English department before taking this class.
Engcmp
1903 Service Learning Seminar PPW 1
credit
Course catalog description: Service-Learning Seminar is a one-credit
course open to students who are enrolled in a three-credit course
offered through the Public and Professional Writing Program during
the same term. Students who enroll in the Service-Learning Seminar
will gain valuable real world experience by performing meaningful
community service in a local non-profit organization. The main
objective of the Service-Learning Seminar is to help students
learn more about workplace professionalism in the non-profit sector
by providing opportunities to carry their reflections on their
workplace experiences back to their courses in the program. Participants
are required to perform service in an approved non-profit organization
for a minimum of thirty hours, or roughly three hours per week
throughout the term. They are also required to participate in
a weekly one-hour seminar meeting conducted by faculty in the
Public and Professional Writing Program. During the term they
will be expected to perform a number of short written reflection
activities, including the keeping of a journal documenting and
reflecting on their service work. Finally, students in this course
will be expected to work with participating faculty to determine
demonstrable ways in which they will apply their experiences in
the Service-Learning Seminar toward completing the course requirements
in their regular Public and Professional Writing courses.
Prerequisite: This course is open to any student enrolled in a
regular Public and Professional Writing course during the same
term. This course is offered during Fall and Spring terms. For
more information about service learning, go to this page: <http://www.pitt.edu/~ppw/sl.html>.
To read about the experiences of past service learners, go here:
<http://www.pitt.edu/~ppw/SLperspectives.html>.