Nov 23, 2024  
Mercy University 2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
Mercy University 2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog

English, Cultural Studies Concentration, B.A.


Christopher Loots, Ph.D., Program Director
914-674-7423
cloots@mercy.edu

Bachelor of Arts

General Education Requirements       60 credits

Major Concentration:

English Cultural Studies                     36 credits

Open Electives                                    24 credits

Total                                                   120 credits

 

The concentration in English Cultural Studies is for English majors interested in devoting a portion of their studies (12 credits) to courses that examine the cultures we encounter in literature, music, and film; including courses that explore popular culture and the environments in which we grew up; and courses that focus on how culture relates to our identities. For more about the English major, refer to the primary catalog listing for the English B.A. degree.

Students who choose the major concentration in English Cultural Studies must complete the following two core courses (6 credits):


Students must also complete one course (3 credits) from the following category:


Students must complete four courses (12 credits) from the following group to meet the concentration requirement:*


Gaining Perspective: Culture, Identity, & Difference


Students must take one course (3 credits) from the following group:


And students must take one course (3 credits) from the following group:


Developing Your Voice: Writing, Rhetoric, & Style


Crossing Borders & Disciplines


Notes


ENGL 195 should be taken as soon as possible, preferably in the semester immediately following completion of ENGL 112 or ENGL/HONR 192. Transfer students should ideally take ENGL 195 in the first semester upon transferring in.

ENGL 400 is the capstone course, meaning the final course in the English major. It should be taken in the final semester of the program, or at least in the penultimate semester if a student foresees scheduling conflicts for the final semester.

ENGL 294 Major Authors and ENGL 295 Special Topics are generic course codes under which can run a number of new or experimental courses. ENGL 397 Independent Study is a course code by which a student might, in rare and special circumstances, pursue a unique course of study. Courses running by these codes will default to working as major electives. If a course running by one these codes makes sense as a substitution for a category requirement, though, 

students can request of the Program Director that a substitution be allowed to let the course count for the category requirement.

The English program highly recommends that English majors earn a minor to complement their English major. Students can earn a minor in another field such as Media Studies, Theatre Arts, History, Design & Animation, or Communication Studies (to name just a few) by completing 15 credits in that field. English majors have a total of 42 non-major elective credits to spend (24 Open Elective credits plus 18 General Education Liberal Arts & Sciences Elective credits) and so have ample opportunity to earn a minor. To learn more, speak with your PACT mentor or contact the English Program Director.

ENGL 380 Workplace Experience I, and ENGL 381 Workplace Experience II, are internship codes that allow students to complete internship experience. Such internship credits count as Open Elective credits. Students interested in seeking internship opportunities should speak with the Mercy University Office of Career & Professional Development, the Chair of the Department of Literature and Language, and/or the Director of Undergraduate English.

The English major has an 18 credit residency requirement,.

The English Minor


15 Credits

Students of other majors can earn a minor in English by completing any five English courses ranging from ENGL 195 to ENGL 399. Speak with the Program Director of English to learn more.

Theatre Arts Minor


15 Credits
Students who choose to minor in Theatre Arts can complete it with 15 credits earned through five of the courses listed below. *At least TWO of these courses must be selected from the COMM/MEDA performance selections (246, 262, 263, 282).

The 4+1 Program (Undergraduate English + Graduate Education)


English majors planning on pursuing a career in teaching English at the Middle Childhood and/or Adolescence Education level may apply to the Four-Plus-One Program, offered jointly by the School of Education and the School of Liberal Arts. The program is designed to allow majors to begin their Graduate Education coursework during their upper junior year. These courses will be counted jointly towards their undergraduate and graduate degrees. For specific program eligibility and requirements, please refer to the School of Education section of the Catalog.

Earn Graduate MA English Credits During Your Final Undergraduate Year


Qualified Mercy University undergraduates who are interested in pursuing a Master of Arts in English Literature through Mercy University’s esteemed graduate English program have the opportunity to take up to two graduate courses during the final year of undergraduate study, and have these graduate courses count both for the undergraduate degree and the MA English degree. If the student ends up completing such courses but not continuing into the graduate program, the courses still count as normal Open Electives for the undergrad degree. 

To be eligible, students must not be registered for a multiple-degree program (such as the 4+1 program). And students must have completed at least 90 credits with a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.0. Such students may petition to enroll in one graduate-level English course at Mercy University per semester of their final year of study, for a maximum possible total of six graduate credits. Students must receive written permission from the Program Director of Graduate English or the Department of Literature and Language Chairperson. Contact your PACT mentor or the Director of Graduate English for advisement and to start the process.

Full-time undergraduate students who receive permission to take graduate courses in this way will be charged the undergraduate tuition rate for the graduate courses. If the student is part-time, the graduate rate will be charged for graduate courses and the undergraduate rate for undergraduate courses. Students receiving financial aid in the form of grants and/or loans will continue to be eligible for said aid, as the courses are approved to count as Open Electives. If there are any questions regarding tuition, please speak with a representative from the Office of Enrollment Services.

Graduate courses will not count towards the residency requirement for the undergraduate degree, or for program honors.