Senior Capstone
Guidelines for ENGL 485, Senior Capstone in English
All English majors must聽complete a capstone experience, no exceptions. Students taking ENGL 485, Senior Capstone in English, must wait until the last semester of enrollment to register for the course. With prior approval, special projects such as the Washington Semester may be substituted for this course requirement–but all students (whether enrolled in ENGL 485, in Washington Semester, or in any other approved alternate program) must complete all additional requirements of the Capstone course during the final semester of enrollment. These requirements are: r茅sum茅/job search workshops, exit survey, final portfolio submission, and capstone presentation.
Capstone project
Under the supervision of a full-time faculty instructor from聽the Department of English and Modern Languages, the student will propose a project, have the proposal approved, and execute the project. The student should concentrate on experiences s/he has had at 海角社区 that would be useful to graduate school or career choices. Projects may include but are not limited to: drafting聽and revision聽of a piece of creative writing,聽preparation and presentation of a conference paper, development of a substantial website, creation of a special workshop for other English majors, and participation in a dramatic performance. At the end of the semester, students will present their projects to the full-time English faculty and anyone else interested in the presentations.
Capstone presentation
All students completing the capstone course or an alternate capstone experience (e.g., Washington Semester) will be required to present their work to the full-time English faculty.聽
R茅sum茅/job search workshops
Each semester, the capstone course聽will include聽workshops on job searches, writing聽r茅sum茅s and application letters, and interviewing. Attendance at these job workshops is mandatory for English majors in their final semester of enrollment (whether enrolled in Senior Capstone, Washington Semester, or any other approved alternate program). Students in their final semesters will work with a full-time faculty instructor聽on their r茅sum茅s and their sample job application letters; both documents will then be included in the final portfolio.
Graduate school workshops
Each semester, a full-time faculty instructor聽will conduct a workshop on application to graduate school. This workshop will be available to any student, even those who do not see graduate school in their futures at present.
Portfolio
Each student will create his/her portfolio under the close supervision of a full-time faculty instructor. In addition to the r茅sum茅 and sample application letter (both developed with guidance from the faculty instructor and the Department of Career Services), the portfolio will include an overall assessment letter and three to five samples of the student’s work. The students must work closely with the instructor聽to create a portfolio that聽represents the breadth of the student’s achievements in the English program. The student will choose the work from his/her courses that best demonstrates the learning goals the Department of English and Modern Languages has identified as outcomes for our program. These are:
- Student will demonstrate clear and effective expression in written English.
- Student will demonstrate the ability to research from a variety of sources and evaluate, analyze, and synthesize the information.
- Student will organize ideas in a clear and lucid argument.
- Student will appreciate the global significance of humanist tradition as manifested in the literature of various times and cultures.
- Student will demonstrate original and critical thinking including the ability to analyze texts.
The portfolio will include:
- Table of contents
- Cover letter to department (letter will reflect on student’s learning experiences with specific references to the portfolio contents that demonstrate the Department of English and Modern Languages learning outcomes)
- R茅sum茅 and application letter (a one-page r茅sum茅 and one-page application letter to a potential employer)
- Three to five pieces from class work to be showcased (student-selected works that demonstrate the outcomes listed above; works included will probably be primarily from upper-division or advanced courses and will utilize MLA or other appropriate format; other pertinent material could also be included, e.g., original pieces written in Creative Writing classes,聽Picket articles, peer tutoring assignments, conference papers, websites, PowerPoint presentations, etc.)
Hard copy versions of the portfolio should be submitted in a three-ring binder. Web portfolios (with relevant texts hyperlinked) are also permissible.
The Department of English and Modern Languages is pleased to provide these examples of past Capstone projects:
- , The Trilogy of Carter鈥檚 Asylum (short story collection)
- , A Foundling (novel in progress)
- , 鈥淒ouble-Consciousness of the Lost Generation in James Baldwin and Ernest Hemingway鈥
- , 鈥淚dentifying the Self and the Rejection of the Absurd: Zadie Smith鈥檚 NW鈥
- , The Magic Within (novel in progress)
- , 鈥淎 Search for Identity: Live Performance by Natalie Blake in Zadie Smith鈥檚 NW鈥
- , 鈥淢odels of Female Depravity: H茅l猫ne Kuragina, Sonya Rostova, and Gendered Redemption in War and Peace鈥
- , Three Fairy Tale Retellings (short story collection)
- , Paint Me Tangerine (poetry collection)
- , Poetry Collection
- , Where the Wild Wind Blows on the Mountain Side (poetry collection)