CDL COURSE ENTRY FORM


Author: Laura Wait/SUNY
Last modified by: Laura Wait/SUNY
Composed: 08/16/2005 03:34 PM
Curriculum Committee Approval Date:
Modified: 02/28/2018
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Course Number: (prefix) CUL (number) 224524 ESC 2.0 Course number: LITR-3010 LITR-3010Children’s Literature: Advanced

Name: Children's Literature: Advanced
Datatel Title: (30char) Children's Lit.: Advanced

Area Coordinator: Dana Gliserman-Kopans Department Code: 10LH Team: Humanities

Liberal Study? YES Level: UPPER Credits: 4 Prerequisite? YES
General Education Course? YES GenEd Approval Term/Year:

GenEd Area 1: 7. HumanitiesFully or Partially: f
GenEd Area 2: Fully or Partially:



Pre-registration Information?
Course will be offered (for online course descriptions, proposed offerings for by term views and web views)
Spring 1, Fall 1
Course will be offered (for final term listings, online registration, online bookordering, web views)
Spring 1, Fall 1
First Term Offered: 2006SP (Required Format: YearTerm - i.e., 2005SP)
Last Term Offered in Print Version:
Title Changes:
AC Changes:
BK Number:

Description: The figure of the child is striking for its ability to exemplify the competing demands of the culture which invents it. At once, children embody both our most precious fantasies and our worst fears; as "blank slates," children are particularly suited--at least fictively--to serve as proxies in our cultural debates. Recent scholarship in children's literature is increasingly interested in the ways that representations of childhood participate in, but also resist, our very ideas about childhood itself. In this course, we will examine the ways that children's literature is central to the ways that cultural values are disseminated, but also the ways that literature--like poorly behaved children--can fail to be contained by the constraints of the genre which aims to normalize it.

In addition to reading widely in the genre and participating in class discussion, students will be expected to write a short reflection essay, three short critical essays, and a final research paper.

Prerequisite skills and knowledge: the introductory level Children’s Literature course is not a prerequisite for the course at the advanced level, though students who have taken the introductory course may take it for credit at the advanced course as well. Students may find an introductory study in literature such as Introduction to Literature or its equivalent and a study in academic writing helpful. This course assumes that students can construct substantiated and rhetorically effective arguments about literature, produce clear and correct prose appropriate to advanced-level studies, and document sources correctly.


This course fully meets the General Education requirement in Humanities.

Generic:



Major Course Area
Communications Humanities and Cultural Studies
Minor Course Area
Cultural Studies, Early Childhood Studies, Literature
SLN Disciplines
English & Literature
Additional Course Requirements
Audio Component
Undergrad Certificate Association:


2


Meets General Education Requirement

Required Booknote:

Optional Booknote:


Archive Course:

genedcode for dpplanner: 7^f~8

genedfull area for dpplanner: Humanities