2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog
Department of English and Modern Languages
|
|
Return to: College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
Brandi Kellett, Chair
Caroline Bumpas, Lecturer
Dana Chamblee Carpenter, Associate Professor
Jan Harris, Associate Professor
Matthew G. Hearn, Professor
David G. Holmes, Professor
Kelly I. Kidder, Associate Professor
Theodore H. Parks, Professor
T. Stephen Prewitt, Associate Professor
Kimberly C. Reed, Professor
William Steele, Professor
|
The Department of English & Modern Languages strives to empower students to explore these compelling relationships between language, literature, and culture. Our curriculum works to hone the skills students need to succeed in today’s professional world. We offer majors in English (with concentrations in literature and/or writing), French and Spanish, as well as teaching certifications for these 3 majors.
Distinctives of the English & Modern Languages Department
The study of literature and language, of the written and spoken word, has long been the foundation of a strong education because through story and word we find our voice, individually and collectively. We learn how to use that voice effectively and how to listen to the voices of others. Students who engage with this study prepare themselves for a lifetime of growth and success, and the Department of English & Modern Languages has the track record to prove it. Five of the past seven Fulbright Scholars from Lipscomb have majored in English and/or a modern language. Our intentionally progressive curriculum offers a Core set of classes which introduce students to foundational skills and the tools needed to practice those skills. Our curriculum culminates in classes focused on preparing students for professional life postgraduation or to pursue graduate degrees in multiple disciplines.
The ability to write well is typically identified as the skill most likely to get an employee noticed and promoted, regardless of the specific career or discipline. Expanding student abilities to persuade, to work collaboratively, and to adapt to changing conditions and audiences–in addition to developing agile analytical skills–are at the heart of what we teach in the Department of English & Modern Languages. We develop these soft skills in our students, and all English majors are required to have internship or practicum experience to help them develop marketable workplace skills and professional contacts before they graduate. Our students have held positions with Nashville publishers, newspapers, magazines, professional sports teams, television studios, software firms, non-profits, state government and the entertainment industry. Some students opt to tutor in our Writing Studio, which serves students from across the University. This hands-on tutoring experience is excellent for future teachers, and helps our graduates compete successfully for funding when they apply to graduate and professional programs.
Modern language majors are required to have an intensive language experience, which may be fulfilled in a number of ways: Language-immersion programs such as those offered through CCCU or the Mid-Continent Consortium, or language study in Lipscomb’s Global Learning program. We are also the first American university to adopt web-based usage of Auralog’s award-winning Tell Me More software for its French, German, Spanish and English Language learners. The department is the only one in middle Tennessee to offer Pre-K-12 teaching certification in French, German and Spanish, and also offers an endorsement in English as a Second Language (ESL). Our majors are equipped to fulfill their vocational passions at a high level.
Students have many opportunities to publish their writing while still enrolled as undergraduates. Our majors have presented work in a wide variety of venues and competitions, including the National Undergraduate Literature Conference, the Southern Literary Festival, The Nashville Scene, The City Paper, the Society for Professional Journalism Competition, the Southeastern Writing Center Association Conference, the Lipscomb Student Scholars Symposium, and the national conference of Sigma Tau Delta, an international honors society for English Studies.
With a variety of activities and programs to enrich the college experience, we also offer our community the opportunity to hear a diverse range of nationally recognized writers. The Landiss Lectures, for example, bring widely renowned writers to campus each year; past guest speakers have included the Pulitzer prize-winning poet Natasha Trethewey, the author Margot Lee Shetterly, the novelist Ann Patchett, the distinguished historians Robert K. Massie and H.W. Brands, and the noted biographer, poet, and novelist Jay Parini.
Study Abroad Opportunities
The Office of Global Learning offers a variety of opportunities for students interested in learning abroad. Lipscomb’s Global Scholar programs provide language and cultural studies for students who spend a semester abroad. Through course work, service learning and field trips, students engage with their local community. Destinations include Costa Rica; London, England; Florence, Italy; and Vienna, Austria.
Through our consortial partnerships, students may participate in language-immersion programs that combine home stays with academic study, such as an intensive French program in Angers, France, and an intensive Spanish program in Oviedo, Spain. These experiences are offered each summer, and empower students to experience deep learning in French and Spanish. Additionally, modern language majors may enroll in accredited programs in countries where French, German, or Spanish are native or official languages. Students should consult with the department chair or another modern language professor as well as the registrar before enrolling in order to determine if a given program’s course of study will transfer to Lipscomb for academic credit.
Career Opportunities
Because the English curriculum produces students with excellent analytical and communications skills, Lipscomb’s English graduates have pursued careers in a wide range of professions, including:
- Law
- Editing/publishing
- Public relations
- High school teaching
- College teaching
- Professional writing
- Journalism
- Medicine
- Library science
Many modern language majors enter careers in high school teaching or continue to graduate school to prepare to teach at the college level. However, there are other interesting endeavors in which a modern language major would be beneficial, such as the following:
- International business, commerce and industry
- Airline or travel industries
- Journalism, advertising and other media forms for the international markets
- Positions with government agencies and political organizations for domestic and overseas service
- Mission work in foreign countries
- Interpreting
- Translating
Many students find that adding modern language as a second major will present special advantages for job placement and increased opportunities for career advancement.
Requirements for Modern Language Majors
Departmental Admission Requirements
All new students (freshmen and transfers) who have studied a foreign language in high school or at another college or university must take a short placement assessment before attending the preregistration counseling session with the academic advisor or attempting to register for any courses in that same language. This assessment is short (20-30 minutes) and easy to access online https://www.perpetualworks.com/secure/register/student/. After taking the placement exam, students should email their score to kelly.kidder@lipscomb.edu for placement information.
Summer Intensive Courses
The year-long elementary and intermediate language sequences are often offered during the full summer session. Students should realize that the pace of such an intensive course is rigorous and will require at least as much if not more time than a full load taken during the fall or spring semesters. It is recommended that students not take any additional course work nor become involved in many outside activities during such an intensive course (i.e., one should not plan to work more than 12-15 hours per week).
All students intending to take an intensive language program must complete the placement assessment and consult with the department chair prior to having their schedules for the summer session approved by their advisors.
Program of Study Requirements
Return to: College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
|