Department of English M.A. Program
General Information and Requirements
The Department of English offers four areas of emphasis
within its M.A. program:literature, writing,
language, and literature
and environment. These emphases serve a
variety of students with a wide range of purposes.
Applicants to the M.A. program must have an
undergraduate major or minor in English or its equivalent from an
accredited college or university, and a cumulative GPA of at least 3.0.
Potential applicants who do not meet these minimum requirements should
talk with the Director of Graduate Studies to determine which
undergraduate English courses to take should they wish to prepare for
graduate studies in English. Detailed information on applying to the
M.A. program is found at the end of this bulletin in the section
"How to Apply for
Admission."
M.A. and Ph.D. admissions are separate; completion of
the M.A. program at the University of Nevada, Reno does not ensure
admission to the Ph.D. program.
The following general requirements apply in all emphases
within the M.A. program, except where clearly stated in the specific
descriptions which follow.
1. Time Limit. All requirements must be satisfied
during the six calendar years immediately preceding the granting of the
degree.
2. Graduate Committee. As soon as practical and
in consultation with the Director of Graduate Studies, a student should
choose an advisory committee and complete a Program of Study. The
graduate program in English emphasizes a close working relationship
between the student and his or her advisory committee. Advisory
committees for master's students consist of a chair and a second member
from the graduate faculty in the Department of English and one member
of the graduate faculty from another university department.
3. Choice of Plan A or Plan B. Our M.A. program
allows students the option of writing a thesis (Plan A) or of
substituting course work for the thesis (Plan B). We encourage students
to follow Plan B unless there is a compelling reason to select the
thesis option (as in the M.A. Writing emphasis).
4. Total Credits. A non-thesis (Plan B) option
requires 33 credits of graduate work; a thesis (Plan A) option requires
31 total credits, 6 of which will be thesis credits. No more than 4
credits of Internship and 3 credits of Special Topics may be counted
toward the degree. Except in the case of required internships,
independent study and internships credits may not be used for
course requirements but may be counted for total number of credits for degrees.
5. Transfer Credits. No more than nine total
credits applicable to the approved program of study may be accepted
from graduate courses taken at another institution and/or taken at the
University of Nevada, Reno on graduate special status. These courses
must have been completed within the six-year time limit for the M.A.
degree and must be approved to count toward the degree by the student's
committee chair, the Director of Graduate Studies, and the Graduate
School.
6. Residence. In Plan B options, a minimum of 23
credits must be earned in residence; in Plan A options, the minimum is
21 credits.
7. Continuous Registration. Graduate School
regulations require graduate students to maintain continuous
registration of at least three credit hours per semester to remain
active in the pursuit of a degree. This means that students studying
for comprehensive exams or writing theses must (even if they are not in
residence) register for at least three credit hours each semester
(summers excluded) until they graduate.
8. Seminar Requirement. All M.A. students
are required to take a substantial portion of their course work at the
700 level or above. In the Literature, Language, and Literature and
Environment emphases (Plans A and B), at least 23 credits must be
completed in courses numbered 700 or above. In the Writing emphasis, 19
credits must be numbered 700 or above in Plan A, or 16 credits in Plan
B.
9. Foreign Language Requirement. Competence in
one language is required. French, German, Spanish, Italian, Latin, or
Greek are recommended, but other languages may be approved by the
student's advisory committee. The student is strongly advised to
complete the work necessary to meet this requirement before becoming a
graduate student, or as soon as possible after beginning graduate
study. The requirement may be met either by course work or by
examination. Course work: competence is demonstrated by the student
completing fourth-semester college-level course work in the language
with a grade of B or better in the final term of the course or by the
student completing the second semester of a sophomore reading course
with a grade of B or better. Examination: the student must pass a
proficiency exam given by the Department of Foreign Languages and
Literatures at the University of Nevada, Reno. M.A. students in the
Literature and Environment emphasis only may fulfill the foreign
language requirement by passing two graduate-level courses in a cognate
discipline with a grade of B or better.
10. Comprehensive Examination.
In order to register for 795 (comprehensive exam), a student must:
(1) have filed a completed Program of Study with the Graduate School;
(2) have completed all but the last semester of course work toward the degree for the M.A.;
(3) have met the foreign language requirement for the student's degree and area of emphasis;
(4) have met with the student's committee chair to work out plans for completing the written and oral portions of the exams;
(5) have returned the "Approval to Register for Comprehensive Exams" form, completed, to the English department office prior to the end of registration.
The M.A. program
requires a comprehensive exam as a part of the degree requirements. In
general, the exam includes three parts: a) a professional paper or a
writing portfolio; b) a written examination over a set reading list or
over course work; c) an oral exam of about an hour and a half, covering
the professional paper or portfolio and the written exam. Examinations
for each program emphasis are detailed below. A student must have
completed the professional paper or portfolio and have passed the
written exam prior to taking the oral exam. Failed written or oral
exams can be retaken only once. Students must register for English
795, Comprehensive Exam, 1 credit, the semester they will be completing
their exams.
11. Thesis (Plan A only). Students choosing a
thesis option will first prepare a thesis prospectus, in consultation
with the chair of the advisory committee, for the committee's approval.
The finished thesis, after meeting the approval of the advisory
committee, is defended in the final oral examination, which also covers
the written exam. In the Writing program, the final oral defense is
separate from the discussion of the portfolio and written exam. While
the thesis is in progress, the candidate should register for the six
required hours of thesis credit (English 797), including one hour to be
taken during the writing of the prospectus. Documentation and
bibliography should follow the current MLA Style Manual. Precise
guidelines for thesis format and submission are available at the
Graduate School. Students doing research involving human subjects
must check with the Office of Human Subjects Research in Ross
Hall regarding necessary protocols and review procedures.
12. Graduation. To graduate in any given
semester, the student must file an Application for Graduation by the
dates specified for that semester in the university catalog and meet
that semester's deadlines for submission of the notice of completion
and (if on Plan A) the final copy of the thesis to the Graduate School.
Students should be aware that graduation application dates at the
University of Nevada, Reno are unusually early: the deadline is
generally at the beginning of the last month of the semester prior to
graduation.
13. Paperwork. The student is responsible for a
knowledge of the degree requirements and for the timely submission of
all Graduate School forms. Early in their graduate careers, students
should become familiar with the most important of these forms: the
Program of Study, the Notice of Completion, and the Application for
Graduation. Most Graduate School forms are available on the web
at www.unr.edu/grad/forms. The
Application for Graduation must be purchased from the Cashier in the
Student Services building.
Last Updated: July 14, 2011