Syllabus

ENGL 4960 Internship, Fall 2025

ENGL 4970 Thesis, Fall 2025

MW 3:30-4:45 p.m., Arts & Sciences 338

 

Professor

 

Dr. Alex E. Blazer

alex.blazer@gcsu.edu

alexeblazer.com

478.445.0964

Office Hours: MW 2:00-3:15 p.m., Arts & Sciences 330 and Zoom

 

Course Description

 

ENGL 4960 Internship and ENGL 4970 Thesis are capstone experiences focusing on working in the field and writing a thesis, respectively. Since these two courses are not lecture and discussion classes, the majority of time spent is working in the field and writing independently.

 

ENGL 4960 Internship outcomes include

Therefore, internship students will spend most of their time at their internship while checking in for individual conferences and submitting journal entries reflecting on their internship, giving a presentation on their experience, and compiling a portfolio that documents their work.

 

ENGL 4970 Thesis outcomes include

Therefore, thesis students will spend most of the course writing on their own while checking in for individual conferences, submitting documents for various stages of research and writing (topics, outlines, proposals, annotatied bibliographies, work-in-progress, the final thesis), and participating in peer workshops with other thesis students.

 

Both courses fulfill the capstone requirement in the English B.A. Film, Media and Culture Concentration and English B.A. Literature Concentration.

 

Course Materials

 

None

 

Assignments and Grade Distribution

 

ENGL 4960 Internship

 

internship director confirmation, 5%

You will ask your internship director to email your professor a confirmation of your internship.

journal entries, 5% each

You will compose three journal entries reflecting upon your internship.

internship director evaluation, 5%

You will ask your internship director to email your professor an evaluation of your internship performance.

presentation, 5%

You will share your internship experience in a 10-15 minute presentation.

portfolio, 70%

You will create a portfolio documenting your internship.

 

ENGL 4970 Thesis

 

topics and outlines, 5%

You will generate three potential thesis topics and outlines.

proposal, 5%

You will compose a 250 word thesis proposal.

annotated bibliography, 5%

You will research and compose a 15 source annotated bibliography for your final research topic.

work-in-progress workshops, 5% each

At three points in the semester, you will submit your work in progress for peer review and participate in peer review.

presentation, 5%

You will present your thesis in a 10-15 minute presentation.

thesis, 65%

You will research and compose a 25-40 page thesis.

 

Course Policies

 

Technology

We will use the course site for the syllabus schedule and assignment prompts; supporting documents include an attendance record, a course grade calculation spreadsheet, FAQ, a GeorgiaVIEW walkthrough, a guide to literary analysis, a research methods guide, and paper templates. We will use GeorgiaVIEW for assignment submission and the course packet; if you experience technical issues with GeorgiaVIEW, contact the Center for Teaching and Learning at ctl@gcsu.edu or 478.445.2520. Check your university email for course-related messages. Use an online backup or cloud storage service to not only save but also archive versions of your work in case of personal computer calamities.

Attendance

Because this liberal arts course values contemporaneous discussion over fixed lecture, regular attendance is required. In courses that meet one day per week, such as ENGL 6601, there will be a one letter final grade deduction for every unexcused absence beyond two; furthermore, any student who misses four or more classes for any reason (excused or unexcused) will be dropped from the course and fail. In courses that meet two days per week, such as ENGL 4960 and 4970, there will be a one letter final grade deduction for every unexcused absence beyond three; furthermore, any student who misses seven or more classes for any reason (excused or unexcused) will be dropped from the course and fail. In courses that meet three days per week, such as ENGL 2110, there will be a one letter final grade deduction for every unexcused absence beyond six; furthermore, any student who misses ten or more classes for any reason will be dropped from the course and fail. I suggest you use your skip days both cautiously and wisely; and make sure you sign the attendance sheets. Habitual tardies, consistently leaving class early, texting, and web surfing will be treated as absences. Unexcused absences include work, family obligations, and scheduled doctor's appointments. Excused absences include family emergency, medical emergency, religious observance, and participation in a college-sponsored activity. Do not attend class while symptomatic or testing positive for COVID-19. During isolation, retrieve class notes from a classmate and consult with me about make up work. Absences due to isolation will be considered excused if appropriate documentation from Student Health Services or Academic Advising is provided. If you continue to test positive after the date the university gave you for an excused absence, your positive test counts as an excused absence. If you have a medical condition, extracurricular activity, or job that you anticipate will cause you to miss more than four days of class, I suggest you drop this section. The university absence policy can be found here. You can check your class attendance record here.

MLA Style and Length Requirements

Part of writing in a discipline is adhering to the field's style guide. While other disciplines use APA or Chicago style, literature and composition follows MLA style. Assignments such as in-class exams, discussion board responses, informal/journal writing, and peer review may be informally formatted; however, formal assignments and take-home exams must employ MLA style. One-third of a letter grade will be deducted from a formal paper or take-home exam for problems in each of the following three categories, for a possible one letter grade deduction total: 1) margins, header, and heading, 2) font, font size, and line-spacing, and 3) quotation and citation format. A formal paper or take-home exam will be penalized one-third of a letter grade if it does not end at least halfway down on the minimum page length (not including Works Cited page) while implementing 12 pt Times New Roman font, double-spacing, and 1" margins. Each additional page short of the minimum requirement will result in an a additional one-third letter grade penalty. Before you turn in a formal paper, make sure your work follows MLA style by referring to the MLA style checklist. Feel free to use these templates that are preformatted to MLA style.

Late Assignments

We're all busy with multiple classes and commitments, and adhering to deadlines is critical for the smooth running of the course. There will be a one letter assignment grade deduction per day (not class period) for any assignment that is turned in late. I give short extensions if you request one for a valid need at least one day before the assignment is due. I will inform you via email if I cannot open an electronically submitted assignment; however, your assignment will be considered late until you submit it in a file I can open. Because your completion of this course's major learning outcomes depends on the completion of pertinent assignments, failing to submit an assignment that is worth 15% or more of the course grade within five days of its due date may result in failure of the course. Failing to submit a final exam or final paper within two days of its due date may result in failure of the course.

Academic Honesty

The integrity of students and their written and oral work is a critical component of the academic process. The Honor Code defines plagiarism as "presenting as one's own work the words or ideas of an author or fellow student. Students should document quotes through quotation marks and footnotes or other accepted citation methods. Ignorance of these rules concerning plagiarism is not an excuse. When in doubt, students should seek clarification from the professor who made the assignment." The Undergraduate Catalog and Graduate Catalog define academic dishonesty as "Plagiarizing, including the submission of others’ ideas or papers (whether purchased, borrowed, or otherwise obtained) as one’s own. When direct quotations are used in themes, essays, term papers, tests, book reviews, and other similar work, they must be indicated; and when the ideas of another are incorporated in any paper, they must be acknowledged, according to a style of documentation appropriate to the discipline" and "Submitting, if contrary to the rules of a course, work previously presented in another course," among other false representations. Including writing generated by LLMs, also known as AI, in your work is improper and dishonest. As plagiarism is not tolerated at GCSU, "since the primary goal of education is to increase one's own knowledge," any student found guilty of substantial, willful plagiarism or dishonesty may fail the assignment and the course. This course uses plagiarism prevention technology from TurnItIn. The papers may be retained by the service for the sole purpose of checking for plagiarized content in future student submissions.

Writing Center

Writing consultants will work with any student writer working on any project in any discipline. To learn more about Writing Center locations, hours, scheduling, and services, please visit here. Send questions to writing.center@gcsu.edu.

Required Syllabus Statements

Additional statements regarding the Religious Observance Policy, Assistance for Student Needs Related to Disability, Student Mental Health, Student Rating of Instruction Survey, Academic Honesty, Student Use of Copyrighted Materials, Electronic Recording Policy, Academic Grievance or Appeals, and Fire Drills can be found here.

 

Course Schedule

Week 1
M, 8-18

Introductions

W, 8-20

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Topic Workshop

Week 2
M, 8-25

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Topics and Outlines Due

W, 8-27

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

Week 3
M, 9-1

No Class: Labor Day Holiday

W, 9-3

Internship: No Class, Journal Due

Thesis: Individual Conferences, Proposal Due

Week 4
M, 9-8

Internship: Individual Conferences

Thesis: No Class

W, 9-10

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Annotated Bibliography Due

Week 5
M, 9-15

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

W, 9-17

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

Week 6

M, 9-22

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Work-in-Progress Due

W, 9-24

Internship: No Class, Journal Due

Thesis: Work-in-Progress Workshop

Week 7
M, 9-29

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

W, 10-1

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

Week 8
M, 10-6

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

W, 10-8

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Work-in-Progress Due

Week 9
M, 10-13

No Class: Fall Break

W, 10-15

Internship: No Class, Journal Due

Thesis: Work-in-Progress Workshop

Week 10
M, 10-20

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

W, 10-22

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

Week 11
M, 10-27

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

W, 10-29

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

Week 12
M, 11-3

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Work-in-Progress Due

W, 11-5

Internship: No Class, Journal Due

Thesis: Work-in-Progress Workshop

Week 13
M, 11-10

Internship: Individual Conferences

Thesis: Individual Conferences

W, 11-12

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

Week 14
M, 11-17

Internship: No Class

Thesis: Individual Conferences

W, 11-19

Internship: Presentations

Thesis: Presentations

Week 15
M, 11-24

Internship: Individual Conferences

Thesis: Individual Conferences

W, 11-26

No Class: Thanksgiving Holiday

Week 16
M, 12-1

Internship: Presentations

Thesis: Presentations

W, 12-3

Internship: Presentations

Thesis: Presentations

Finals
R, 12-11

Internship Portfolio Due

Thesis Due