I. Course Title: Professional Writing In and About Art (WI) 
                                    
                                    II. Course Number: ART 201
                                    
                                    III. Credit Hours: 3 credits
                                    
                                    IV. Prerequisites: Open to all art majors
                                    
                                    V. Course Description: 
                                    
                                    The focus will be on the various types of writing that emerging artists engage in
                                       as part of their careers; variations in assignments will reflect different practice
                                       goals and concentrations. It will be submitted for approval as a Writing Intensive
                                       course.
                                    
                                    VI. Detailed Description of Content of the Course:
                                    
                                    This undergraduate course focuses on two things: the art of critical writing about
                                       art (exhibition reviews, for example) and the skills and formats necessary for the
                                       various forms of professional writing you will do throughout your career. These include
                                       the types of writing you might do when applying for a grant, course syllabi, submitting
                                       your work to a gallery, and professional work and research statements. This class
                                       does not have any content other than the act of writing.
                                    
                                    VII. Detailed Description of Conduct of Course:
                                    
                                    Writing is an individual activity. In class, we will focus on identification of the
                                       obstacles to good writing, defining precisely what is meant by "good" writing, and
                                       developing the skills that one can use in critiquing and improving one's own and others'
                                       writing. In other words, although your primary focus for this class is your own writing,
                                       because many of you will probably teach at some point and because it is also easier
                                       to recognize successful and unsuccessful writing when someone else does it, we will
                                       also use class to develop skills for critiques and editing. Class meetings will consist
                                       of discussion, structured writing activities, and peer review. Ultimately, it will
                                       be helpful to think of the class as a group tutorial with the group focus falling
                                       on the nature of critical writing and the individual focus involving a path of reading
                                       and writing related to your personal goals. Writing for public presentations, as opposed
                                       to writing for paper presentations is another possible topic.
                                    
                                    VIII. Goals and Objectives of the Course:
                                    
                                    
                                       
                                       - Develop ability to read and critique other writing about art
 
                                       
                                       - Overcome your anxieties about writing (everyone has them)
 
                                       
                                       - Begin the process of t ranslating one's individual practice and theory of art into
                                          writing that may be more formal than the artist's statement
 
                                       
                                       - Recognize and execute wit h competence and confidence the many conventional fo rms
                                          of writing you will rely on as a professional artist
 
                                       
                                       -         WI Outcome 1: demonstrates proficiency in the writing conventions of the discipline
 
                                       
                                       -         WI Outcome 2: Communicates through writing your understanding of disciplinary
                                          content
 
                                       
                                    
                                    IX. Assessment Measures:
                                    
                                    
                                       
                                       - Short, in-class writing assignments mixed with assignments done prior to class and
                                          brought to the group for anonymous critique.
 
                                       
                                       - "Peer" review of papers from other classes with a goal of developing writing-relevant
                                          rubrics for consistent grading.
 
                                       
                                       - A work statement, artist statement, research statement, or teaching philosophy; these
                                          are all relevant forms of writing for artists but the right one for you depends on
                                          your career goals.
 
                                       
                                       - Letters of inquiry about jobs, graduate school, grants, etc.
 
                                       
                                       - Create a writing portfolio with at least 5 examples of different forms of writing,
                                          brief justifications for the selection and format of each example.
 
                                       
                                    
                                    
                                       
                                       - Grading: using writing intensive rubrics created for this course, A - F with expectation
                                          that more than 70% of the students will achieve a high level of competence. It is
                                          likely that not doing well will result from not doing, rather than doing poorly. Each
                                          assignment will be graded with a rubric but for the purposes of the writing intensive
                                          learning outcomes, the student will prepare a writing portfolio including samples
                                          of writing done for class. These selections for the portfolio should have a brief
                                          introductory note explaining the student's decision to include that sample. The categories
                                          in the rubric will include the assessment of the student's ability to recognize and
                                          use the correct conventions for the specific type of writing, to write in a manner
                                          which is appropriately formal rather than casual or informal, to use the conventions
                                          of writing (grammar, spelling, etc.) correctly, and to reduce errors in writing over
                                          the semester. In addition to showing progress through the semester, the student will
                                          be asked for a self-assessment of their understanding and ability to use formal and
                                          professional writing conventions
 
                                       
                                    
                                    Other Course Information
                                    
                                    None
                                    
                                    Review and Approval
                                    
                                    March 01, 2021