English (Emphasis in Literature)

Effective: Fall 2024
Associate in Arts Program Map

This program map from the 2024-2025 catalog year represents one possible pathway to complete this program. Your pathway may vary depending on your transfer plans and also previous college credit, including AP Test scores, concurrent enrollment courses and high school articulated courses.

I'm ready to get started. What do I do next?

  1. Review this program map to get an overview of the required courses
  2. Meet with a counselor to develop your customized student education plan www.chabotcollege.edu/counseling
  3. Use DegreeWorks, an online student education planning tool, to track your progress toward graduation www.chabotcollege.edu / admissions / degreeworks
Program Description

The study of English is the study of language, storytelling, culture, history, ideas, and creative expression. English majors are curious, thoughtful, articulate, and empathetic. In the English program you will develop your strength as a close reader and your craft as a writer. You will hone your ability to ask critical questions and conduct high-level analysis, skills useful in any of your future endeavors; a degree in English prepares you for transfer and many different kinds of academic, professional, and creative work.


What can I do with this major?

Question: What are you going to do with a college degree in English?

Answer: Anything! Everything!

A degree in English can take you many places and into many careers. It can prepare you for transfer and graduate study in many academic fields. The study of English and writing is extremely valuable because it develops skills that are useful beyond any one job or area. High-level critical thinking, detail-oriented close reading, clear and effective communication, and sensitivity to human experience are always in demand.


Learning and Career Pathway
  • Communication, Language & Media

Icon Key

= Critical Course = Prerequisite for Other Courses = Prerequisite Required = Required for Major GE = General Education

Semester 1

13-14 units

English 1- Critical Reading and Composition

4 units
GE

List A course #1

3 units
Select one course from List A below.
See the full list: (Click here)

General Education Course- see a counselor to choose the appropriate general education pattern and general ed course option for this term.

3 units
GE

Math Course for General Education: see a counselor to choose the appropriate course.

3-4 units
GE
Math 47 recommended

Semester 2

16 units

ENGL 4A
Critical Thinking and Writing about Literature

4 units
Develops skills in close reading, critical thinking, analytical and argumentative writing, research, and information literacy through the study of works from major literary genres. Works will include poetry, fiction (short stories and novel), and drama, but may also include alternative genres such as creative nonfiction, graphic novels, spoken word, flash fiction, and lyrics. Primary texts will showcase diverse writers, including marginalized voices.
Course Details:
  1. Prerequisite: ENGL C1000
  • Transfers to CSU
  • List A course #2

    3 units
    GE
    Select one course from List A below.
    See the full list: (Click here)

    General Education Course- see a counselor to choose the appropriate general education pattern and general ed course option for this term.

    3 units
    GE

    General Education Course- see a counselor to choose the appropriate general education pattern and general ed course option for this term.

    3 units
    GE

    General Education Course- see a counselor to choose the appropriate general education pattern and general ed course option for this term.

    3 units
    GE

    Semester 3

    16 units

    List A course #3

    3 units
    Select one course from List A below.
    See the full list: (Click here)

    List B course

    3 units
    Select one course from List B below.
    See the full list: (Click here)

    General Education Course- see a counselor to choose the appropriate general education pattern and general ed course option for this term.

    3 units
    GE

    General Education Course- see a counselor to choose the appropriate general education pattern and general ed course option for this term.

    4 units
    GE

    General Education Course- see a counselor to choose the appropriate general education pattern and general ed course option for this term.

    3 units
    GE

    Semester 4

    15 units

    List A course #4

    3 units
    Select one course from List A below
    See the full list: (Click here)

    General Education Course- see a counselor to choose the appropriate general education pattern and general ed course option for this term.

    3 units
    GE

    Elective- see a counselor to choose a course that counts for elective units (can be any credit course).

    3 units

    Elective- see a counselor to choose a course that counts for elective units (can be any credit course).

    3 units

    Elective- see a counselor to choose a course that counts for elective units (can be any credit course).

    3 units

    List A

    ENGL 20
    Studies in Shakespeare

    3 units
    Readings of the sonnets and representative comedies, histories, tragedies, and romances of William Shakespeare, with attention to the early, middle and late phases of his art and to the historical time period in which he lived. Consideration of recurring themes in his works, along with the political and cultural contexts that shaped these ideas and attitudes. Examination of Shakespeare’s global legacy and diverse adaptations of his plays.
    Course Details:
    Terms Offered: Spring

    ENGL 21
    The Evolution of the Black Writer

    3 units
    Introduction to Black-American writers in fiction, poetry, drama, and the essay, beginning with the historical texts of the slave trade, and continuing to the present. Emphasis on the 20th and 21st-century writers' growth and development in relation to their historical and cultural context. Offers a broader view of World and American History through the lens of the Black writer's journey from capture in West Africa, enslavement in America, and the fight for liberation. Examines issues of Black identity and how that identity has been expressed through various forms of literature. Explores how the Black writer has used literature and specific literary devices to inspire change, radical thought, and challenge white supremacy.
    Course Details:
    Terms Offered: Spring

    ENGL 22
    Mexican American/Latinx Literature of the U.S.

    3 units
    This course is an introduction to Mexican American and Latinx Literature in the United States. The Mexican American and Latinx literary movement, particularly in California, is growing at a phenomenal rate, pushing the creative and intellectual boundaries within American Literature. In the course, we will cover a range of genres, including short stories, novels, poetry, memoirs, essays, and plays. Although Mexican American and Latinx authors have been contributing to American literature since the sixteenth century, the bulk of our attention will be paid to the Mexican American and Latinx literary movements that began in the 1950’s and extend through the present day. Students will analyze the literary works within the context of socio-economic, political, and historical movements; additionally, students will learn about the unique history, thematic concerns, and genre-bending styles of Mexican American and Latinx writers.
    Course Details:
    Terms Offered: Fall

    ENGL 25
    Asian-American Literature

    3 units
    Introduction to literary works of fiction, poetry, drama and the essay that reflect and explore the diversity of Asian-American experiences as well as divisions within Asian-American communities. Class explores literary expressions of cultural pride and identity, as well as reflections on racism, stereotypes, “perpetual foreigner syndrome,” the model minority myth, and internalized oppression. Course texts also explore loneliness and loss of “home,” identity confusion, generation gaps, acculturation … and the challenge of creating community and retaining culture in America. Analysis of literature in the context of the historical growth of Asian-American identities with a focus on the 20th and 21st centuries.
    Course Details:
    Terms Offered: Fall

    ENGL 28
    Classic and Contemporary Youth Literature

    3 units
    Social-historical context and tools for analyzing literature directed toward young readers. Emphasizes contemporary U.S. texts, classic works, and the origins of youth literature (including fables, folk tales and fairy tales). Explores subgenres and literary elements common to children’s and young adult literature, including fantasy, journeys, and animal characters. Emphasizes literature from diverse authors and communities, and the impact of this literature on the psychological, sociological, and cultural growth of young readers.
    Course Details:
    1. Strongly Recommended: ENGL 1
    2. or
    3. Strongly Recommended: ENGL 1A
    Terms Offered: Spring

    ENGL 31
    Introduction to Queer Literature

    3 units
    Introduction to novels, poems, plays, and essays about queer people, i.e., members of the LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and questioning) community. Analysis of this literature in the context of the LGBTQ social and political movements of the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries and evolving societal attitudes toward the LGBTQ community. Themes include coming out, developing a sense of queer pride and community, combating discrimination and anti-queer violence, maintaining family ties with sometimes supportive, sometimes hostile relatives, surviving the nearly universal queer childhood experience of bullying, struggling against internalized homophobia/transphobia and reductive stereotypes, understanding the intersection of sexuality, gender identity, and other identities, and sustaining queer relationships in a heteronormative society.
    Course Details:
    Terms Offered: Spring

    ENGL 32
    U.S. Women's Literature

    3 units
    Chronicles the expression of U.S. women authors through readings in a variety of genres such as fiction, poetry, drama, and the essay. Explores works by authors of varied racial and ethnic backgrounds in an effort to understand the diversity of women's voices, especially in the 20th century.
    Course Details:

    ENGL 35
    Modern and Contemporary U.S. Literature

    3 units
    U.S. literature from the second half of the 19th Century to the present, including poetry, drama, prose fiction, and essays. This class explores each work in relation to its social, cultural and historical contexts, and emphasizes the analysis of defining moments of the times as they are reflected in literature. The content of course closely examines distinctive literary movements and chronology of American literature since the mid-19th century: including Realism, Modernism, Harlem Renaissance, and Contemporary Literature, reflecting the diversity of American voices.
    Course Details:
    1. Prerequisite: ENGL 1
    2. Prerequisite: ENGL 102
    3. or
    4. Prerequisite: ENGL 101B
    5. Strongly Recommended: ENGL 1
    6. or
    7. Strongly Recommended: ENGL 1A
  • Transfers to CSU
  • Terms Offered: Fall

    ENGL 41
    World Literature (17th Century to the Present)

    3 units
    Comparative study of selected works of literature, in English and in translation, from around the world, including Africa, Europe, the Middle East, Asia, the Americas, and other areas, from the mid seventeenth century to the present.
    Course Details:
    1. Prerequisite: ENGL 1
    2. Prerequisite: ENGL 102
    3. or
    4. Prerequisite: ENGL 101B
    5. Strongly Recommended: ENGL 1
    6. or
    7. Strongly Recommended: ENGL 1A
  • Transfers to CSU
  • Terms Offered: Spring

    ENGL 45
    Studies in Fiction

    3 units
    Exploration of particular themes and/or periods as reflected in works of fiction, including discussion of form, content, and cultural contexts.
    Course Details:
    1. Strongly Recommended: ENGL 1A
    2. or
    3. Strongly Recommended: ENGL 1
    Terms Offered: Spring

    ENGL 48
    The Literature of the Holocaust

    3 units
    Explores the literature of the Holocaust through readings in a variety of genres including memoir, essays, fiction, poetry, and film. Historically and culturally contextualizes the literature and examines the implications of writing which attempts to represent the Nazi genocide against the Jews.
    Course Details:
    Terms Offered: Fall

    List B

    Select one course (3-4 units) from the list below.

    Any List A course not already taken

    3 units

    ENGL 11A
    Introduction to Creative Writing1

    3 units
    English 11A is an introductory creative writing course, offering practice in the elements of creative writing, including narrative, verse, and dialogue. Students will read, write, and respond to poetry, fiction, and dram. Class assignments will use materials drawn from individual's own work and selected texts.
    Course Details:
    1. Prerequisite: ENGL 102
    2. or
    3. Eligibility for: ENGL 1
    4. Advisory: ENGL 1
    5. or
    6. Advisory: ENGL 1A
    Terms Offered: Fall, Spring

    ENGL 12A
    Beginning Fiction Writing2

    3 units
    English 12A serves as a beginning course in the practice of writing fiction. Students will learn to develop internal and external sources for stories and novels. Class assignments will focus on characterization, plotting, point of view, and narrative techniques. The class will give considerable attention to the analysis and criticism of published writing and the individual's own work.
    Course Details:
    1. Prerequisite: ENGL 102
    2. or
    3. Prerequisite: ENGL 1
    Terms Offered: Spring, Fall

    ENGL 13A
    Beginning Craft of Writing - Poetry3

    3 units
    English 13A serves as a beginning course in the practice of writing poetry. Students will focus on analyzing and using techniques and styles from a diverse selection of poetry, including peers, to develop and revise one's own work. Students will learn elements of the craft of writing poetry such as voice, rhythm, imagery, extended metaphor, meter, and freeform.
    Course Details:
    1. Prerequisite: ENGL 102
    2. or
    3. Prerequisite: ENGL 1
    Terms Offered: Spring

    SERV 85A
    Learning in Action: Beginning

    1 unit
    Placement in meaningful volunteer projects in community organizations or schools, approved by instructor and supervised by site supervisor. Introduction to practical skills and knowledge required to serve as effective volunteers or tutors. Discuss specific problems in the community and investigate and carry out service projects to address them. Class will meet one hour per week on campus for reflection and discussion of community issues, and students will serve at least 3 hours per week in community agencies or schools.

    ENGL 7A
    Critical Thinking and Writing across Disciplines

    4 units
    Develops critical thinking, reading, and writing skills as they apply to the analysis of primary and secondary non-fiction books, articles, and essays from a range of academic and cultural contexts. Primary texts will showcase diverse writers, including marginalized voices. Theme based units will emphasize the techniques and principles of effective written argument in research-based writing across disciplines.
    Course Details:
    1. Prerequisite: ENGL 1
    2. or
    3. Prerequisite: ENGL 1A
  • Transfers to CSU
  • Terms Offered: Spring, Fall, Summer
    Total Units: 60-61 units