Show/hide contentOpenClose All
Curricular information is subject to change
1. To help students master a basic critical vocabulary for the analysis of poetry, acquainting students with resources for the study of poetry which are also likely to promote their critically-informed reading of literature more generally.
2. To encourage students to engage fully with textual and linguistic complexity.
3. To empower students as readers of poetry and to build confidence in their interpretive abilities, whilst engendering a love for poetry and its expressive possibilities.
4. To acquaint students with key poems and forms in the history of poetry.
5. To help students to understand how poems function on their own terms, and in relation to the social, material, and ideological systems of which they are a part.
6. To develop students' capacities to write effectively and fluently on poetry.
Each week, we will attend to a particular aspect of poetic analysis (eg, sound, meaning and pattern; denotation and connotation; rhythm and meter; figurative language, etc), integrating it with aspects already covered and gradually building a fully-equipped poetry-reading toolkit.
Student Effort Type | Hours |
---|---|
Specified Learning Activities | 28 |
Autonomous Student Learning | 48 |
Seminar (or Webinar) | 24 |
Total | 100 |
Not applicable to this module.
Description | Timing | Component Scale | % of Final Grade | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Assignment(Including Essay): Writing Exercise B | n/a | Standard conversion grade scale 40% | No | 10 |
|
Assignment(Including Essay): Writing Exercise C | n/a | Standard conversion grade scale 40% | No | 10 |
|
Reflective Assignment: Commonplace Book: A weekly journal in response to prompts provided by the module co-ordinator | n/a | Standard conversion grade scale 40% | No | 20 |
|
Assignment(Including Essay): Writing Exercise A | n/a | Standard conversion grade scale 40% | No | 10 |
|
Assignment(Including Essay): Essay: Essay (length: 2,000 - 2,500 words) | n/a | Standard conversion grade scale 40% | No | 50 |
Resit In | Terminal Exam |
---|---|
Spring | No |
• Feedback individually to students, post-assessment
• Group/class feedback, post-assessment
• Self-assessment activities
- Regular individual feedback on continuous-assessment written exercises throughout the semester. as well as in-class large-group feedback on this work. - regular individual and group oral feedback on ideas developed during seminar discussion. - Individual formal written feedback on the end-of-semester essay (after the assessment period for the semester concerned). - one-to-one oral feedback meeting on the end-of semester essay available (where possible) on request
Name | Role |
---|---|
Professor Danielle Clarke | Lecturer / Co-Lecturer |
Dr Catríona Clutterbuck | Lecturer / Co-Lecturer |
Professor Danielle Clarke | Tutor |
Dr Catherine Kilcoyne | Tutor |