Monday, 24 September 2012

Crazy Brave: A Memoir

The Utah Humanities Book Festival, in conjunction with Holmgren Historical Farm, are excited to present acclaimed indigenous poet, musician and activist Joy Harjo reading from her new memoir Crazy Brave in the Holmgren Historical Barn.

 
Date: Friday, Oct. 5, 2012
Time: 7:00 pm
Location: Holmgren Historical Farm
460 North 300 East Tremonton, UT
 
Joy Harjo was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma and is an internationally known poet, performer, writer, and saxophone player of the Mvskoke/Creek Nation. Her seven books of poetry include such well-known titles as How We Became Human: New and Selected Poems, The Woman Who Fell From the Sky, and She Had Some Horses, all published by W.W. Norton. Her poetry has garnered many awards including the New Mexico Governor's Award for Excellence in the Arts, the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writers Circle of the Americas, 1998 Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Award, and the William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America. Harjo's memoir, Crazy Brave, tells of her journey to becoming a poet and was called "the best kind of memoir, an unself-conscious mix of autobiography, spiritual rumination, cultural evaluation, history and political analysis told in simple but authoritative and deeply poetic prose" by Ms Magazine.

In this transcendent memoir, grounded in tribal myth and ancestry, music and poetry, Joy Harjo, one of our leading Native American voices, details her journey to becoming a poet. Harjo grew up learning to dodge an abusive stepfather by finding shelter in her imagination, a deep spiritual life, and connection with the natural world. She attended an Indian arts boarding school, where she nourished an appreciation for painting, music, and poetry; gave birth while still a teenager; and struggled on her own as a single mother, eventually finding her poetic voice.

A renowned musician, Harjo has released four award-winning CD's of original music and in 2009 won a Native American Music Award (NAMMY) for Best Female Artist of the Year for Winding Through the Milky Way. She performs nationally and internationally with her band, the Arrow Dynamics. She also performs her one-woman show, "Wings of Night Sky, Wings of Morning Light," which premiered at the Wells Fargo Theater in Los Angeles in 2009 with other performances at the Public Theater in NYC and LaJolla Playhouse as part of the Native Voices at the Autry. She lives in Glenpool, OK.

Other key sponsors of this event include Weller's Book Works, The Women and Gender Center at Utah State University and Utah State University Library's Special Collections and Archives Division.

Job Posting from Kendall Grant at BYU-Idaho:


Here is the link to the job posting (and the posting is below): https://employment.byui.net/applicants/jsp/shared/frameset/Frameset.jsp?time=1348510712515


Official Title: Temporary Faculty - English
Department: English
Position Type: Faculty
Position Summary: Teach composition courses or other Foundations (general education) courses.
Knowledge, Skills and Experience: Master's degree required. Preference will be given to those candidates who demonstrate excellence in teaching and proficiency in Literary Studies, Creative Writing, English Education, or Professional Writing. Applicants must be members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and eligible for a temple recommend.
Work Schedule: To be determined by department chair.
Anticipated Start Date: 01-01-2013
Salary: Dependent on Education and Experience
Posting Date: 09-21-2012
Closing Date: 09-30-2012
Required Applicant Documents: Resume
Cover Letter
Transcript 1
Optional Applicant Documents: Curriculum Vitae
Other Document
Transcript 2
Transcript 3
Special Instructions to Applicants: Successful candidate will teach for three semesters. From January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013.

Official transcript of degrees earned is required and must be mailed by the university to the following address:
Mr. Kelly T Burgener
Associate Academic VP for Instruction
210 KIM
BYU-Idaho
Rexburg ID 83460-1690
Contact Info: Peggy P Clements
Faculty Employment Specialist
230 KIM
Academics Office
BYU-Idaho
Rexburg ID 83460-1670
208-496-1140
clementsp@byui.edu

Friday, 21 September 2012

Hawaii International Conference


Call For Papers
   sponsored by:
(for full conference details, visit our website at: http://www.hichumanities.org) Submission/Proposal Deadline: August 17th, 2012Submission/Proposal Deadline Extended to: October 5th, 2012 Topic Areas (All Areas of Arts and Humanities are Invited)
·         Anthropology·         American Studies·         Archeology·         Architecture·         Art·         Art History·         Art Management·         Dance·         English·         Ethnic Studies·         Film·         Folklore·         Geography·         Graphic Design·         History·         Landscape Architecture·         Languages·         Literature·         Linguistics·         Music·         Performing Arts·         Philosophy·         Postcolonial Identities·         Product Design·         Religion·         Second Language Studies·         Speech/Communication·         Theatre·         Visual Arts·         Cross-disciplinary areas of Arts and Humanities·         Other Areas of Arts and Humanities  
 
- Center for Sustainable Urban Neighborhoods <http://www.louisville.edu/org/sun>

Submitting a Proposal/Paper:

You may submit your paper/proposal by following the instructions on our website. To make a submission, and for detailed information about submitting see:


Tuesday, 18 September 2012

Evans Award Ceremony


We would like to invite you to join us for the Evans Biography Awards Ceremony next Friday, September 21, 2012 at 2:00 p.m. in the Alumni House.  Please feel free to pass the following announcement along to any students or community members that you think might have an interest.   

The Mountain West Center presents the Evan’s Biography and Handcart Awards to this year’s recipients, authors William M. Adler for his work The Man Who Never Died: The Life, Times, and Legacy of Joe Hill, American Labor Icon (Bloomsbury, 2011) and Alwin J. Girdner for his work Dine’ Tah: My Reservation Days 1923-1939 (Rio Nuevo Publishers, 2011).  The public is invited to attend the awards ceremony at the David B. Haight Alumni House on Friday, September 21, 2012. The ceremony will begin at 2 :00 pm. This will be followed by book signings and an opportunity to meet the authors with light refreshments being served.  William Adler will also be speaking on campus on Friday morning from 10:00 – 11:00 am in the library – room 154.  A flyer with additional details is attached.  Information on the winning books and authors can be found at the following link, http://usu.edu/ust/print.cfm?article=51296.   For questions, please contact the Mountain West Center at 435-797-0299 or mwc@usu.edu.
 
Please click here to view the flyer for this event!

Professor Elabbas Benmamoun




Professor of Linguistics and the Director of the School of Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics at the University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign)

 

THE ARABIC LANGUAGE: A HISTORICAL AND LINGUITIC SURVEY

Thursday September 20th

4:30 p.m.

Old Main 201

 

Interest in the study and teaching of the Arabic language has been steadily increasing for a variety of reasons.  Among these reason are (1) the prominence of the geographical area where Arabic is spoken as a native language or is an official language (the majority of the countries of the Arab league), a geographical area that stretches from the Persian Gulf to North Africa, in addition to Sub-Saharan countries and other countries where Arabic is a minority language; (2) the developments in information technology and computational linguistics and the increasing interest to extend the reach of the research to languages such as Arabic, particularly its spoken colloquial varieties; and (3) the fact that Arabic, with its vast diversity and diglossic nature, provides a rich testing ground to explore linguistic issues such as agreement, word order, root and pattern morphology, second language acquisition, heritage agreement, word order, root and pattern morphology, second language acquisition, heritage languages, diglossia and code switching, language change  and micro-variation, among others.

Attention!!! All Grad Students!

           Next term Melody Graulich will be teaching a course on American Indian Literature that will have spaces for both advanced undergraduates and graduate students.


From Dr. Graulich:

I would like to assign more reading for the grad students and meet with them separately perhaps every three weeks. Ideally, I would ask the grad students to participate in “teaching” the undergrad class by leading class discussion on a particular book and/or doing smaller group discussions. But the structure of the class will depend on how many grad students are interested in taking it. At the moment, I plan to focus on works by N. Scott Momaday, Leslie Silko, Louise Erdrich, and Louis Owens, but that may change.


I know THIS semester is only just beginning but I have to order the books for the class in a month. So if you are interested, please let me know either by email at melody.graulich@usu.edu or by stopping by my office to discuss the course at Ray B. West 211. I’ll be in much of MWF this term or could make an appointment.

-- Melody Graulich

 
Call for Papers
 
 
Conference Description

The Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE) invites proposals for its Tenth Biennial Conference, to be held May 28th through June 1st, 2013, at the University of Kansas in Lawrence. The decennial conference theme is intended to reflect some of the most engaging current conversations within the environmental humanities and across disciplines, and to link those discussions to the transnational nexus of energy, labor, borders, and human and nonhuman environments that are so fundamentally "changing nature," and with it the widely varied kinds of environmental critique we practice, art we make, and politics we advocate. Migrations--of humans, of non-human creatures, of "invasive species," of industrial toxins across aquifers and cellular membranes, of disease across species and nations, of transgenic pollen and GM fish-have changed the meanings of place, bodies, nations, and have lent new urgency to the old adage that "everything is connected to everything." Energies--fossil, renewable, human, spiritual, aesthetic, organic-radically empower our species for good and for ill, and make our individual and collective choices into the Anthropocene. And those choices are profoundly about Limits on resources, climate, soil, and water; about voluntary and involuntary curbs on individual and collective consumption and waste; about the often porous and often violently marked borders of empire, class, race, and gender.

We seek proposals for papers, panels, roundtables, workshops, and other public presentations that address the intersections between representation, nature, and culture, and that are connected to the conference's deliberately broad and, we hope, provocative theme. As always, we emphatically welcome interdisciplinary approaches; readings of environmentally inflected fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, and film; and proposals from outside the academic humanities, including submissions from artists, writers, practitioners, activists, and colleagues in the social and natural sciences. An incomplete list of possible topics might include, combine, and are certainly not limited to:
  • Petro-­culture and the Energies of Modernity: the Keystone pipeline, hydrofracking, tar sands, global capital and resource wars, the possibility of change
  • Aesthetics and the Futures of Environmental Representation
  • Climate Change: mitigation, adaptation, costs, and the concept of place
  • Empire, Race and Environment: postcolonial ecocriticism
  • The Futures of Ecofeminism
  • Indigenous Environmentalisms
  • "Natural" Histories of Race, Ethnicity, Gender, Class, Sexualities...
  • Ecocomposition, environmentalism and rhetoric, sustainable pedagogies/the pedagogies of sustainability
  • Environmental Justice: toxins, food, climate, sovereignty
  • Postnatural Nature, Posthuman Humanism
  • Digital Representation and Natural Experience
  • Biotechnology: prostheses, genetic modification, synthetic life
  • Waste: from adopt-a-highway to the pacific garbage patch
  • Animals, Animality: us and us
  • Evolution, Epigenetic Change, Politics
  • Affect and Environmentalism: love, despair, postdespair
 
 
 
 
Plenary Speakers 
(More speakers TBA) 
 
Stacy Alaimo, Distinguished Teaching Professor in English, University of Texas at Arlington. Author of Undomesticated Ground: Recasting Nature as Feminist Space and Bodily Natures: Science, Environment, and the Material Self.
 
Juan Carlos Galeano, Spanish Poetry and Amazonian Studies, Florida State University. Author of Amazonia and Folktales of the Amazon.
 
Wes Jackson, resident of the Land Institute. Author of
Nature as Measure (2011) and Consulting the Genius of the Place (2010).

Rob Nixon,
Rachel Carson Professor of English, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Author of Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor and Dreambirds: The Natural History of a Fantasy

Jeffrey Thomson
, Poetry and Nonfiction, University of Maine Farmington. Author of Birdwatching in Wartime and Renovation.

Daniel Wildcat,
American Indian Studies, Haskell Indian Nations University. Co-director of the Haskell Environmental Research Studies Center and author of Red Alert! Saving the Planet with Indigenous Knowledge and (with Vine Deloria, Jr.) Power and Place: Indian Education in America.

Cary Wolfe,
Bruce and Elizabeth Dunlevie Professor of English, Rice University. Author of Animal Rites: American Culture, The Discourse of Species, and Posthumanist Theory and What Is Posthumanism?
 
Donald Worster, Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Professor of U.S. History, University of Kansas. Author of Nature's Economy: A History of Ecological Ideas, Dust Bowl: the Southern Plains in the 1930s, and A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir.
 
 
 
Submission Guidelines

For additional information and to submit a proposal for a pre-formed panel or individual paper, please visit the conference website: asle.ku.edu.
  • One proposal submission allowed per person.
  • Participants can present on only one panel/paper jam/or roundtable (though serving as a chair on a panel, in addition to presenting, is permitted.)
  • Pre-formed panels are highly encouraged. To encourage institutional diversity and connection, all pre-formed panels must include participants from more than one institution and from more than one academic level.
  • Proposals must be submitted online (though if this poses a significant difficulty for an individual member, please email Paul Outka to work out an accommodation.)
All proposals must be submitted by November 15, 2012. We will evaluate your proposal carefully, and notify you of its final status by January 31, 2013.

For questions about the program, please contact 2013 ASLE President Paul Outka, at paul.outka@ku.edu. For questions about the conference site and field sessions, please contact the Conference Site Host, Byron Caminero-­Santangelo, at bsantang@ku.edu.
 
 
Pre-conference Workshops
 
As we have in the past, we will hold a number of pre-conference workshops on Tuesday, May 28, 2013, on central and emerging topics that reflect the diversity of our approaches and our membership. Rather than choose conference leaders in advance, however, we are calling for proposals for workshops and will post what seem the most compelling set of panels before the conference registration opens. Preconference workshop leaders will receive free registration for the 2013 conference and a complementary year's membership in ASLE. For more information or to submit a proposal to lead a preconference workshop, please email Greta Gaard, ASLE's 2013 Preconference Workshop Coordinator (greta.gaard@uwrf.edu). Proposals should include (a) a 500 word (max) proposal outlining the proposed workshop theme, structure, and your particular qualifications and (b) your vita. Pre-­conference workshop proposals must be sent by October 30, 2012.
 
 
Field Sessions

We will also be offering half-day field excursions one afternoon that will allow attendees to experience some of the extraordinary natural beauty and fascinating history of the area, including a visit to the Konza Prairie Biological Station; a tour of the Wakarusa Wetlands, Haskell Indian Nations University Campus and Medicine Wheel; a trip to the KU Environmental Studies Field Station and Native Medicinal Plant Research Garden; mountain biking along the Kansas River; and an organic farm tour. For more information, please contact the conference site host, Byron Caminero-Santangelo (bsantang@ku.edu).
 
 
Interest Group Caucuses

Finally, as announced on the diversity caucus blog and in the newsletter, the conference will make a block of time and a number of rooms available during the conference to facilitate the formation of interest group caucuses within ASLE, based around critical perspective, identity, language, region, nation, or whatever other organizing principle the group chooses. The only requirement for these groups is that they are open to all members; our hope is that the caucuses will encourage richer conversation within ASLE and will facilitate better communication between the membership and the leadership about how ASLE might strengthen its longstanding commitments to diversity. For more information on the caucuses and to request meeting space in advance, please contact ASLE diversity coordinator Salma Monani at smonani@gettysburg.edu.
 
 
Lawrence and the University of Kansas
 
"Stretching out on its own unbounded scale, unconfined... Combining the real and the ideal, and beautiful as dreams."
--Walt Whitman on the view from the campus of The University of Kansas
 
Located in the forested hills surrounding the Kansas River, Lawrence offers the charms of a small city on the edge of the prairie with the resources of Kansas City (and its major airport) a short drive to the east. As home to both the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Nations University, Lawrence is frequently cited as one of the United States' best college towns, and was recently ranked by the National Trust for Historic Preservation as one of its "Dozen Most Distinctive Destinations." The lovely KU campus sits atop Mount Oread and is a short walk, bike, or bus ride from Lawrence's vibrant downtown, as well as the river and a number of area parks. At the center of downtown is very pedestrian-friendly Massachusetts Street, offering two miles of local shops, galleries, independent bookstores, coffeehouses, bars and live music venues, as well as a burgeoning foodie and locavore culture spearheaded by a range of downtown restaurants. For those seeking outdoor activities, the town offers extensive cycling and walking trails through town and along the Kansas River; hiking, camping, and boating at Clinton Lake and Perry Lake (each about a fifteen-minute drive from campus); and walking trails through the Wakarusa wetlands.  
 
Conference housing will be provided in the university's dormitories and in three local hotels. Dormitory housing, all conference events, and one hotel are all within a five minute walk of each other through campus. Two Conference hotels are in the center of downtown, about ten blocks from campus; regular shuttle service will be provided for those who would prefer that option. Wireless Service will be available for all conference registrants, and all rooms for concurrent sessions will be equipped with projectors and Internet access. In addition, to reduce our resource use, we will make all conference materials, including maps and the program, available online and through a smartphone app; paper materials will also be readily available at registration upon request.
 
 
 
Contact Information

Questions about the program? Email Paul Outka at paul.outka@ku.edu.
Questions about the conference site and field sessions? Email Byron Caminero-Santangelo at bsantang@ku.edu.

Sunday, 16 September 2012

Book Review: From Pusan to Panmunjom

Title: From Pusan to Panmunjom: Wartime Memoirs of the Republic of Korea's First Four-Star General
Author: Paik Sun Yup
ebook: 271 pages
Publisher: Potomac Books Inc. (October 1999)
ISBN-10: 1574887432
ISBN-13: 978-1574887433




An immensely important contribution to Korean War discussions, From Pusan to Panmujom chronicles the Korean War from instigation to armistice from the viewpoint of arguably the most influential and well-respected ROK Army officer ever, former General Paik Sun Yup. His involvement permeated virtually every major battle and decision that occurred on the battlefield and thus, innately qualifies him to narrate the vastly overlooked Korean perspective of the war. From frantically forming a counterattack to repel the invading North Korean forces, holding the line at the Pusan Perimeter, re-establishing tactical dominance back near the 38th parallel and beyond to capture Pyongyang, to domestic objectives such as quelling the communist guerrilla force near Mt. Jiri and representing the armed forces at the armistice talks, General Paik was the quintessential key player in every major event during the Korean War. His story is begging to be heard.

As Paik concedes, just prior to the war The ROK Army was an overwhelmingly under-equipped militia at best. It was only army in name. None of the heavy armor, long-range firepower, or logistical support existed yet and thus, was reduced to being compared to the U.S. Army as nothing more than a ragtag group of underpaid and undertrained volunteers and forced draftees. While this might be partially correct, the later joint U.S. Army's contribution of heavy armor and superior howitzers combined with the ROK's infantry proved to be an effective fighting force despite relatively little previous experience. Paik maintains that his men's determination to unify the country and staunch anti-communism stance steeled them into hardened soldiers willing to sacrifice themselves for the good of the country. Paik proudly writes highly of his men; so much so that it's difficult to imagine how he must have dealt with the loses inflicted by the numerous Chinese human wave offenses that inundated his forces.

Not only was Paik the first Korean to reach the prestigious rank of Four-Star General, he was also amazingly young; few other 33-year-olds could claim his level of success. Yet, Paik comes off as a humble working-man's soldier; a man devoted to the service of his country but who could also see the internationally unfolding big picture. Even as he pens this memoir decades later, he attributes successes to those around him and claims responsibility for failures. Men of Paik's caliber are indeed rare. 

Paik's memoir affects me on a few personal levels. As a former enlisted member of the U.S. armed forces, I can understand the clear reasons why he was quickly promoted; Paik appears to have been an outstanding commanding officer at a time when they were likely few and far between. The history nerd in me appreciates Paik's ability to give grand scheme analyses when deconstructing individual battles; he appropriately expounds on certain contextual details to help color the circumstances that he and his men faced. His politically sensitive language, too, is foretelling of his second career in diplomacy. Furthermore, he often goes beyond dryly stating who did what; Paik briefs the reader of the men around him who would later rise to future successes inside and outside of the military. For all of Paik's militaristic achievements, he also maintains a certain degree of literary professionalism that hovers around frankness and cordiality. For such a heavy topic, it's really a great read.

This is a well-constructed memoir, no doubt about it. I have very few reservations about recommending it. If only the reader does a short brush-up on basic military hierarchy and unit strength comparison (corps, battalion, company, etc) the book then becomes highly appreciable by non-military and former military alike. Like many others who have read this book, I come away feeling not only more informed and also grateful to Paik for writing down his astonishing experiences. If you're interested in Korea or the Korean War, you will surely appreciate this organically Korean side of the story.

Thursday, 13 September 2012

Meet with Duane Roen


My co-presenters at TYCA-West will be Duane Roen, the president of the CWPA and a vice-provost and department head at ASU, and Angela Clark-Oates, the director of the Writers' Studio for the School of Letters and Sciences at ASU. If any grad students would be interested in meeting them, I would be happy to see if I can facilitate that, perhaps after the session, or, I could see if I could put together a lunch or dinner. 
Let Whitney know if you're planning on attending and you'd like to meet these scholars. (m.whitney.olsen@gmail.com)

Wednesday, 5 September 2012

Program of Study Form


The Program of Study form lists all the courses that will count towards the fulfillment of a student’s degree requirements, the student’s contact information, and the working title of his or her dissertation. It is signed by the student, all the members of the student’s Supervisory Committee, the Department Head, and the Graduate Dean. Once the Program of Study form has been submitted and approved, revisions can be made to it by a memo from the Director of Graduate Studies in English to the Graduate School. Students must file the Program of Study form with the Graduate School by the end of their third semester in the program. If they fail to meet this deadline, the Graduate School will stop granting them waivers of tuition.
If students have not yet recruited their fifth committee member from outside the department by the end of their third semester, they may submit their Program of Study form signed by just the four members from inside the English Department. A revised Program of Study form, signed by the fifth member, must be filed by February 15 in the student’s fourth semester. This revised form will list all five members but need only be signed by the newly-added member, by the major professor, and by the department head.


Program of Study Worksheet

Prior to submitting the Program of Study form to the Graduate School, students should complete the Program of Study Worksheet (link to Program of Study Worksheet) and submit it to their major professor for approval. The Program of Study form is organized chronologically and is intended for the Graduate School. The Program of Study worksheet is organized by TPPC program requirements and is intended to help the student and major professor check that all program requirements will be met.

Supervisory Committees

 

The School of Graduate Studies requires students to form their Supervisory Committee and submit a Supervisory Committee Form by the end of their second semester in the program.
These committees are responsible for approving the student’s Program of Study after the Portfolio (Qualifying) examination is passed and for drawing up and administering the Comprehensive examination. The Supervisory Committee also serves as the examining committee for the final oral examination.
A doctoral student’s Supervisory Committee consists of at least five faculty members from inside and outside the department of English who are interested in, and able to help with the dissertation. All members of this committee must have doctoral degrees and be approved by the Dean of the School of Graduate Studies in accordance with the Utah State University General Catalog. Supervisory Committees must include:
  • three members of the faculty from the written communication areas of the Department of English who are identified as primary faculty members in the TPPC program,
  • one additional faculty member from the Department of English who is not listed as a primary faculty member in the TPPC program, and
  • one faculty member from outside the Department of English
One member of the committee is designated as the student’s chair or major professor. Usually, this will be one of the three primary faculty members in the TPPC program. The student will work the closest with this member.
While students should make every effort to form their full committee by the end of their second semester, the School of Graduate Studies recognizes that students in the TPPC program may need additional time to recruit the committee member from outside the English department. Students may therefore submit their Supervisory Committee form at the end of their second semester with just the four members from inside the English Department. A revised Supervisory Committee form, adding the fifth member from outside the department, must be filed by February 15 in the student’s fourth semester. This revised form will list all five members but need only be initialed by the newly-added member and signed by the department head.

Financial Information

 

In addition to student loans, PhD students may have access to three kinds of financial support: scholarships and fellowships, Graduate Instructorships, and tuition waivers (in conjunction with teaching).

Scholarships and fellowships: The English Department has access to a limited amount of scholarship money, for which PhD students will be considered. In the future we expect to develop some research fellowships that will be available to PhD students.

Graduate Instructorships: All students are encouraged to apply for a paid Graduate Instructorship. The assignment will be 50 percent time, or approximately 20 hours of work per week. The normal teaching load is two sections of writing classes (e.g., composition). Guarantee of continued support is contingent upon three factors: 1) acceptable teaching performance; 2) acceptable academic performance and progress towards the degree; and 3) sufficient funding from the university allowing the department to continue hiring GIs. Although we anticipate that students will complete the degree in four years, support may be available for a fifth year if necessary.

Graduate Instructorship duties begin in August with a week-long, in-service training workshop prior to the semester, conducted by the Director of Writing. GIs are also expected to attend departmental meetings as they are scheduled before classes begin and to enroll in Engl 6820: Practicum in Teaching English during fall semester if they have not done so already.

If PhD students have passed Engl 7860: Teaching Technical Writing or demonstrated equivalent formal preparation, they may be given the opportunity to teach certain upper-division technical communication courses, notably Engl 3080: Introduction to Technical Communication, Engl 3400: Professional Writing, and Engl 3410: Professional Writing Technology.

Tuition waivers: Doctoral students who work as Graduate Instructors receive waivers of
resident (instate) tuition, leaving them to pay only the fees associated with their classes.
Students who are not employed by the English department or by another department as Graduate
Instructors receive no waivers and must pay full tuition and fees.

US citizens who enter the doctoral program as residents of states other than Utah will also have their nonresident (out-of-state) tuition waived if they work as Graduate Instructors, but only for the first year. By the end of that year they will need to have established Utah residency to avoid being charged nonresident tuition in subsequent years.

International students, who cannot legally establish Utah residency, will continue to receive
waivers of nonresident tuition as long as they are employed as Graduate Instructors.

Tuition waivers will cover only those classes approved by the student’s Supervisory Committee for inclusion on the student’s Program of Study form. Students must check with their Supervisory Committee before registering for classes each semester. The Supervisory Committee may approve certain upper-division undergraduate classes, but lower-division undergraduate classes and recreational classes will not be covered by tuition waivers.

Classes taken through Distance Education may have higher tuition costs than on-campus classes. Tuition waivers are not increased to cover this difference in cost, which must be paid by the 
student.

Girls Generation - Korean