Difference between revisions of "The Short Story"

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{{Template:CAA courses}}
 
{{Template:CAA courses}}
  
[[The Short Story]] ([[STOR]]) was a [[CAA]] course that first introduced a "level" concept for writing at CTY, meaning it was a more advanced style writing course. For a prerequisite, you had to complete either [[The Sense of Place]], [[Introduction to Creative Writing]], [[Writing About Place: The Monterey Bay|Writing by the Bay]], [[Writing Autobiography]] or [[Writing the Expository Essay]]. This course was offered at [[Bethlehem]] and [[Frederick]].
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[[The Short Story]] ([[The Short Story|STOR]]) was a [[CAA]] course that first introduced a "level" concept for writing at CTY, meaning it was a more advanced style writing course. For a prerequisite, you had to complete either [[The Sense of Place]], [[Introduction to Creative Writing]], [[Writing About Place: The Monterey Bay|Writing by the Bay]], [[Writing Autobiography]] or [[Writing the Expository Essay]]. This course was offered at [[Bethlehem]] and [[Frederick]].
  
 
==Course Desription==
 
==Course Desription==

Revision as of 13:38, 17 January 2018

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Writing About Place: The Monterey Bay

The Short Story (STOR) was a CAA course that first introduced a "level" concept for writing at CTY, meaning it was a more advanced style writing course. For a prerequisite, you had to complete either The Sense of Place, Introduction to Creative Writing, Writing by the Bay, Writing Autobiography or Writing the Expository Essay. This course was offered at Bethlehem and Frederick.

Course Desription

From the CTY Course Catalog (1999):

Building upon the foundations of writing laid in CAA's first-level writing courses, The Short Story provides an intensive introduction to short fiction. In addition to writing their own short stories, students read and discuss works by authors such as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Anton Chekov, Eudora Welty, Raymond Carver, Alice Walker, and Jorge Luis Borges. Using published pieces and their own writing, students examine the principles and practices of fiction writing, such as plot, theme, character development, and training the writer's ear to hear the written word. As in all Institute writing classes, students read and discuss their work with members of the class in workshops and the instructor provides in-depth critiques. The course strongly emphasizes comprehensive revision based on conferences with the instructor and on workshop comments.