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Reprinted with permission from
The Hampden-Sydney Tiger, April 23, 2004
Rhetoric Department Offers New Concentration
By Wesley Sholtes
Hampden-Sydney College’s
Rhetoric Department has recently received the rubber stamp of the
general faculty to offer students a concentration in rhetoric, which
will be infinitely valuable for students wishing to pursue careers
involving written or verbal communication. Elliott Professor of
Rhetoric and Humanities Elizabeth Deis had previously presented an oral
argument to the general faculty favoring the establishment of said
concentration, which could only be approved by a majority vote of all
the faculty members, regardless of department, in order to be
instituted.
Approve the concentration
they did, though only after a lengthy period of discussion and
planning. Currently, three Hampden-Sydney students have completed or
are in the process of completing the requirements for the concentration,
including seniors Joey Hall and Rusty Foster as well as Sophomore Chad
Southward. However, due to the lateness of the implementation of the
new concentration, Hall will not have the concentration denoted on his
transcript, even though he fulfilled its requirements.
Deis commented about the
number of long-term faculty members comprising the Rhetoric Department,
as well as information about their specializations: “We now have, with
Professor [Lizabeth] Rand … four tenure track positions, each of us
having areas of expertise.” She noted that she recently went to the
national composition convention, which concerns one of her noted areas
of expertise, while Rand, who is an Assistant Professor of Rhetoric, has
performed research on the rhetoric associated with illness and
religion. Apparently, Rand is recognized on a national level for her
work with illness.
Deis stated, “She has a
course this semester on Rhetoric and illness, a 401-level course. They
read discussions by patients and doctors about illness [especially
cancer].” Regarding the quantity of staff members now available to teach
rhetoric classes, she added, “We’ve got enough people in rhetoric that
we could do something like this.”
Rhetoric can be applied to
a wide variety of fields. According to Deis, “Even simple businesses
that are surveyed put communications skills at the top of their list.”
Elliott Associate Professor of Rhetoric and English Kathy Weese echoed
Deis’s assessment: “I think so many employers put such a high premium on
having students write well … Oral rhetoric fits very well into a liberal
arts curriculum.”
Weese commented on her
role as Chair of the Department as well as Deis’s role in getting the
concentration approved. “Dr. Deis conceived the idea, while I did a lot
of the footwork,” said Weese, adding that once it finally came to a
formal vote of the faculty, “it was passed by an overwhelming majority.”
Deis said that when she
went from department to department to pool potential rhetoric-related
classes for consideration to be included as part of the curriculum, she
found that “they all got excited about [the concentration].” However,
she contrasts current faculty enthusiasm with the “nightmare fight” that
occurred several years ago over the issue of hiring a new faculty member
to teach the college’s current course offering in Public Speaking.
Deis recalled, “The main
concern was having to hire more people.” Fortunately for the
department, adding on a new concentration did not require the hiring of
more faculty members, since Rand had already been recently added to the
department’s faculty. As a consequence, the faculty has been very
supportive of the new concentration.
Regarding the previous
non-existence of a Rhetoric concentration, Deis stated, “It’s ridiculous
when Hampden-Sydney is known for Rhetoric that all we could do was teach
students in their freshman year.” She is very pleased that students
will now have the option to continue upper-level courses in rhetoric
toward the goal of gaining recognition on their transcript.
Southward had a similar
reaction to Deis about the previous lack of course offerings in
rhetoric, asserting, “I was shocked to learn
Rhetoric was not offered as a major or concentration. Now, at least, one
can achieve a concentration in Rhetoric to go along with whichever major
they are pursuing.”
Hall, however, was more understanding of the time it took for
Hampden-Sydney to offer a concentration. He stated, “I'm not at all
surprised to see that the concentration didn't exist before now. The
one thing I've learned is that everything worth having takes time to
get.”
Weese notes that “the [Rhetoric] program is often touted as the
centerpiece of the college curriculum,” so it certainly makes sense for
the college to offer upper level courses. Asked about the possibility
of a Rhetoric or Communications major down the road, Weese asserted, “I
don’t foresee the program expanding radically in the near future.”
The concentration requires
six courses, including Rhetoric 102, Rhetoric 210 (Public Speaking),
Rhetoric 310 (Advanced Public Speaking), Rhetoric 301 (currently,
Creative Nonfiction taught by Deis) or English 235 (Creative Writing),
Rhetoric 401 (currently, the Rhetoric of Illness taught by Rand) or a
choice between Critical Issues in Fine Arts, Literary Criticism, and two
Classics courses, and finally, an additional course with rhetoric import
chosen from a wide variety of courses among a number of different
disciplines.
The department had to
argue for two new courses to be added to the Hampden-Sydney curriculum:
Rhetoric 301, Creative Nonfiction and Rhetoric 401, Topics in Rhetorical
Theory and Practice.
Creative Nonfiction is
writing intensive and focuses on reading and discussing essays and
finding a personal style and voice. According to a “Rationale”
defending the addition of the class to the department, which was offered
up for the faculty’s consideration, “The ability to craft a
well-researched and well-reasoned argument, and present it with
conviction and an awareness of the rhetorical situation, is the hallmark
of a well-rounded liberal arts education.”
Hall notes that it was
through this class that he first realized he could pursue a
concentration in Rhetoric. “I had a great
start on the requirements, such as having already had one public
speaking course, and, just by what I think is good fortune and somewhat
[of] an attempt to make the most of broadening my horizons, I took
Creative Nonfiction with Dr. Deis, where I was informed of the potential
of the concentration and how that class too was part of the
requirement.” He added, “So, as it stood, I had a great start on
fulfilling the concentration.”
Hall enthused, “Dr. Deis had a great impact on me and my overall
experience here at Hampden-Sydney. Before I even took the Creative
Nonfiction class with her, I had always valued what going through the
rhetoric program had done for me: I felt like I could communicate. But
taking Creative Nonfiction allowed me to see that I love to write.”
Southward echoes Hall’s enthusiasm for this class as well, asserting
that it was the most valuable course that he has taken so far for the
concentration. “Creative Nonfiction with Dr. Deis was essential for
me. It was my first upper level rhetoric course, and it made me focus
my writing. Focusing my writing has allowed my skills of rhetoric to
increase. Pinpointing a thesis and staying with the thesis is something
you can only learn by practice.”
Southward says he wished
more courses beyond the introductory level were offered, but he
expresses pleasure with several of the offerings. “Classes
such as Rhetoric of Illness with Dr. Rand really allow a person to
explore writing on a more personal basis, making writing a passion
instead of a chore. I am glad that Public Speaking with Professor Deal
is included in the Rhetoric concentration. Speaking well is important
in any career path.”
Rhetoric 401, the other
new class that is being offered, treats the study of selected topics in
rhetorical history and theory, with students participating regularly in
class discussion, giving oral presentations, and writing analytical
essays, including a “substantial seminar paper.”
The “Rationale” for this
class asserted, “Rhetoric 401—an upper-level seminar taught in the
spring semester every other year—will allow students the opportunity to
read broadly and deeply in rhetorical theory and practice and, as a
result, to become skilled ‘producers’ and ‘consumers’ of written and
oral discourse.”
Hall also mentioned this
course as one of a couple of courses whose professors have offered him
significant support, guidance, and instruction during his pursuit of a
Rhetoric concentration. “In my last semester … I have taken two more wonderful classes that have
really allowed me to actively engage [sic] my desire to write, the
Rhetoric of Illness with Dr. Rand and Creative Writing: Fiction Writing
with Dr. Robbins.”
Regarding Creative Writing courses, Deis said she was very pleased that
it can now count for more than a mere English elective. “This allows
the class to serve another purpose, which is just great.” She also
thought that the Rhetoric 310 course is very valuable, since students
are required to deliver an oration off campus to a group.
Both Hall and Southward
expect to benefit in the future from their coursework in Rhetoric.
Southward, an English major, stated, “I plan
on becoming a teacher and a professor after my time at H-SC is
over. Rhetoric skills can only enhance my ability to communicate to my
students, whether they [are] in high school or college.”
Hall stated, “I
initially decided to go for the Rhetoric concentration because I had
plans to go to law school, and I figured that having the concentration
would help me in that endeavor.”
Hall responds about not
receiving the recognition of an official concentration due to the time
lag that the concentration experienced in being approved by the
faculty. He stated, “As far as being
disappointed that the concentration will not be on my transcript, I'm
really not. It sounds cheesy, but I just value the skills that I have
acquired in pursuing the concentration.”
“It would have been nice to attain the notoriety of being the first
Hampden-Sydney student to graduate with a concentration in Rhetoric, but
that's just for other people's acknowledgement anyway, as far as I see
it.”
Hall summed up the real value of a rhetoric concentration, aside from
the obvious benefit of enhancing one’s transcript so as to become more
attractive to employers: “Honestly, developing the skills of learning
how to articulate and express my thoughts convincingly is all the merit
I need, and these are the treasures that will do more for me than just
having it in writing on my diploma.”
*The Rhetoric Concentration became the Rhetoric Minor in the 2006-07 academic year.
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