WPx - Writing Program ExtensionWriting ProgramEnglish Department | All Sites... 

Search Business & Technical Writing...  
Writing as a Naturalist 355:352
355:352
Course Description
Sample Syllabus
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Business & Technical Writing
Home
About Our Program
Certificate Programs
  Technical
  Professional
Teacher Resources
 
 

Course Description

Writing as a Naturalist involves writing based on natural observation to develop your skills in reading, observation, and writing. Though the course is designed to meet the needs of students in the natural sciences (including those majoring in Natural Resource Management and Environmental Science), it should be a very good class for anyone interested in the environment and the world around them.

Besides reading the works of major naturalists, both classic and contemporary (which may include William Bartram, Henry David Thoreau, Charles Darwin, Aldo Leopold, John Muir, Mary Austin, Loren Eiseley, Rachel Carson, Archie Carr, Wendell Barry, Barry Lopez, Scott Russell Sanders, Annie Dillard, Leslie Silko, Gary Nabhan, Terry Tempest Williams, and E. O. Wilson), you will also engage in journal writing and observation projects to help you refine your skills in writing and natural observation.

The course will begin with attention to the readings, about which you must produce a short essay. During this time, you will also begin keeping a nature journal to record general observations, observations in response to specific assignments, observations made on a class excursion, and the observations you make as part of your project. Before midterm, you will begin to develop a focused, independent project involving observation of an animal, place or other specific part of the natural world. There will then be a short midterm paper about your project in response to the writings of a specific naturalist (or naturalists) who has already written on the subject. In the last third of the class, you will develop and write your independent project where focused natural observation is combined with a response to your independently researched reading to produce an original work of natural history.

The grade for the course will be based on the three essays (20 or more pages of finished work) and your nature journal.

 
 
 

 

 



Copyright © 2000
Rutgers University Business & Technical Writing
All Rights Reserved
Site Feedback: William Magrino
wmagrino@rci.rutgers.edu