School of English

School of English

BreadThe Loaf School of English 2013 Summer Programs Summer 2013 Dates and Fees New Mexico Campus June 15 Arrival and registration day June 17 Classes begin July 23 Classes end July 24 Commencement Tuition: $4,834 Room & Board: $2,655 Facility Fees: $ 310 Total: $7,799 Bread Loaf staff (left to right): Dana Olsen, Melissa Nicklaw, Elaine Lathrop, Karen Browne, Emily Bartels, Dixie Goswami, Django Paris (Sandy LeGault absent). North Carolina Campus June 15 Arrival and ADMINISTRATION registration day BREAD LOAF STAFF June 17 Classes begin RONALD D. LIEBOWITZ, July 25 Classes end President of Middlebury College Karen Browne, Administrative Associate July Commencement MICHAEL E. GEISLER, Elaine Lathrop, Office Manager, 27 Vice President for Language Schools, Administrative Associate Schools Abroad, and Graduate Programs Sandy LeGault, Director of Admissions Tuition: $4,834 Melissa Nicklaw, Administrative Associate Room & Board: * $2,660 EMILY C. BARTELS, Director of the Dana Olsen, Administrative Associate Facility Fees: $ 310 Bread Loaf School of English Total: $7,804 DJANGO PARIS, Associate Director of Caroline Eisner, Director of BreadNet the Bread Loaf School of English Sheldon Sax, Director of Technology * The room and board charge for a single room will be $3,177. DIXIE GOSWAMI, Director of the Bread Loaf Teacher Network, PLEASE ADDRESS Coordinator of the Writing Curriculum CORRESPONDENCE TO: Oxford Campus ALAN MACVEY, Director of the June 24 Arrival day Program in Theater, Director of the Bread Loaf School of English June 25 Registration day Bread Loaf Acting Ensemble Middlebury College June 26 Classes begin BEVERLY MOSS, Coordinator of the Middlebury VT 05753 August 2 Classes end Ken Macrorie Writing Centers August 3 Commencement http://www.middlebury.edu/blse E-mail: [email protected] Telephone: 802.443.5418 Tuition: $4,834 Front cover photo by Edward Brown Fax: 802.443.2060 Room & Board: $4,702 Facility Fees: $ 348 Other photographs by Edward Brown, Total: $9,884 Charles, Byrne, David Chapman, Sarah Hoffman, Lise Johnson, Kim Masterson, Chris Moore, This publication was Vermont Campus Jon Olson, Brett Quimby, Sarah Rescoe, printed on recycled paper. Brett Simison, Daniel Shaw June 24 Arrival for first-year students June 25 Arrival and The Bread Loaf School of English, as a graduate school of Middlebury College, is accredited by the New registration day England Association of Schools and Colleges. June 26 Classes begin Middlebury College complies with applicable provisions of state and federal law that prohibit discrimination in employment or in admission or access to its educational or extracurricular programs, activities, or facilities, on August 6 Classes end the basis of race, color, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sex, sexual orientation, age, marital status, place of August 10 Commencement birth, Vietnam veteran status, or against qualified individuals with disabilities on the basis of disability. Because of varying circumstances and legal requirements, such provisions may not apply to programs Tuition: $4,834 offered by the College outside the United States. This is consistent with the College’s intent to comply with the requirements of applicable law. Individuals with questions about the policies governing such programs should Board & Room: $2,599 direct inquiries to Emily Bartels. Total: $7,433 Bread Loaf School of English 2013 Summer Programs stablished in 1920, the Bread Loaf School of English (BLSE) stands beside the Language Schools and the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference as one of Middlebury College’s outstanding summer programs. The faculty Ecome from eminent colleges and universities across the U.S. and U.K. The curriculum includes an unusually diverse blend of courses in literature and culture, pedagogy and literacy, creative writing, and theater arts. Our aim is to produce innovative teachers and thinkers who, through the interpretation of literary and critical texts, are able to engage in creative thought, write persuasive and original arguments, and, as relevant, use new technologies to develop effective teaching and learning practices. The program, tailored to K–12 teachers, runs for six weeks at four distinctive campuses: St. John’s College in Santa Fe, New Mexico; the University of North Carolina at Asheville; Lincoln College, University of Oxford, in England; and the Bread Loaf Mountain campus outside Middlebury, Vermont. Students may enroll for one or more summers for continuing graduate education, or they may pursue a full program of study leading to the Master of Arts or Master of Letters degree in English. The normal course load is two units per summer: each unit carries three semester hours of graduate credit (the equivalent of 30 class hours). Degree candidates must attend the Vermont campus at least once; they are encouraged to attend all four campuses. All Bread Loaf students may join the Bread Loaf Teacher Network, our nationally visible, year-round professional development network. The Campuses The Bread Loaf School of English The Bread Loaf School of English at St. John’s College, Santa Fe, at the University of North Carolina New Mexico at Asheville JUNE 15–JULY 24, 2013 JUNE 15–JULY 27, 2013 Bread Loaf’s program in New Mexico is The Bread Loaf program in North Carolina located at St. John’s College, at the foot of is located at the University of North the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in Santa Fe, Carolina at Asheville (UNCA), in the heart and enrolls approximately 60 students. of the Blue Ridge Mountains, and enrolls The curriculum emphasizes the texts and approximately 50 students. The curriculum St. John’s College. cultures of the Southwest, including emphasizes African American and Southern Native American and Latino/a literatures. literature and draws on the important racial and cultural history of the city. Students are lodged in double rooms and eat together at St. John’s College. Students with Students are lodged in single and double families must find their own off-campus rooms and take meals together on the housing. UNCA campus, which is located within Asheville, one mile north of downtown. Bread Loaf students have use of the library Students with families must find their own of St. John’s College, supplemented by off-campus housing. books from the University of New Mexico and Middlebury College. Bread Loaf students have use of the R. Hiden Ramsey Library and its Nearby places include Albuquerque, resources. Acoma Pueblo, Taos, the Santa Fe Opera, Tent Rocks National Park, and stunning Though a small city, Asheville is archeological sites. The program offers select both intensely regional and strikingly field trips, but students should consider cosmopolitan, featuring Appalachian arts renting a car for greater access to the area. and country and bluegrass music as well as a variety of ethnic restaurants and sidewalk cafes. Mountain sports and activities around Asheville include hiking, mountain climbing, and whitewater rafting. The Blue Ridge Mountains outside Asheville. Magpie on Santa Fe building. 2 The Bread Loaf School of English at The Bread Loaf School of English Lincoln College, University of Oxford in Vermont JUNE 24–AUGUST 3, 2013 JUNE 25–AUGUST 10, 2013 The Bread Loaf campus in England is based The central and largest Bread Loaf campus is at Lincoln College and is centrally situated located in Ripton, approximately 12 miles within the university and city of Oxford. outside Middlebury, in the Green The Bread Loaf/Oxford program enrolls Mountains of Vermont. The program approximately 70 students and offers a enrolls roughly 250 students each summer. curriculum centered on British and world The curriculum offers a range of courses on literature. Students take one two-unit course British, American, and world literature as (six semester-hour credits), with roughly well as pedagogy, literacy, creative writing, half devoted to independent research. and theater arts. The Vermont campus Classes are small (six students each), and is home base for the Bread Loaf Acting most include individual tutorials as well as Ensemble, professional actors who perform seminar meetings. Meeting times and and interpret texts in a range of classes places are arranged by each tutor. and who work beside Bread Loaf students in theatrical productions throughout the Students have single accommodations in summer. Lincoln College or its annex in Lincoln House, most with bathrooms en suite. Students without families are housed on Meals are provided in the College Hall. campus, most in double rooms, and eat in There are a limited number of rooms the Bread Loaf Inn. Students with families available at Lincoln for students with must find their own off-campus accommo- partners and a limited number of semi- dations and can purchase meal tickets for private accommodations outside Lincoln campus meals for themselves at group or for students with families. individual rates. (The Bread Loaf office has a list of nearby rentals.) Bread Loaf student visits the Bridge of Sighs, Lincoln is one of the smallest Oxford a short distance from Lincoln College. colleges. Students have access to both the The facilities of the Middlebury College Lincoln College Library and the Bodleian Davis Library are available to Bread Loaf Library, one of the finest research libraries students. The Davison Memorial Library in the world. The School offers theater trips on the Bread Loaf campus also has a small to Stratford-upon-Avon and London and collection, supplemented by reserve readings course-related excursions to other locales for summer courses. (Canterbury, the Lake District, Hardy country). Oxford itself is filled with The Bread Loaf campus is ideally located innumerable parks, museums, shops, in easy range of a number of spectacular restaurants, and places of both historical trails, lakes, and rivers within the Green and contemporary interest. Mountain National Forest. The Long Trail, which winds along the summit of the Green Mountains and extends from southern Vermont to the Canadian border, is a short hike from the School. Students have use of playing fields and tennis courts on campus and athletic facilities on the Middlebury campus downtown.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    36 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us