You are here: UNE Home / Course and Unit Catalogue / 2013 / A-Z / ENCO509

Year:

ENCO509 Writing Non-fiction: Interpreting the Truth

Credit Points 6
Offering
Responsible Campus Teaching Period Mode of Study
Armidale Trimester 2 Off Campus
Armidale Trimester 2 On Campus
Intensive School(s) None
Supervised Exam There is no UNE Supervised Examination.
Pre-requisites candidature in a postgraduate award
Co-requisites None
Restrictions ENCO309
Notes

Offered in odd numbered years

Combined Units ENCO309 - Writing Non-fiction: Interpreting the Truth
Coordinator(s) Jeremy Fisher (jfishe23@une.edu.au)
Unit Description

This unit introduces the practice of non-fiction in traditional print and emerging online environments, with life-writing and biography as central pathways. Throughout, students will study examples of non-fiction from a variety of genres and examine ways in which the craft, techniques and issues analysed in these works can be incorporated in their own written work.

Materials Textbook information will be displayed approximately 8 weeks prior to the commencement of the teaching period. Please note that textbook requirements may vary from one teaching period to the next.
Disclaimer Unit information may be subject to change prior to commencement of the teaching period.
Assessment Assessment information will be published prior to commencement of the teaching period.
Learning Outcomes (LO) Upon completion of this unit, students will be able to:
  1. analyse and critically discuss a wide range of non-fictional works of literature, popular culture and online writing;
  2. use a variety of sources and resources to identify, analyse and creatively respond to ethical and creative questions associated with non-fictional works;
  3. initiate independent research and integrate findings into the analysis and production of non-fiction; and
  4. demonstrate a sophisticated ability to create non-fiction works that address particular audiences and readerships.

Graduate Attributes (GA)
Attribute Taught Assessed Practised
1 Knowledge of a Discipline
The unit develops students' knowledge of disciplinary categories and methods, particularly genre and practices of reading and writing, in media and literary studies. This knowledge is assessed through written assignments and tutorial work.
True True True
2 Communication Skills
These skills are essential to the content and methodology. The unit requires the practice and development of communication skills, especially through the development of assessable written communication.
True True True
3 Global Perspectives
The variety of texts studied and the nature of the required writing tasks provide global perspectives and develop intercultural knowledge and competencies. Because the unit asks students to consider their motivations in weaving 'truth and fact' into a coherent narrative, ethical, personal, political and global perspectives resound throughout.
True True
4 Information Literacy
Information literacy is encouraged and supported, particularly through an emphasis on topic research and fact validation. The materials provided, the methodology adopted and the assessment required provide opportunities to expand informational literacy but do not of themselves demand a high level of practice.
True True True
5 Life-Long Learning
By analysing and practising the processes and techniques of written communication in a non-fiction format, the unit provides the basis for on-going study of communication practices relevant to both personal and professional development.
True True True
6 Problem Solving
The assessment tasks in this unit, while largely creative and practical, also require levels of critical and analytical thinking and articulation that demonstrate the processes essential to understanding the challenges of written communication.
True True True
7 Social Responsibility
The unit's emphasis on the constructed nature of written communication implies a recognition of social responsibility and the way in which the production of texts also reflects, represents, reproduces and interrogates social ideologies which may, or may not, be regarded as 'the truth'. The unit focuses on ethical questions associated with the production and reception of the non-fictional text.
True True
8 Team Work
The pedagogy underpinning the unit will emphasise ethical considerations and respect for others, and the classes themselves, for on-campus students, will include the modelling of a team work approach in learning activities, although this attribute will not be formally assessed.
True True True
   

Email to a friend