MA Creative Writing and Literature for Educators | Fairleigh Dickinson University

Web Name: MA Creative Writing and Literature for Educators | Fairleigh Dickinson University

WebSite: http://gradwriting.fdu.edu

ID:71015

Keywords:

and,Literature,Writing,

Description:

For Teachers with the Souls of WritersThe First (and only) M.A. in Creative Writing Literature for EducatorsExpressly designed for high school teachers – as well as aspiring teachers and professors – this advanced degree nurtures your writing while giving you practical tools for using creative writing in the classroom and for teaching literature from a writer s point of view.The program is fully online except for one 3-day on-campus residency in late June. You’ll never have to compromise your day job! Working at your own pace, you can finish the program in two years or take up to five.During this year’s online residency, you’ll meet our faculty and fellow students from near and far, and spend time with a distinguished Visiting Writer. Our residency is a program highlight. It’s where students make lasting, supportive relationships with one another and their professors.Welcome to our community of writers and teachers at Fairleigh Dickinson University!Program GoalsWe ll take your creative writing abilities to the next level, whatever your level. (We admit students from relative beginners to published authors with multiple books to their credit.) Our writing faculty are National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize finalists; no matter how much experience you have, they ll be able to help you develop your writing, and market it professionally if you so choose. A basic assumption we make is that being a writer makes you a more effective reader and teacher of literature: you ll combine your writerly insight into process with readerly critical approaches to form and content.We ll train you to be a confident, constructive, and versatile teacher of creative writing. We want you to be comfortable teaching all the four main genres of creative writing — fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, and drama — and responding helpfully to student work. This program is the perfect preparation if you want to start to teach creative writing, and is the natural next step in professional development if you already do.We ll train you to be a master interpreter of literature, who can use creative approaches and creative assignments to get their students fired up and thinking deeply about challenging texts. We re sensitive to the demands of Common Core and your local curricula, and we ll help you work within those constraints to get superior results.Admission RequirementsStudents holding undergraduate degrees from an accredited four-year institution in the U.S. or abroad may apply. When to ApplyApplications must be received by April 15th. Students begin the program in mid-May with the foundation course, “Reading Like a Writer” and take the summer residency in late June. Late applications and applications for other semesters will be considered on an individual basis. Please contact us at gradwriting@fdu.edu.2021 Academic DatesFirst summer session:  May 24 – July 16*MA Summer Residency: Saturday, June 26- Monday, June 28Second summer session:  June 14 – August 13**Summer session courses are 8 weeks long. Fall and spring courses follow the traditional FDU academic calendar.How to ApplyComplete the Graduate Admissions form and upload the following documents:A Personal Statement. In at least a couple paragraphs, and at most a page or two, tell us about your professional background and why you think the program will be a good fit for you. Give us a sense of who you are, and what your goals are, as a teacher and a writer.A Writing Sample. We also want a sense of how you write. One short story, one chapter of a novel, a few poems, one act of a play, or one article or course paper is a good length – but use a piece you have edited, not a first draft.Your Transcript verifying your B.A. or B.S. degree.Fill out a FAFSA online ASAP if you are interested in financial aid.GRE and other test scores are NOT required.Letters of recommendation (personal, professional, or academic) are welcome but are NOT required.The program is housed on the Florham Campus in Madison, NJ.Degree PlanThe first foundational course — Reading Like a Writer — introduces the practice of writerly exegesis and the focus on how meaning is created. Students tell us that the residency is the program’s highlight. It’s where students meet their professors and classmates, make long-term connections, and participate in insightful workshops that will give you tools to bring back to your classroom and use in your own writing. The subsequent writing courses are designed specifically to provide both a creative and writerly/analytical experience in each of the major genres the educators are likely to see in student work. The literature courses offer greater breadth and enriched understanding and connection to the advanced readerly aspects of the literature often taught in high school. Specifically, they address:areas of the traditional high school curriculum (Shakespeare, young adult literature),non-Western literature (African writers, world literature),cross/intercultural literature (ethnic American literature), andTo earn the MA degree, students must attend the three-day residency (two credits) and complete the following seven courses (four credits each) for a total of 30 credits:Foundation Course: Reading Like a WriterFour Writing/Critiquing Courses (one from each genre below)Two Literature Courses (on any topic of interest to you)Residency and Foundation CourseCWLT8000 ResidencyCWLT8001 Reading Like a WriterWriting/Critiquing CoursesCWLT8101 FictionCWLT8102 PoetryCWLT8103 Creative Non-FictionCWLT8104 Dramatic / Cinematic WritingLiterature CoursesCWLT8201 Ethnic-American LiteratureCWLT8202 Non-Linear NarrativeCWLT8204 Contemporary African WritersCWLT8206 Contemporary World LiteratureCWLT8209 International Short StoryCWLT8207 Young-Adult LiteratureCWLT8210 Tropes of Reading: Reading TropesCWLT8211 Modern PoetryCWLT8212 ShakespeareCWLT8213 Post-Colonial LiteratureSpecial InformationOur tuition is at a deeply discounted rate to accommodate educators. CWLT8000 3 day residency for the MA in Creative Writing and Literature. CWLT8001 This course focuses on reading in a writerly way ? exploring how meaning is created from a writer?s perspective. The emphasis is on close reading and careful analysis of the bones of the text ? structure (narrative, poetic, dramatic), point of view, style, tone, diction, sound, etc. CWLT8101 In this course, students will create and revise a short work of fiction. The emphasis is not on the completed product but rather on the strategies of critiquing and revision that are developed through common readings and discussions. To that end, students and instructor will comment on both the writing and the critiques in on-line workshops. Critiques of the writing use close reading to focus on writerly issues of structure, point of view, style, tone, diction, etc. Commentary on the critiques will focus on usefulness to the writer and to work. CWLT8102 In this course, students will create and revise two poems. The emphasis is not on the completed product but rather on the strategies of critiquing and revision that are developed through common readings and discussions. To that end, students and instructor will comment on both the writing and the critiques in on-line workshops. Critiques of the writing use close reading to focus on writerly issues of structure, prosody, line, style, tone diction, etc. Commentary on the critiques will focus on usefulness to the writer and to the work. CWLT8103 Students create and revise a short work of non-fiction. The emphasis is not on the completed product but rather on the strategies of critiquing and revision that are developed through common readings, discussions and critiques in on-line workshops. Critiques of the writing use close reading to focus on writerly issues of structure, point of view, style, tone, diction, etc. CWLT8104 Students create and revise a short screenplay or stage play. The emphasis is not on the completed product but rather on the strategies of critiquing and revision that are developed through common readings, discussions and critiques in on-line workshops. Critiques of the writing use close reading to focus on writerly issues of dramatic structure, point of view visual storytelling, dialog, style, etc. CWLT8201 This course focuses on the latter half of the twentieth century and examines different racial and ethnically hyphenated groups through fiction, autobiography, poetry, and film. Discussion of texts by Jewish-Americans, African-Americans, Indian-Americans, Native-Americans, Mexican-Americans and others will combine close textual analysis with attendant theories of identity and multiculturalism. CWLT8202 This course focuses on selected 20th century narratives that present particular challenges due to their non-linear presentation. Close readings will show how these texts establish complex relationships with objective reality and standard ways of representing reality. The predominance of subjective versions of history, with an individual sense of time and space, will inform our reading strategies so as to derive meaning in unconventional ways. CWLT8204 This course focuses on how contemporary African writers challenge or redefine their societies? conventional values, usages, and beliefs. On-line discussions, through a close reading of poems, stories, plays, novels, and memoirs, explore the ways language both carries and subverts cultural assumptions. Interpretations of primary texts focus on the aesthetic choices African writers make in response to very different social realities. CWLT8206 This course examines changing literary conceptions of the world from perspectives influenced by race, class, gender, and sexuality, through contemporary post colonial fiction from perspectives influenced by race, class, gender, and sexuality, through contemporary postcolonial fiction from India, Indonesia, Jamaica, and Zimbabwe. The course also analyzes how the narrative techniques employed in these novels fuse the political with the aesthetic in constructing national identities. CWLT8207 Survey of young adult literature of the mid to late 20th century. Examines how this relatively new genre reflects growing changes within culture and society. We will read classics and novels that are standard in high school curricula and consider issues including transition to adulthood, sexuality, conflicts between youth and parents, fantasy, responsibility, and authority. CWLT8209 Focusing on short stories written in the last few decades, we will emphasize unique features of the form, along with elements of craft that it shares with other narrative genres. We will study works from a variety of national traditions, in English and translation, asking how cultural identity effects setting, character, conflict, and theme. CWLT8210 The most commonly read secondary school tests often seem to have inscribed or enforced readings suggested by the history of our connections to the texts as well as elements of the texts themselves. Such readings, can become narrative and foreclose other possible interpretations and connections. In this course we will try to identify the inscribed/enforced readings and the causes and the manner in which such readings might foreclose others. Additionally, we will explore some of the alternative interpretations. CWLT8211 We will focus on recent work by living American poets, mostly written within the last fifteen or twenty years, with one exception, the poems of Anne Sexton (which we?ll look at to establish a base for comparison). We?ll primarily read complete volumes by individual poets, rather than scattered single poems in anthologies, focusing on how poets create identifiable voices, a unique poetic language, and poetic landscape that is undeniably their own. We will focus particularly on the craft and form of the featured poets. Poets studied will include, among others (in addition to Sexton), C.K. Williams, Kim Addonizio, Paul Muldoon, Rita Dove, and Billy Collins. CWLT8212 What are some of the Bard?s models for his comedies? Which plays have left a mark in other national literatures through the centuries? This course aims at analyzing some of the most often read Shakespeare plays, defining their historical context and their political agenda, while also looking at which sources helped to inspire them and which other plays, in turn, they molded in centuries to come. Particular attention will be given to comedies and to the role of servants in them, with an eye to how plays could be taught in the classroom going beyond the text and looking at performance history and practice.

TAGS:and Literature Writing 

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You'll never have to compromise your day job! Working at your own pace, you can finish the program in two years or take up to five.

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