Course Information
Click below for information on course requirements, course descriptions and the Academic Rhode Map, which lists all the courses you will need to complete this program and graduate in a timely fashion.
Program Coordinator:
Associate Professor Mark Anderson
401-456-8028
manderson@ric.edu
Creative writing concentrators study and write poetry, fiction or creative nonfiction in workshops and literature classes that focus on the components of craft, questions of genre and intricacies of art. You will also have the opportunity to gain experience with publishing by becoming a contributing writer or staff member of Shoreline, Rhode Island College's literary magazine. In addition, all students, faculty and the Rhode Island Community are invited to celebrate new writing via student readings, faculty readings and our Visiting Writers Reading Series.
Click below for information on course requirements, course descriptions and the Academic Rhode Map, which lists all the courses you will need to complete this program and graduate in a timely fashion.
Upon completion of this program, students will be able to:
1. Why or in what ways is writing important to your discipline/field/profession?
Writing is central to all aspects of the discipline of English. It is a means of thinking about texts and how writers create them, of reflecting on learning, of discovering and demonstrating new knowledge, of applying critical and creative ways of thinking to disciplinary issues and problems, of understanding oneself and the world, of developing intellectual agency and of working for social change.
2. Which courses are designated as satisfying the Writing in the Discipline (WID) requirement by your department? Why these courses?
The concentration in creative writing has the following WID courses:
ENGL 220: Introduction to Creative Writing
ENGL 371: Intermediate Creative Writing, Fiction
ENGL 372: Intermediate Creative Writing, Poetry
ENGL 373: Intermediate Creative Writing, Nonfiction Prose
ENGL 461: Advanced Workshop in Creative Writing
These courses were chosen because they represent key moments in each program where you will learn and demonstrate writing knowledge and skills. We would add, however, that virtually all courses in English, and especially those in creative writing and professional writing, are writing-intensive, where writing is assigned, taught and evaluated.
3. What forms or genres of writing will you learn and practice in your WID courses? Why these genres?
The range of genres or forms of writing in which you will engage and practice is too extensive to list in its entirety and depends, to a significant extent, on your chosen concentration within the major. Having said this, we offer a few examples of the writing students do in different concentrations below.
Within the literature concentration, students produce literary/cultural analysis papers that require skills of close reading and knowledge of and dexterity with applying critical and analytical approaches to texts.
Within the creative writing concentration students practice the writing skills that inform key literary genres such as fiction, poetry and nonfiction.
Within the professional writing concentration, students produce reports, proposals, analysis papers, research papers and various digital and multimodal texts.
Students in each concentration must take courses in the other concentrations, so they will range outside the genres described above to experiment with and practice a variety of academic, creative and professional genres of writing.
4. What kinds of teaching practices will you encounter in your WID courses?
The English Department has long prided itself on engaging in “best practices” when it comes to the teaching of writing. We will engage you in scaffolded writing assignments that initially include low-stakes or informal writing to help you make sense of challenging readings and materials; in this way you write to learn as you learn to write. You will also practice key moves in lower stakes writing assignments that inform higher stakes writing projects for midterm papers and final projects. Small group workshops and tutorials are a regular part of our practice and provide crucial feedback for effective writing. In virtually all of your courses we provide models and exemplars of the work we ask you to produce. We often hold one-on-one conferences to guide you in individual challenges and difficulties. In sum, we engage in the full-range of practices that research in the teaching and learning of writing has shown helps students learn to write well.
5. When you have satisfied your department’s WID requirement, you should be able to:
Declaring a minor allows you to explore other areas of interest and make interdisciplinary connections. Minor areas at RIC complement and reinforce all major areas of study. By declaring a minor, you can set yourself apart as a candidate for job, internship and volunteer opportunities.