UMD UMD English Logo White

English Minors

An English minor complements a variety of degrees and solidifies practical skills including creative thinking, written and verbal communication and logical argumentation.

Related Resources

  • Current Courses

We offer rigorous 15-credit minors in Creative Writing, Professional Writing, and Rhetoric, as detailed below. Interested students should also consider whether our 36-credit English major , with its specialized tracks in similar skill areas, would better maximize their academic and career goals.

Creative Writing Minor

About the minor.

The minor in creative writing offers students the opportunity to engage deeply with their own writing and that of their peers in a graduated series of workshops led by professional writers of poetry and prose. Participants in the program take four workshops sequentially during their undergraduate careers, plus one upper-level English course of their choice focused on literary studies.

Eligibility for the Creative Writing minor requires either successful completion of the appropriate 200-level creative writing workshop with a grade of A+, A, or A-, or submission of an acceptable portfolio of work to the creative writing faculty.

15 credit hours consist of the following:

  • 3 credits at the 200-level (ENGL271 or ENGL272 or ENGL273 or ENGL274)
  • 3 credits at the 300-level (ENGL352 or ENGL353)
  • 6 credits at the 400-level (two sections of ENGL498 or of ENGL499)
  • 3 credits in any upper-level ENGL course focused on literary studies.

After admission to the minor, students choose to specialize in either prose (352, 498) or poetry (353, 499). Students admitted directly to a 300-level workshop must take 3 workshops (9 credits) at the 400 level.

Contact the English Undergraduate Studies Office ( [email protected] ) with questions about the minor.

Minor Course Restrictions

  • A grade of C- or better is required in each of the courses making up the 15 credits of the minor.
  • No more than 6 of the 15 semester hours may be taken at an institution other than the University of Maryland, College Park.
  • No more than 6 of the 15 semester hours may count toward the student’s major or toward college requirements.
  • No course used to satisfy the requirements of another minor may count toward the Creative Writing minor.

Writers’ House Students

Students in the Jiménez-Porter Writers’ House program who also wish to complete the Creative Writing minor should note the following:

  • Students in the Jiménez-Porter Writers’ House program may substitute ARHU319 for 1 of the 400-level creative writing workshops (ENGL498 or ENGL 499).
  • Students in the Jiménez-Porter Writers’ House program may also count their 3-credit supporting class toward the minor, provided that the supporting class is a 300- or 400-level English course focused on literary study.
  • Students in the Jiménez-Porter Writers’ House program who are also English majors, and who wish to complete the Creative Writing minor may double count credits as explained above. They may not, however, “triple-count” credits; that is, they may not use any of the same credits to satisfy both the Jiménez-Porter Writers’ House program and the English major.

Admission and Advising

Participants in the Creative Writing minor will be advised in the English Undergraduate Studies Office, 1128 Tawes Hall.

Students who wish to apply to the Creative Writing minor should go to the ARHU minors page to complete a contact form . The completed form will be sent to the Creative Writing minor advisor in the English Undergraduate Studies Office who will contact you to schedule an advising appointment. Please note that you can only be admitted to the minor if you have fulfilled the prerequisites: either successful completion of the appropriate 200-level creative writing workshop with a grade of A or A- or submission of an acceptable portfolio of work to the creative writing faculty.

All minors in ARHU are open only to a limited number of students. Students will be enrolled in the Creative Writing minor as space permits according to the original time of submission of their contact form and completion of prerequisites.

Enrolling in Intermediate Workshops

There are currently two methods to gain permission to enroll in the intermediate fiction and poetry workshops, ENGL352 and ENGL353, respectively.

Learn more about enrolling in intermediate workshops.

Digital Storytelling and Poetics Minor

The Digital Storytelling and Poetics minor prepares students to interpret, and to create, imaginative writing in digital and new media spaces. Students build the skills necessary to critically analyze digital culture, narrative, poetics, and rhetoric. They also learn how to craft creative expression in digital platforms. These skillsets are combined: a foundation in critical methods in English and new media studies provides a basis for the craft of digital writing and design. And understanding of the process of creating digital poetry and prose provides context and insight for effective critical analysis. During their coursework, students develop digital portfolios of critical and creative work as a means to showcase their career-facing knowledge and skills.

Course Requirements

A total of 15 credits from a select list of courses, as well as submission of an electronic writing portfolio, are required.

The 15 credit hours are as follows:

  • 3 credits of ENGL 295: Introduction to Digital Storytelling and Poetics
  • 12 credits (4 courses) from the following courses, including at least one course from the Critical Analysis and Theory list, at least one course from the Craft and Creative Process list, and at least one course at the 400-level:

Critical Analysis and Theory: ENGL 318A: Machines Reading, Machines Writing ENGL 355: Digital Fictions ENGL 368K: The Art of Black Social Movements, From Marcus Garvey to Black Lives Matter ENGL 376: The Speculative Imagination: Science Fiction on Page and Screen ENGL 378P: Videogames and the Boundaries of Narrative ENGL 378W: Deep Time: Memory, Media, and Ecological Imagination in the Americas ENGL 378Z: Women and Memory in Material and Digital Worlds ENGL 387: Visual Rhetoric ENGL 438B: Black Digitalities ENGL 463: Narrative Analysis Methods in English Studies ENGL 491: Digital Rhetoric IMDM 350: Advanced Digital Media Theory

Craft and Creative Process: ENGL 355: Digital Fictions ENGL 378C: How to Make a Magazine: Introduction to Literary Publishing ENGL 378M: Digital Publishing with Minimal Computing: Humanities on a Global Scale (also CMLT 398M) ENGL 378R: Storytelling with Code ENGL 378W: Deep Time: Memory, Media, and Ecological Imagination in the Americas ENGL 388D: Dickinson Electronic Archives Internship ENGL 388T: Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities Internship (Also MITH 388) ENGL 467: Creative Approaches to Digital Textuality ENGL 477: BookLab ENGL 479J: Flash Fictions ENGL 492: Graphic Design and Rhetoric IMDM 390: Collaborative Studio II: Experiential Computing

Portfolio Requirement

To earn the Digital Storytelling and Poetics Minor, a student must submit an electronic professional writing portfolio to the minor advisor during the student’s final semester. The portfolio must contain, at a minimum, the following materials: 

  • A welcome page.
  • Five finished, polished texts produced by the student in Digital Storytelling and Poetics minor’s courses, including a minimum of one critical essay and one creative work.
  • A reflective essay that analyzes how these texts demonstrate the student’s achievement of the minor’s learning outcomes. 

The minor advisor will confirm that each portfolio meets these minimum requirements. Portfolio submission deadlines are November 1 for fall semester graduation, April 1 for spring semester graduation, and August 1 for summer graduation. Students submit portfolios by emailing the URL to the Digital Storytelling and Poetics advisor at [email protected].

To declare the Digital Storytelling and Poetics minor, please visit the ARHU Minors page and submit the appropriate online form.  Participants in the Digital Storytelling and Poetics minor will be advised in the English Undergraduate Studies Office, 1128 Tawes Hall. Questions about the minor should be emailed to [email protected].

Humanities, Health, and Medicine Minor

The ARHU minor in Humanities, Health, and Medicine engages students in an interdisciplinary curriculum that applies the methods, perspectives, and insights of the arts and humanities to health and medical education as well as practice. Visit the Humanities, Health, and Medicine Minor page to find more information.

Through an exploration of human health and medicine using the inter-disciplinary questions and research methods of literary and cultural studies, as well as the arts, philosophy, communication, and history, the minor aims to develop and nurture skills such as empathy, ethical understanding, socio-cultural analysis, self-reflection and an appreciation of diversity and inclusion that are essential for humane and effective medical care as well as sound health policy. This minor is open to all Undergraduate students on campus, regardless of major.

Professional Writing Minor

The Professional Writing minor offers students opportunities to engage deeply with the theory and practice of writing, editing and designing print and digital documents for professional workplaces, civic organizations and community deliberations.

This minor provides undergraduates who have an interest in pursuing a writing career with a clear path for their coursework. The minor also benefits students across the entire campus who wish to enhance their marketable skills and broaden their post-graduate employment opportunities. In particular, students in STEM disciplines and public health will find that the Professional Writing minor complements their major course of study with theoretically grounded, project-based coursework that helps them learn how to communicate their disciplines to a range of audiences through writing.

The state of Maryland and the greater Washington, D.C. metro region are particularly fertile ground for professional writing-related internships and careers. The Professional Writing minor exposes students to a wide variety of these opportunities through:

  • an introductory course that surveys the field in terms of its international, national, regional and local scope
  • networking opportunities with alumni
  • cultivating and facilitating students’ placement in professional writing internships in Washington, D.C. and throughout Maryland
  • support in developing professional writing portfolios that showcase students’ writing, research, design and technological skills.
  • A total of 15 credits from a select list of English department writing courses, as well as submission of an electronic writing portfolio, are required. 
  • 3 credits from ENGL297: “Introduction to Professional Writing”
  • 12 credits from the following courses, including at least 9 credits at the 300 or 400 levels (and of those 9 credits, at least 3 must be at the 400 level):

200-level courses:

  • ENGL281: “Standard English Grammar, Usage, and Diction” (3 credits)
  • ENGL282: “How Rhetoric Works: Persuasive Power and Strategies” (3 credits)
  • ENGL289C: “Introduction to Health, Medicine, and the Humanities” (3 credits)
  • ENGL291: “Writing, Revising, Persuading” (3 credits)
  • ENGL292: “Writing for Change” (3 credits) [Also offered as ENGL388C; credit is only granted for either ENGL292 or ENGL388C]
  • ENGL293: “Writing in the Wireless World” (3 credits)
  • ENGL294: “Persuasion and Cleverness in Social Media” (3 credits)

300-level courses:

  • ENGL 378C: "How to Make a Magazine: Introduction to Literary Publishing"
  • ENGL381: “MGA Legislative Seminar” (3 credits)
  • ENGL384: “Concepts of Grammar” (3 credits)
  • ENGL378A: “Medical Humanities: Science, Rhetoric, and Literature”
  • ENGL388C: “Writing for Change” (3 credits) [Also offered as ENGL292; credit is only granted for ENGL292 or ENGL388C]
  • ENGL388M: “Writing Internship: Maryland General Assembly Pre-Professional Writing Internship” (6 credits)
  • ENGL388P: “Writing Internship: Pre-Professional Writing Skills Internship” (1-6 credits)
  • ENGL388V: “Writing Internship: Undergraduate Teaching Assistants in Writing Programs” (1-6 credits)
  • ENGL388W: “Writing Internship: Writing Center Internship” (1-6 credits)
  • ENGL390-395, 398: “Professional Writing Program Courses” (3 credits)

400-level courses:

  • ENGL 461: “Qualitative Research Methods” (3 credits)
  • ENGL487: “Principles and Practices of Rhetoric” (3 credits) (Note: Credit only granted for ENGL487 or COMM 401.)
  • ENGL488: “Topics in Advanced Writing” (3 credits)
  • ENGL489T: “Analyzing Conversation” (3 credits)
  • ENGL 491: “Digital Rhetoric” (3 credits)
  • ENGL492: “Graphic Design and Rhetoric” (3 credits)
  • ENGL493: “Writing in Context” (3 credits)
  • ENGL494: “Editing and Document Design” (3 credits)  

Additional Notes on the Professional Writing Minor Requirements

  • All courses presented for the minor must be passed with a grade of C- or better.
  • Credit toward the minor will be granted for only 1 of these 2 courses: ENGL281 or ENGL384.
  • A student cannot count toward the Professional Writing minor the course taken to fulfill the Fundamental Studies Professional Writing requirement.
  • Students may satisfy up to 3 credits of the minor through a documented writing-intensive professional or internship experience (ENGL 388M, 388P, 388V, or 388W). Internship courses from departments other than English may be used with approval of the Professional Writing minor advisor.

During a student’s final semester, the student must submit a professional writing portfolio to the minor advisor. Minimum requirements for the portfolio are outlined in a section below.

To declare the Professional Writing minor, please visit the ARHU Minors page and submit the appropriate online form.

Professional Writing Portfolios

To earn the Professional Writing minor, a student must submit a professional writing portfolio to the minor advisor during the student’s final semester. The portfolio must contain, at minimum, the following materials:

  • A welcome page
  • 6 finished, polished texts written by the student in Professional Writing minor courses; 
  • A reflective essay that analyzes how these documents demonstrate the student’s achievement of the Professional Writing minor learning outcomes.

Portfolio submission deadlines are November 1 for fall semester graduation, April 1 for spring semester graduation and August 1 for summer graduation. Students submit portfolios by emailing the URL to the Professional Writing minor advisor: [email protected] .

You can send an email with Professional Writing Minor questions to  [email protected]  or complete an  ARHU Minor Contact Form .

Rhetoric Minor

The Rhetoric minor is an interdisciplinary program supported jointly by the Department of Communication and the Department of English and is open to undergraduates entering any discipline, field or career.

The minor educates students to understand and analyze the history, theory and criticism of civic discourse and cultural practices. Course offerings feature both applied and theoretical approaches. Knowledge and skills acquired through the minor empower graduates to engage with important social issues and take active leadership roles in their communities and careers.

Courses in the minor provide opportunities to practice applied skills in composing across media and to study rhetorical theory and methods of analysis across time periods. Students who minor in rhetoric acquire the knowledge and skills to take on a broad range of leadership roles in which they advocate for and communicate with others to address issues of social and political importance.

The Rhetoric minor may be especially valuable for those who plan careers in fields like business, education, government, law, nonprofits and others where persuasive writing and speaking skills are prized. The minor requires just 15 credits in a wide range of courses offered in both Communication and English.

Students wishing to pursue the minor should check the ARHU minors page . When enrollment in the minor is open, students can submit the online contact form to initiate the process of meeting with an advisor and officially declaring the minor. 

  • UC Berkeley
  • Letters & Science

Creative Writing Minor

The Creative Writing Minor Program at the University of California, Berkeley is offered by the Office of Undergraduate and Interdisciplinary Studies in the Division of Undergraduate Studies of the College of Letters and Science. The approved courses students take to satisfy the minor course requirements are offered by over thirty departments on campus. Interested undergraduate students in any major may earn an interdepartmental minor in Creative Writing by completing three approved upper-division creative writing courses and two approved upper-division literature courses from any department that offers them, satisfying the minor requirements, and declaring the minor.

Find out about our Requirements

Announcements.

  • Summer 2024 Course List
  • Spring 2024 Course List
  • Berkeley Holloway Poetry Series – Fall 2023
  • UC Berkeley Lunch Poems 2023-24
  • Minor Declaration Form – Must declare no later than term before EGT.
  • Completion of L&S Minor Form – Must complete during EGT.

Give to Creative Writing

Forms and downloads, student academic advising.

creative writing minor reddit

Get in touch

Administrative office.

Laura Demir 235 Evans Hall [email protected]

UGIS Office

231 Evans Hall

creative writing minor reddit

IMAGES

  1. My Minor in Creative Writing

    creative writing minor reddit

  2. Consider a creative writing minor!

    creative writing minor reddit

  3. “Creative” Writing : r/tumblr

    creative writing minor reddit

  4. NDSU’s creative writing minor: connect with people through innovative

    creative writing minor reddit

  5. Creative Writing

    creative writing minor reddit

  6. Creative Writing Fantasy Prompts

    creative writing minor reddit

COMMENTS

  1. Is a minor in Creative Writing at college worthwhile? - Reddit

    It balances out the type of thought you do on a daily basis, all accounting and no writing makes Jack a dull boy. I understand that you would write anyways, but a minor will push your boundaries, make you a better creative writer, and will probably help you take away more from your business classes. 2. pikabuddy.

  2. Considering a creative writing minor : r/writing - Reddit

    Hi all, I'm a busniess major and I'm seriously thinking about declaring a minor in creative writing. I am deciding between that and communications. I've always liked English class, but I never done any sort of creative writing before, but I want to create stories and express myself through the written word.

  3. What can I do with a minor in creative writing and ... - Reddit

    What can I do with a minor in creative writing and professional writing I was pre med for a long time but realized it wasn’t for me. I’m choosing writing because I like art and feel like I have some good ideas.

  4. English Minors | Department of English

    An English minor complements a variety of degrees and solidifies practical skills including creative thinking, written and verbal communication and logical argumentation. We offer rigorous 15-credit minors in Creative Writing, Professional Writing, and Rhetoric, as detailed below. Interested students should also consider whether our 36-credit ...

  5. Creative Writing Minor | The Writing Program

    The Creative Writing Minor (18 credits) A student must complete 18 credits of English writing courses, with a 3-course concentration in one of the tracks. (A student can declare both a major and a minor in different tracks, provided that they do not overlap courses. Completion of both programs requires 51 credits.) View the creative writing ...

  6. Creative Writing Minor – University California, Berkeley

    The Minor. The Creative Writing Minor Program at the University of California, Berkeley is offered by the Office of Undergraduate and Interdisciplinary Studies in the Division of Undergraduate Studies of the College of Letters and Science. The approved courses students take to satisfy the minor course requirements are offered by over thirty ...