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  • Admission Events

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  • Contact Us

    Admission Contact
    Office of Undergraduate Admission
    72 Fifth Avenue, 1st floor
    New York, NY 10011
    [email protected]
    212.229.5150 or 800.292.3040

    Program Contact
    Joyinn Paulin
    66 West 12th Street, room 918 
    New York, NY 10011
    [email protected]

    Laura Cronk
    66 West 12th Street, room 503 
    New York, NY 10011
    [email protected]
    212.229.5611 Ext. 2435

  • Curriculum

    The BA in Creative Writing is awarded upon the completion of 120 credits, 30 of which must be in Creative Writing and Literature. The major consists of four literature courses, four creative writing workshops, the two-credit Writer's Life Colloquium course, and a four-credit capstone course.

    Creative Writing students can choose writing workshops and literature courses in a wide variety of genres, including fiction, nonfiction, poetry, writing for children and young adults, journalism, playwriting, arts writing, and more. Undergraduate BA in Creative Writing students share resources and programming with graduate MFA in Creative Writing students and join an active community of writers that extends beyond the classroom. Creative Writing majors often apply for the Writing & Democracy Honors Program, which is highly compatible with the major and includes scholarship funding.

    Courses Credits
    Four NLIT Literature Courses
    Sample courses:
    NLIT 3324 Emily Dickinson
    NLIT 3383 Reading Toni Morrison
    NLIT 3530 Science Fiction
    NLIT 3384 Reading James Baldwin
    12
    Four Creative Writing Workshops
    Sample courses:  
    NWRW 3205 Poetry: The Language of Music
    NWRW 3301 The Novel Workshop
    NWRW 3403 Finding Your Voice in Nonfiction
    NWRW 3611 Arts and Entertainment Journalism
    NLIT 4051 Literary Translation Workshop
    12
    NWRW 3906 Writer's Life Colloquium2
    NWRW 4001 Capstone Project4
    Total Credits30

    Literature Courses

    Students have the freedom to take literature courses—in subjects ranging from contemporary writing linked to the Creative Writing Program’s event series to single-author explorations—that support their own writing interests and expand their understanding of what is possible in their own work. Students may take any NLIT course or any other undergraduate literature-focused course at the university as available.

    The Writing Workshop

    Guided by an experienced writer-teacher, students focus on their writing, both in the workshop and in individual conferences with the instructor. The emphasis is on the creative acts of self-editing and revision. Structure and content are adapted to the genre of the workshop.

    The Writer's Life Colloquium

    Creative Writing majors participate in a semester-long colloquium of visiting writers, critics, writing teachers, editors, and publishers. Students attend readings and events and reflect on their experience and the kind of life they want to build as writers outside of the classroom in an asynchronous online course. The colloquium programming reflects the wide range of cultural activity at The New School and the belief that students benefit from exposure to many voices and genres. Examples of regular events included in the Writer's Life Colloquium are public readings and award ceremonies co-sponsored with the National Book Critics Circle, the Cave Canem Poetry Foundation, The Story Prize, Kundiman, the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses (CLMP), PEN America, the Academy of American Poets, and the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI) and public readings and discussions in the many genres of study offered through the Creative Writing Program. Students write critical and reflective essays about the events they attend.

    Capstone Project

    The Creative Writing Capstone is the culmination of the undergraduate degree, giving students the chance to revise, reconsider, and build upon the writing produced over the course of the major. Students develop their skills as editors, focusing on copy editing and reexamining the scope, form, and content of their final project. In conversation with their faculty advisors, students also consider next steps for their writing after completing their degrees.



  • Take The Next Step

Submit your application

Undergraduates

To apply to any of our undergraduate programs (except the Bachelor's Program for Adults and Transfer Students and Parsons Associate of Applied Science programs) complete and submit the Common App online.

Undergraduate Adult Learners

To apply to any of our Bachelor's Program for Adults and Transfer Students and Parsons Associate of Applied Science programs, complete and submit the New School Online Application.

Graduates

To apply to any of our Master's, Doctoral, Professional Studies Diploma, and Graduate Certificate programs, complete and submit the New School Online Application.

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