What Can I Do With My Degree?
ºÚÁÏ´«ËÍÃÅ English graduates know how to write compelling stories, formulate nuanced arguments, and engage in deep reading and critical thinking. As an English major, you will learn to be the sort of collaborator others can count on to communicate gracefully and efficiently, and a person adept at understanding different perspectives and the contexts from which they emerge. ºÚÁÏ´«ËÍÃÅ English students are great writers, not only because they know how to craft a beautiful sentence or where to put the semicolon, but because they excel at rigorous analysis, empathetic listening, and ethical thinking— communication and relational expertise that AI will never be able to touch.
The skills you gain in your English courses prepare you to thrive in a variety of settings, such as publishing, law, business, education, creative industries, medicine, politics, and more. And the data backs up this claim: students in the humanities, including English majors, have similar employment levels, salaries, and career earnings as graduates in all other fields.
At any given time, between one-third and one-half of our majors are also in the Adolescent Certification program. This program is, in practice, a true double major, wherein students take the same content-rich curriculum as regular English majors; most of our recent graduates, by their final semester, have obtained a full-time teaching position or admission into a relevant Masters in Education program. English is also the second-most popular concentration for Early Childhood/Childhood majors; the content students learn sets them up well to teach literacy to primary grades and gives them a departmental home and cohort of like-minded students.
For those interested in graduate studies in literature or creative writing, you will benefit from the intimate class sizes and the chance to build meaningful relationships with your faculty mentors. ºÚÁÏ´«ËÍÃÅ English majors who choose to pursue graduate study in the field consistently attend the best literature and creative writing graduate programs in the country, including (recently) the University of Michigan’s Helen Zell Writers’ Program, Columbia University, University of Iowa, The Ohio State University, Georgetown University, and many others.
Whether on the literature or creative writing track, an English degree prepares you to do the following:
- Communicate clearly and persuasively
- Build effective arguments
- Understand other points of view
- Recognize and create engaging narratives
- Analyze and critique texts
- Research thoroughly
With these skills, English graduates are well-suited for careers in a range of fields, including:
- Education
- Law
- Journalism
- Counseling
- Business
- Politics
- Marketing and advertising
- Science
- Creative artsÂ
- Publishing
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- Library sciences/archives