Writers who are serious about their craft can create a custom course of study to prepare for graduate programs in creative writing. In this post-baccalaureate certificate program, students hone their craft, formalize their training and build a solid portfolio of work for application to MFA and MA/PhD programs in writing. Courses are conducted as writing workshops to allow for valuable feedback from a community of fellow writers. As students analyze and write creative work and learn about the publishing world, their creative development is guided by instructors who are respected writers themselves. Students can explore a variety of writing areas, or they may specialize their course of study based on experience and discipline — fiction, creative nonfiction or poetry.
Students should have some academic writing experience before beginning the Creative Writing post-baccalaureate certificate.
Creative Writing Tuition
Post-baccalaureate students at Northwestern's School of Professional Studies pay per course. For more information about financial obligations and tuition, visit the Tuition page.
Admission for Creative Writing
In addition to completing an online application, you'll also need to submit a few supplemental materials. A list of requirements for admission including application deadlines and tips on how to apply can be found at the Admission page.
Creative Writing Registration Information
Whether you're a first-time registrant or current and returning student, all students register using our online student registration and records systems. Important information about registering for courses at SPS, including registration timelines and adding or dropping courses in which you are already enrolled, can be found at the Registration Information page.
Find out more about the Creative Writing Certificate Program
Program Courses:
Course Detail
Reading and Writing Poetry <> ENGLISH 206-CN
Intended for students with little or no formal training in the
elements of writing poetry, this course combines both seminar and
workshop methods and includes extensive reading of poetry. Students
use analytical skills presented in the course to critique each
others' drafts of poems written during the quarter. May not be
audited or taken P/N. Advanced composition course or equivalent
writing experience strongly recommended.
There is no available section.
Reading and Writing Fiction <> ENGLISH 207-CN
Intended for students with little or no formal training in the
elements of writing fiction, this course emphasizes the processes
and assumptions unique to fiction writing and the development of a
personal voice. Students analyze technique and form in works of
various authors. Writing assignments include at least two stories
developed and revised in a workshop format. Lectures, workshops,
and individual conferences. May not be audited or taken P/N.
Advanced composition course or equivalent writing experience
strongly recommended.
Reading and Writing Creative Nonfiction <> ENGLISH 208-CN
This course is for students who want to improve their writing
skills and explore the fundamentals of creative nonfiction.
Creative nonfiction borrows techniques from fiction—strong
characters, captivating narration, and compelling scenes—and bears
a certain allegiance to journalistic practices—a faithfulness to
“the facts,” sharp descriptions, and dialogue that rings true. By
learning the craft of creative nonfiction, you’ll discover how to
interest, amuse, entertain, move, persuade, and instruct your
readers.
In this course, students can take their writing to a new level. The
focus will be on three forms of creative nonfiction: the personal
essay, think pieces (which is most of the nonfiction you encounter
on the internet), and the lyric essay. Students will learn how to
read as writers, learning from the old masters and new voices, and
will experiment with a new form and submit a written assignment
each week. All classes will be conducted in seminar and workshop
formats.
May not be audited or taken P/N. Advanced composition course and
strong basic writing skills highly recommended.
For students who have taken courses in fiction writing or who
have been writing fiction on their own, this intermediate-level
course offers further practice and study in the development of
short stories. Students write and submit drafts and revisions of
stories and are assigned readings of short stories, which are
discussed in class. Student writing is discussed in a workshop
format and in individual conferences. May not be audited or taken
P/N.
Prerequisite: ENGLISH 207 or comparable courses in creative writing
with permission of instructor. Students who have not completed
ENGLISH 207 should obtain instructor's consent and confirmation of
appropriate writing experience. Please send an email to the
professor with your writing background to request a permission
number once registration for winter quarter has opened on November
18, 2024.
In this advanced-level course, we'll focus on taking a
first-draft story through a multi-stage revision process,
increasing the story's richness, urgency, and texture. Using
prompts and other strategies, students will quickly draft and
workshop a new story, then use expansion and layering techniques to
deepen and further develop character, plot, and style, taking the
story through a full, considered revision that will be workshopped
a second time by the whole class. Reading and analyzing the
structures and strategies of published stories will supplement your
writing and our discussions.
For students who have completed at least one course in fiction
writing, the course will provide further study of matters of
technique and structure. The course builds on the premises,
assignments, and goals of English 307-A, but students may
enroll without having completed that course. May not be audited
or taken P/N.
Prerequisite: ENGLISH 207 or 307-A or comparable courses in
creative writing with permission of instructor. Students who
have not completed ENGLISH 207 or 307-A should obtain instructor's
consent and confirmation of appropriate writing experience. Please
send an email to the professor with your writing background to
request a permission number once registration for spring quarter
has opened on February 17, 2025.
This workshop course is for students who have taken courses in
creative nonfiction or who have been writing creative nonfiction on
their own. Students apply their developing command of creative
writing techniques and forms to frequent short writing exercises
and essays. Class discussion of published essays and excerpts from
longer works and student drafts may address such topics as voice,
style, structure, the uses of research, and truth.
May not be audited or taken P/N. Prerequisite: ENGLISH 208 or
permission of instructor. Students should have previous creative
writing experience in an academic setting. Students who have not
completed ENGLISH 208 should obtain instructor's consent and
confirmation of appropriate writing experience. Please send an
email to the professor with your writing background to request a
permission number once registration for winter quarter has opened
on November 11, 2024.
This advanced course is for students who have completed at least
one course in nonfiction writing. We will emphasize close reading
of contemporary nonfiction as well as careful writing and revision.
Elizabeth Hardwick states that reading is the only way to learn how
to write. We will lean into that assertion, studying the work of
Sigrid Nunez, Laura Kipnis, Phillip Lopate, and other modern
masters, using their essays as templates for creating new work.
Weekly homework will include reading and writing assignments, and
weekly meetings will include discussion, writing exercises, and
in-depth workshopping of essays. The required book for this class
is The Best American Essays, 2023, edited by Vivian
Gornick. May not be audited or taken P/N.
Prerequisite: ENGLISH 208 or 308-A, or comparable courses in
creative writing with permission of instructor. Students who
have not completed ENGLISH 208 or 308-A should obtain instructor's
consent and confirmation of appropriate writing experience. Please
send an email to the professor with your writing background to
request a permission number once registration for spring quarter
has opened on on February 17, 2025.