Applicants for admission to the MA program must have completed a minimum of 24 semester hours of upper-division undergraduate courses in English or an appropriate related discipline, with grades indicating ability for successful graduate work. Successful applicants to the MA program typically have GRE verbal scores at or above the 75th percentile and an undergraduate GPA of 3.00 or better.
Applicants should follow the procedures noted on the Admissions page. Ensure that you send the following directly to the Department of English:
Your application is not complete until all materials are received by The Graduate School and the Department. Admission decisions are based on all parts of an application, with especially close attention given to writing samples.
Application deadlines are December 15 for those wishing to be considered for fellowships or assistantships and April 15 for all others.
Prior to registering for classes each semester, you should make an appointment to talk with an advisor. New MA students may rely on the graduate student coordinator, or the director of graduate studies, for advisement. Within the first semester, however, students should identify an advisor among faculty members in their major field.
The curriculum for this program is given below.
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*Neither ENGL 701A and 701B nor more than one workshop course can be counted in the 30 hours of classroom credits; students wishing to emphasize technical writing should consult the graduate director about special conditions.
When you have amassed 30 graduate credit hours in this MA program, you must take the comprehensive exam. At the beginning of the semester in which you plan to take the exam, notify the director of graduate studies in writing of your intention to do so. The exam consists of two sections, one on composition, the other on rhetoric. You will choose one of three questions in each part and respond to it in 90 minutes (a total of 3 hours). Two of three graders must pass your responses. You have two opportunities to pass this exam.
The MA thesis is an essay of approximately 50-80 pages that makes a defensible contribution to scholarship on a figure, text, movement, problem, or current questions in Composition and Rhetoric. It must conform to standards set by The Graduate School. Your thesis director will supervise your ENGL 799 (thesis) hours, and your essay will be read by one other faculty member in your area.
A limited number of fellowships are available from The Graduate School and the College of Liberal Arts. Applicants to this program are eligible for these fellowships if nominated by the Department of English. The selection process for nominees begins January 30 with awards announced mid-March.
The Department of English offers teaching assistantships, editorial assistantships, instructional assistantships, and research assistantships.
Based on information provided in applications completed by January 30, prospective students will automatically be considered for an appropriate assistantship. (For example, teaching assistantships are available only to students who have successfully completed 18 hours of graduate work in English.)
All assistantships confer in-state tuition status, as well as a stipend and tuition supplement whose amounts vary with the type of assistantship. Students awarded an assistantship by the Department of English are expected to
Graduates with this MA degree have found satisfying careers as teachers or writing center administrators in community colleges, as grant writers or technical writers, as editors or corporate communication managers in business and industry, and as communication specialists in or consultants for government agencies and nonprofit organizations. For help with career options you should use take advantage of resources on campus, like the Career Center and College of Arts and Sciences Career Development Program.
Many graduates apply for admission to PhD programs at this or other major research universities. Although admission to one of USC's doctoral programs in English is not guaranteed after earning the MA, some students continue graduate work here.