BA (Hons) Creative and Professional Writing with Foundation Year

Bachelor's degree

In Wolverhampton

higher than £ 9000

Description

  • Type

    Bachelor's degree

  • Location

    Wolverhampton

This specialist course combines the practice of writing for different audiences and in different contexts and genres with the development of a reflective and critical understanding of writing. It is one of the few courses in the country to combine creative and professional writing, giving it a real emphasis on employability.
 
The Foundation year prepares students for university level study. Successful completion of our Foundation course permits access to any of our Humanities or Media BA (Hons) degree courses, which include English, English Language, Creative Writing, Linguistics, Media, Philosophy and Religious Studies — many of which can be taken singly as specialist degrees or together as ‘joint’ degree routes. The Foundation year begins with modules aimed at providing transferable study skills and then, in the second semester, gives students the opportunity to study more specialist modules, with a focus on various aspects of Humanities and Media.

Student writing, both in the classroom and in individual conferences, is the heartbeat of this specialist course. You will create, analyse and interpret different forms and styles of writing, focusing on three broad themes: craft of writing; reading as a writer; and working as a writer.

In all your creative and professional writing modules, you can expect to spend time exploring theory and technique, reading the work of established writers, experimenting through writing exercises and producing your own original pieces. You’ll be taught by published writers whose books cover a wide range of creative, professional and critical disciplines, we also invite special visiting lecturers from the world of publishing as well as internationally renowned authors.

 

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Facilities

Location

Start date

Wolverhampton (West Midlands)
See map
Wulfruna Street, WV1 1LY

Start date

On request

About this course

Year 1 (Level 4)

We aim to make every day you spend on the course an adventure of exploration. Exploring the world of writing; your creative ideas; your technical skills and where you see your future career.  To assist you in your personal exploration the course team is there to support you individually and in conjunction with your fellow students as you experience modules that might include:  The Craft of Writing; Reading as a Writer; Reading and Writing Poetry; Myth; Telling Tales.

Year 2 (Level 5)

The second year of the course will explore topics such as Auto/Biography: Life Writing; Humour Writing; Journalistic Writing; Region, Writing and Identity.

Year 3 (Level 6)

In your final year you will be refining your ideas on your career path and modules such as Teaching Writing; Genre (e.g. fantasy and crime writing); Writing a Novel; Independent Writing Project. and Writing Futures will help you with this

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Reviews

This centre's achievements

2021

All courses are up to date

The average rating is higher than 3.7

More than 50 reviews in the last 12 months

This centre has featured on Emagister for 14 years

Subjects

  • Professional Writing
  • Poetry
  • Media
  • Writing
  • University

Course programme

Module: 3GK012

Credits: 40

Period: 1

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

This module is designed to introduce you to university life. It will support you in exploring the university environment. It will also introduce you to the wide variety of academic skills needed to succeed at university and will support you in the development of these skills.


Module: 3GK013

Credits: 40

Period: 1

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

In this module, you will work collaboratively with other students on a project that reflects an area of shared interest relating to the broad themes of Business, Law or the Social Sciences. You will have the opportunity to work as a small team to devise, design and plan a project relating to a topic of shared interest. In many aspects of life and work, teamwork and collaboration are the norm to solve real world-problems. This group-based project will allow you to develop a range of skills, including leadership skills, time-management, negotiation, communication, creativity, problem-solving and critical thinking skills. By investigating and responding to a complex question, challenge or problem, you and your group will acquire a deeper knowledge of your topic. The module will conclude with a conference, where your group’s project will be presented to the other groups in your class.


Module: 3HU006

Credits: 20

Period: 1

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

This module introduces you to the twin notions of Utopias and Dystopias and uses a range of extracted primary texts (provided in class and on the VLE) to explore how writers, film makers, and others utilise the imagined space of a utopia or dystopia to make comment upon our world.


Module: 3GK014

Credits: 20

Period: 1

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

This module introduces you to Wolverhampton and the people who live there using concepts and insights from a variety of academic subjects, for example Social Policy, Sociology, History, Criminology and Criminal Justice, Law, and Politics, amongst others. You will explore a range of cultural and social issues.


Module: 4EN007

Credits: 20

Period: 2

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

This module will examine the shorter fiction and literature of well-known and canonical authors as a means of introducing a range of authors in a digestible fashion whilst also considering the short story as a distinct literary form. We will discuss a range of short literary material to show the contribution that such literature can make to the canon. We will investigate the formal characteristics of the short story – plot (or its frequent absence), narrative technique, arrangement of scenes, tone, and how the structure determines the treatment of a range of contemporary ideas: time and consciousness, subjectivity, alienation, sexuality, body and gender, fantasy, imperialism and immigration.


Module: 4CW003

Credits: 20

Period: 2

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

This module aims to: acquaint students to a wide range of ideas about language and writing; develop a foundational understanding of language, text and the craft of writing for future creative and professional writing experiences; enable students to make informed judgments about the nature and function of language and writing; and apply their understanding by writing original texts.


Module: 4EN009

Credits: 20

Period: 2

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

This module will explore a broad selection of poetry from different periods of literary history with an emphasis on learning techniques for formal analysis (close reading), creative expression (writing poetry), and performance. We will consider aspects of reading, writing, and performing poetry, including form, rhythm and meter, diction, figurative language and sound. We will also consider the development of particular genres (e.g. the ballad, the sonnet) and forms (e.g. blank verse, free verse) over time, from the medieval period to the present, with an emphasis on the horizon of reader expectations that accrue around poetic forms and genres.


Module: 4CW001

Credits: 20

Period: 2

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

This module will teach students how to read with an eye for technique. It will focus on how writing is structured and the various ways in which authors create compelling narratives. It will address a variety of modes of writing and genres including novels, short stories, poetry, and creative non-fiction, and tap into reading and critical theories. Students will be given the opportunity to experiment creatively within those modes, and reflect on what can be learned from the study of other people's work.


Module: 4FI001

Credits: 20

Period: 2

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

This module will introduce students to the devices and concepts of narrative structure in film, and provide models with which to analyse narrative and its various functional elements. We will consider the particular aspects of film narrative, and how these have been drawn from and, in turn, influenced other narrative forms. This will include addressing the processes through which written and graphic text, and dramatic performance, become transferred and adapted into film narrative. These issues will be explored further through a group assessment exercise in which a scene from a short written narrative will be adapted into a scene from a screenplay.


Module: 4CW006

Credits: 20

Period: 2

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

In this module you will study folk- and fairytales from different cultures, exploring why and how people tell tales. You will listen to tales, tell tales, and rewrite them, discovering how they change in relation to their form and function. Storytelling is increasingly valued as a persuasive tool in the world of work. This module aims to introduce a skill transferable to job interviews, meetings, classrooms and digital media.


Module: 5EN007

Credits: 20

Period: 3

Type: Core

Locations: Wolverhampton City Campus

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Additional information

This specialist course combines the practice of writing for different audiences and in different contexts and genres with the development of a reflective and critical understanding of writing.

BA (Hons) Creative and Professional Writing with Foundation Year

higher than £ 9000