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  • DeadlineStudy Details:

    MA 1 year full-time (campus)

    2 years part-time (campus or online)

    Students can begin studying in January or September.

Course Description

At the heart of the Manchester Writing School are our masters programmes in Creative Writing, available to study on campus in Manchester and also from anywhere in the world via online distance learning.  

On our Master of Arts (MA) Creative Writing programme, you will explore and practice techniques and styles of modern and contemporary writing and apply these through the development of your own creative work. You will undertake a taught element blending writing workshops with reading units and an elective, and then complete your studies through submission of an extended piece of writing from a proposed full-length book or script.  

You will specialise in one of the following routes: Novel (including Short Fiction), Poetry, Writing for Children & Young Adults, Scriptwriting (for stage, screen or radio) or Creative Non-Fiction.  

The MA is available to complete in one year full-time or two years part-time. The Novel, Poetry and Scriptwriting routes are available to study on campus (full-time or part-time) or online (part-time only). The Writing for Children and Creative Non-Fiction routes are online (part-time) only. We have intakes to the programme in September and January each year. 

You can also choose to pursue our MFA Creative Writing masters.  

Visit the Manchester Writing School website for more information, including profiles of staff and published students, news, events and projects. 

Please visit our scholarships page for information on funding opportunities 

Entry Requirements

In order to apply, you will need to submit a completed application form, a sample of creative writing, a critical review and one reference. You can apply here: mmu.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/apply/postgraduate-taught-course. 

On the application form, you will be asked to give a personal statement and should use this to tell us a bit about yourself and give a good sense of what you have been reading and writing, what has led you to apply for our course, and which one of our specialist routes you are applying for. Personal statements should be up to 500 words long. 

For the creative sample, applicants to the Novel, Children’s/YA and Creative Non-Fiction routes should submit up to 2,000 words of prose (a complete piece, or an extract/extracts from a longer work); poetry applicants should submit up to 15 poems; and scriptwriting applicants should submit up to 15 minutes running time of script (a complete piece, or an extract/extracts from a longer work). 

The critical review should focus on a piece of published or produced work in your chosen specialist route, be up to 500 words long, and show evidence of close reading, explaining what it is about the piece you find useful as a writer. Both the creative and critical samples should be relevant to the specialist route to which you are applying (Novel OR Poetry OR Writing for Children/YA OR Scriptwriting OR Creative Non-Fiction).  

Your reference can be from anyone of professional standing (e.g. a current/former employer or tutor) who can vouch for your suitability for study at postgraduate level or the quality of your writing, or, if you are unable to obtain a reference from someone who is familiar with your written work, simply verify your identity. 

Please collate and submit the application form, writing sample, review and reference, where possible. It will not speed up the processing of your application if you send some elements now with others to follow.   

We have intakes into the programme in September and January each year. For application deadlines, please see the ‘How to Apply section’.  

In each application assessed we will be looking for evidence of: 

  • A very high standard of written English;  
  • Creative talent and potential;  
  • Control of form, style and technique;  
  • Commitment to the craft of writing and willingness to engage with the editorial process of receiving feedback and redrafting work-in-progress;   
  • Experience of the development of writing skills through workshops, supervision, mentoring or previous study; 
  • Substantial reading within the relevant field. 

Applicants whose first language is not English are required to produce evidence of English Language proficiency. Overseas applicants will require IELTS with an overall score of 6.5, with no sub-component below 5.5, or an equivalent accepted English qualification. Accepted English qualifications can be viewed here. 

If your application meets these criteria, a tutor may contact you to arrange a telephone or face-to-face interview at a mutually convenient time. 

Find out more

Fees

For fees and funding options, please visit our website to find out more

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