Creative Writing
A fully funded M.F.A. program that combines creative and scholarly work, undergraduate teaching, and professionalization opportunities.
The M.F.A. Program in Creative Writing is nationally ranked and our graduates are the recipients of many distinguished awards and fellowships.
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Our Faculty
Program Coordinator
Emeritus Faculty
In Memoriam
Founding Director
Program Requirements
The Master of Fine Arts Program in Creative Writing offers concentrations in fiction and poetry and requires a creative thesis. The course requirements include both writing workshops and literature courses.
Course Requirements
- Four writing workshops in your concentration (poetry or fiction: English 688 or ENGL 689, respectively).
- Four graduate (600- or 700-level) literature courses.
- At least one semester of Studies in Narrative Form (English 789), if your concentration is fiction, or Studies in Poetic Form (English 788), if your concentration is poetry.
- NOTE: Forms courses are repeatable and can be taken outside of your concentration for elective credit.
- One graduate-level (600-level or above) course outside the English Department, or one 400-level English course elective within the English Department.
Thesis
Beginning in the second year, MFA students register for English 799 (thesis research) under the direction of a member of the creative writing faculty, write as a thesis a book-length manuscript of fiction or poetry.
Mentoring Credit
All MFA students are required to complete one credit of pedagogical or professional mentoring each semester: either ENGL878 or ENGL898.
A Letter from the M.F.A. Program Faculty
Dear Prospective Students,
Our MFA program is committed to social justice and antiracism. Our workshop process decenters whiteness and amplifies BIPOC voices, as we aim to create a space of equity for writing and collaboration and encourage extending creative practice into the world. What is the writing that is happening now, that is looking to the future and creating a viable community? The answer starts in the work of your imagination, your dedication to the craft, and your sense that this matters beyond the act of writing. Our commitment is to you.
Each fall, we welcome three poets and three fiction writers into the MFA Program, a studio-based fine arts program devoted to the development and mentoring of the next generation of poets and fiction writers.
Our attention is to your original writing and to you, the writer; our aim is to help you become the writer you envision for yourself. As fully funded writers, selected by the program faculty from an applicant pool of over 200, you’ll spend two to three years taking workshops, literature courses, and creative forms courses, meeting one-on-one with our faculty, and gaining valuable experience teaching undergraduate workshops, academic writing, and literature courses.
Our varied individual teaching philosophies share the conviction that the hard work of drafting and revising original stories and poems is grounded in reading and studying exemplary works. Literary history, innovative poetic and narrative form, and the experience of the writer all come into play through the shaping hand of art.
During the second and third years of the program, MFA students develop a thesis (a book-length collection of poetry or short fiction, a novel, or a hybrid project) under the direction of the MFA faculty. Students have the opportunity to work closely with each program faculty member in the genre of concentration during their time at UMD.
Completion of the thesis culminates in the occasion of a thesis defense with several faculty members, and a celebratory public reading, at which each student is introduced by their faculty mentor.
The MFA core curriculum includes practica in teaching creative writing (in the first semester) and finishing the thesis (in the last semester), plus a set of professionalization courses to prepare you for a career in creative writing. Our program emphasizes one-on-one mentoring and personal attention to your development as a writer in the world.
The Writers Here & Now reading series, co-sponsored and -curated by the Jiménez-Porter Writers’ House (UMD’s undergraduate residential college devoted to creative writing), brings writers of national and international prominence to the University of Maryland each year, both to read and meet with students in the graduate and undergraduate workshops. Recent visiting writers include Leslie Nneka Arimah, Jennifer Chang, Jos Charles, Alexander Chee, Jennine Capó Crucet, Natalie Diaz, Danielle Evans, Ross Gay, Louise Glück, Kaitlyn Greenidge, Terrance Hayes, Mitchell S. Jackson, John Keene, Yiyun Li, Claudia Rankine, Cristina Rivera Garza, Evie Shockley, Ocean Vuong, and Javier Zamora. We also invite program alumni to read in the series and visit with the MFAs.
Our program faculty and alumni include recipients of the following awards and honors:
● Agnes Lynch Starrett Prize
● Amy Lowell Poetry Traveling Scholarship
● Guggenheim Fellowship
● Italo Calvino Prize
● National Book Award
● National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellowship
● NAACP Image Award
● National Jewish Book Award
● National Poetry Series competition
● New York Public Library Young Lions Prize
● Rome Prize
● Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award
● Whiting Writers’ Award
They have received Stegner, Hodder, Radcliffe Institute, and Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center fellowships, and their work has been featured in the following publications:
● The Atlantic
● Best American Poetry
● Harvard Review
● Los Angeles Review of Books
● The Nation
● The New Republic
● The New Yorker
● New York Review of Books
● New York Times
● Paris Review
● Poetry
● Threepenny Review
● Washington Post
● Yale Review
Our alumni have started their own literary journals online and in print:
● The Account
● Asian American Literary Review
● AzonaL
● B O D Y
● Leavings
● Oversound
● Smartish Pace
They have continued their formal studies in doctoral programs at Florida State University, the University of Houston, the University of Illinois–Chicago, the University of Missouri, the University of Utah, and other top programs. And they have taught in universities, colleges, and high schools around the country and abroad, serving communities and fostering the literary arts.
We thank you for your interest in our program. We urge you to review the department website to get a further sense of whether or not the MFA at Maryland is right for you. And we wish you the very best in your writing.
M.F.A. Application Instructions
Submit the complete application and all supporting materials by December 17, 2024—for the Fall 2025 term. (We do not accept applications for the Spring term.) Please note that the system will close promptly at midnight, so you will be unable to edit your application past 11:59pm on December 17, 2024.
University of Maryland's Graduate Application Process
The University of Maryland’s Graduate School accepts applications through its application system. Before completing the application, applicants are asked to check the Admissions Requirements site for specific instructions.
As required by the Graduate School, all application materials are to be submitted electronically:
- Graduate Application
- Non-refundable application fee ($75) for each program to which an applicant applies.
- Unofficial transcripts of your entire college/university record (undergraduate and graduate), including records of any advanced work done at another institution. Electronic copies of these unofficial transcripts must be uploaded along with your online application. Official transcripts will be required after an applicant is admitted to the program.
- Three Letters of Recommendation. In your online application, please complete the information requested for your recommenders and ask them to submit their letters electronically. The strongest letters of recommendation are written by individuals who are familiar with your fiction or poetry and can speak about you as a writer.
- Statement of Purpose. The statement, which should not exceed 1000 words, should address your creative interests, relevant aspects of your educational experience, and your reasons for applying to our program.
- A single Creative Writing Sample in the genre in which you are applying: for fiction, 15 pages (double-spaced); for poetry, 10-15 pages (single-spaced). To ensure that your application package is processed accurately, you must specify your genre (fiction OR poetry) in the online application.
Note: We DO NOT require--or recommend--that applicants to the MFA Program in Creative Writing submit GRE scores.
The electronic submission of application materials helps expedite the review of an application. Completed applications are reviewed by a faculty admissions committee in each genre. The recommendations of the poetry and fiction committees are submitted to the Dean of the Graduate School, who will make the final admission decision. Students seeking to complete graduate work at the University of Maryland for degree purposes must be formally admitted to the Graduate School by the Dean.
Information for International Graduate Students
The University of Maryland is dedicated to maintaining a vibrant international graduate student community. The Office of International Students and Scholars Services (ISSS) is a valuable resource of information and assistance for prospective and current international students. International applicants are encouraged to explore the services they offer, and contact them with related questions.
The University of Maryland Graduate School offers admission to international students based on academic information; it is not a guarantee of attendance. Admitted international students will then receive instructions about obtaining the appropriate visa to study at the University of Maryland which will require submission of additional documents. Please see the Graduate Admissions Process for International Applicants for more information.
Contact
Applicants are encouraged to direct any technical issues and questions related to the admissions process to the Graduate School (gradschool@umd.edu; 301-405-3644)
Prospective M.F.A. Student FAQs
If, after reading this list, you still have unanswered questions, please contact us.
- Where do I apply on-line? You can apply now via the Graduate School's website.
- When is the application deadline? December 17, 2024 at 11:59 pm (EST)
- Does your program admit students for the Spring semester? No.
- What is the most important part of the application? The creative writing sample is the single most important element of a successful application to the MFA Program in Creative Writing. Of course, the Creative Writing faculty look closely at all of the other materials in the application file.
- Is it possible to meet with the Creative Writing faculty and/or staff to discuss the admissions process? Unfortunately, the faculty and/or staff do not have the time to meet with prospective applicants. We do, however, strongly encourage applicants who have been accepted into the program to visit during the spring semester to meet with faculty, staff, and current students and attend a graduate-level course.
- When are admissions decisions made? Admissions decisions are made in March.
- Should the fiction writing sample be one piece or several pieces? The fiction writing sample can be either a novel excerpt, a short story, or several short stories, as long as the writing sample does not exceed 15 double-spaced pages.
- Can I submit creative work in more than one genre and/or apply in more than one genre? No. All MFA applicants must apply within one genre (fiction or poetry) and submit work only within that chosen genre.
- Does Maryland offer an MFA in Creative Nonfiction? No. However, a workshop in Creative Nonfiction is offered occasionally, and MFA students are welcome to take it as an elective.
- Does the program offer a low-residency option? No.
- What kind of financial award packages does the program offer? Each year, the program accepts 6 applicants (3 fiction writers and 3 poets), who are fully funded by Teaching Assistantships for up to three years of graduate study. Our financial award packages include a stipend of about $26,000 per academic year and 60 credit hours of tuition remission (10 credit hours of tuition remission per semester) over three years of study.
MFA students do not teach during their first year in the program. They teach two classes during their second year and four classes during the optional third year of study. - How do I put myself in the running for funding? No separate application is required. Please see the question above.
- When are decisions made about program-awarded aid (fellowships and teaching assistantships)? In March. We fully fund all 6 applicants who we've accepted. Our offer letter details the program-awarded financial package.
- Where can I find information on tuition and fees? Student Financial Services and Cashiering provides a chart of tuition and fees for Graduate Students by credit hour and residency classification (resident and non-resident).
- Do MFA students ever attend the program part-time? No. Since our MFA students are fully funded they must remain enrolled on a full-time basis (taking at least 6 credits per semester).
- What time do the MFA students take classes? Most graduate English classes are offered once a week, Monday-Thursday, either from 3:30-6pm or from 6:30-9pm. Fiction and poetry workshops are on Wednesdays from 3:30-6pm. Students must be enrolled continuously—unless they petition the Graduate School for a medical leave of absence or for a waiver of continuous registration and such petitions are approved.
- Does your program accept letters of recommendation via Interfolio? The Graduate School does not accept letters of recommendation via Interfolio. However, if Interfolio is your only option to submit your letters of recommendation, then please arrange for Interfolio to send your dossier electronically to the MFA Program Coordinator, Lindsay Bernal: lbernal@umd.edu. (Lindsay will confirm the receipt of the dossier.) Please note that this alternative is a work-around: though the MFA faculty reviewers will be given access to your Interfolio dossier, your letters will continue to appear as missing from your online application.
- Does your program require applicants to submit GRE scores? No.
- Does your program waive the application fee? The Graduate School, not the Program, processes all application fee waiver requests. For more information about application fee waivers, including the eligibility guidelines, please visit the Graduate School’s website.