Creative Writing major

Creative Writing: courses, careers, and where to study

Creative Writing is a craft-focused major where you produce original fiction, poetry, and other literary work in workshops, suited to writers who want to build a publishable body of work.

Creative Writing centers on making original work rather than only studying it. You write your own short stories, poems, novels, essays, scripts, and other forms, then bring drafts to a workshop where classmates and an instructor read closely and give structured feedback you use to revise. Coursework moves between the craft of a given genre (how point of view, line, scene, and image actually work on the page) and wide reading that shows you how published writers solve the same problems. You also pick up editorial and revision skills and learn how finished manuscripts are submitted, pitched, and prepared for publication. This is what distinguishes it from a general English or Literature degree: an English program is built around literary analysis, theory, and scholarly argument, while Creative Writing is built around generating, critiquing, and polishing your own manuscripts.

Most programs award a bachelor's degree, often as a track or concentration inside an English or writing department, and the entry-level writing and editing roles tied to this field generally expect a bachelor's. The defining requirements are word-based rather than clinical: sustained writing workshops across genres, a craft and literature reading load, and a capstone senior portfolio or thesis manuscript that you draft and revise across one or two semesters, sometimes with a public reading. No license is required to write or edit, though some specialized writing roles may ask for separate certification that you should verify with the employer or program. Graduates work in book and magazine publishing, marketing and content teams, communications and grant-writing offices, screen and game studios, journalism, teaching, and freelance authorship, and many pair the degree with a graduate writing program when they aim toward authorship or college-level teaching.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of writers and authors, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $72,270 and projects employment to grow about 3.6% from 2024 to 2034; a bachelor's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

Academic classification (CIP)

In the federal Classification of Instructional Programs, Creative Writing maps to CIP 23.1302, Creative Writing, within the ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE/LETTERS family. The official definition:

A program that focuses on the process and techniques of original composition in various literary forms such as the short story, poetry, the novel, and others. Includes instruction in technical and editorial skills, criticism, and the marketing of finished manuscripts.

Source: U.S. Department of Education (NCES), Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) 2020. View on nces.ed.gov

What you'll study

  • Multi-genre writing workshops in fiction, poetry, and nonfiction
  • Craft of fiction (scene, point of view, structure, dialogue)
  • Poetry craft (line, meter, image, and form)
  • Creative nonfiction and the personal essay
  • Revision and manuscript critique methods
  • Editorial skills and manuscript preparation for submission
  • Wide craft-focused reading across literary traditions
  • Screenwriting or scriptwriting foundations
  • Senior capstone portfolio or thesis manuscript

Typical careers

Typical salary range: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 writers and authors median $72,270).Ranges are early-career estimates. Any BLS figure shown is the occupation-wide median across all experience levels, not a starting wage, and is informational only.

Related occupations

Occupations the federal CIP–SOC crosswalk associates with Creative Writing. Linked titles open a CampusPin career page with BLS pay and outlook data; others are listed for reference.

Source: U.S. Department of Education (NCES), Crosswalk: CIP 2020 to SOC 2018. A program of study does not guarantee any specific occupation.

Before you commit to a Creative Writing major

CampusPin does not rank programs. Use these prompts to pressure-test whether a specific Creative Writing program fits your goals, they are decision questions, not claims about any school.

Ask the Creative Writing department

  • Which concentrations or specializations are offered, and which faculty lead them?
  • What does the typical course sequence look like, and how much is required vs. elective?
  • What labs, studios, clinical placements, or research opportunities are available to undergraduates?
  • Is there a capstone, thesis, internship, or co-op requirement?

Ask current students & check the curriculum

  • How heavy is the workload, and how accessible is the faculty?
  • What internships or co-ops did you do, and where do recent graduates end up?
  • Does the required curriculum actually match the careers listed above?
  • How easy is it to add a minor, double major, or switch tracks later?
Accreditation & licensure: Most Creative Writing programs are covered by their institution's regional accreditation; specialized programmatic accreditation is less common in this field. Confirm any field-specific accreditation or licensure that matters for your goals.
Degree level & graduate study: Many Creative Writingcareers are open with a bachelor's degree, but some, such as research, advanced-practice, or licensure-track roles, require a master's or doctorate. Check the typical entry-level education on each linked career page above before assuming a bachelor's is enough.

Find a Creative Writing program

CampusPin lists U.S. universities and community colleges that offer Creative Writing programs. Filter by state, tuition, school size, acceptance rate, and campus setting, no account required.

Related majors

How this guide is sourced

This is an editorial guide from the CampusPin Editorial Team. Career and wage figures are from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages, and link to each career page. Program availability comes from CampusPin's free institution search; CampusPin does not assert that any specific school offers this exact major until that program data is verified. Last reviewed 2026-06-15. How CampusPin sources data · Report a correction.