English

B.A. English

» Department of English   » College of Letters, Arts & Social Sciences


  • INTRODUCTION
  • WHAT IT TAKES
  • WHAT PEOPLE DO
  • GET INVOLVED
  • FACULTY
Girl reading on a bench

The Bachelor of Arts in English program at the University of Idaho challenges you to think and write critically, as well as educates you as to how words can reflect and shape the world. Through in-depth study of works from literary masters, engaging classroom discussions and intensive writing training, you’ll graduate equipped to think analytically, read with insight and communicate skillfully – all highly desired qualities for a variety of professional careers.


The program gives you the flexibility to focus on an area of English that interests you most and best prepares you for your career goals. You’ll specialize in one of the following options of study:

  • Literature: Study the stories and traditions that define cultures.
  • Creative writing: Develop your writing talent in poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction.
  • Professional: Learn the skills to communicate successfully in the workplace.
  • Teaching: Prepare to become a junior high or high school English teacher.


As an English major, you’ll encounter new ideas and learn to think beyond the expected. You’ll form a solid grounding in the dynamics of the English language and in literary traditions that shape and reflect our evolving culture. You will explore a breadth of literary genres and closely examine works from some of history’s greatest writers, including William Shakespeare, Jane Austen, Ernest Hemingway, Virginia Woolf, Toni Morrison, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Sherman Alexie and Margaret Atwood.

Personal mentorship from our experienced, well-published faculty and thought-provoking course work will challenge you to read, think, write and express your thoughts at a higher, more meaningful level.


At Idaho, you can build on your interests in English and discover other exciting areas of study, such as:

  • American Indian literature
  • Linguistics
  • Rhetorical and literary theory
  • Teaching English as a second language
  • New media


English professor teaching

Prepare for Success

If you are interested in English, how it works, what others have done with it and what you can do with it, then a Bachelor of Arts in English could be for you. To succeed as an English major, you must have exceptional reading and writing skills, with the ability to think and communicate critically, creatively and analytically. The field demands self-discipline, introspection, and the desire to be challenged, technically and intellectually. Prepare for the program by taking advanced high school courses in English, foreign languages and history.


Your First Year

During your first year in the bachelor’s program, you will complete university core requirements and English foundation courses. Depending on your area of emphasis, you may take:

  • ENG 101 – Intro to College Writing
  • ENG102 – College Writing and Rhetoric
  • ENG 210 – Introduction to Literary Theory
  • ENG 257 or 258 – Literature of Western Civilization
  • ENG 291, 292, or 293 – Creative Writing
  • Core Math
  • Core Science
  • Core Discovery
  • Foreign Language

Printable four-year plans: 
Literature Emphasis
Creative Writing Emphasis
Professional Emphasis 
Teaching Emphasis


What You Can Do

A Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of Idaho prepares you for a wide range of exciting and rewarding career opportunities:

  • Environmental science and travel writing
  • Editing and publishing
  • Journalism
  • Business and technical writing
  • Web development
  • Writing novels, poetry, essays, plays
  • Corporate management
  • Teaching
  • Law
  • Medicine

The following graduate programs in English are offered at the University of Idaho:
  • Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing
  • Master of Arts in English
  • Master of Arts in Teaching, English
  • Master Arts in Teaching English as a Second Language


Opportunities

Careers in writing, publishing and editing are naturals for English majors. Some combine their interest in English with an interest in journalism. Others are business, technical or environmental writers, or editors for educational or commercial publications. Of course, some students aspire to be best-selling novelists or well-known poets.

A degree in English prepares you to succeed in a variety of other professions, as well. English majors develop strong transferable skills – excellent communication and analytical thinking – that are highly desired by today’s employers. Our graduates are working all over the world as doctors, entrepreneurs, ministers, financial advisers, Webmasters and bookstore managers.

Law is another popular career choice for English majors, who consistently rank among the highest scorers on the Law School Admissions Test.

Additionally, English graduates commonly enter medical school, library science school, and master’s programs in English, business administration or new media studies.


Gary Williams Teaching

Current Research

University of Idaho faculty members in the Department of English are distinguished published authors with nationally recognized expertise in creative writing, composition, English education, technical writing, British literature, American literature and linguistics. Faculty members have been awarded nationally competitive awards such as the Guggenheim Fellowship. Current faculty projects include:

  • Arthurian themes in video games
  • Rhetoric of global warming
  • Novels, memoirs and poetry of the American West
  • Interface between the humanities and the sciences
  • Gothic literature in the 19th century


Activities

Sigma Tau Delta, Eta Chi Chapter: An honor society for students of English language and literature in undergraduate, graduate and professional studies. Members host department events, work on a community service project, publish in a literary magazine and attend a national conference.


Hands-On Experience

As an English major, you will have many surprising and rewarding opportunities to apply and develop your skills in real-world settings. Students participate in national writing competitions, public readings, presentations at professional writing conferences and campus visits from Pulitzer Prize-winning authors. English majors graduate with a strong portfolio of personal work. Programs include:

  • Senior Seminar: Students spend a semester gathering a portfolio of their work and developing and presenting a major independent project.
  • Fugue Literary Journal: A nationally recognized, student-run literary magazine of poems, essays, stories, interviews and artwork.
  • Public Readings: Students participate regularly in poetry and fiction public readings on campus and in the surrounding community.
  • Distinguished Visiting Writers Program: It brings three to five nationally recognized authors to campus each year to provide selected students with intensive instruction in poetry, fiction or nonfiction writing, both in workshop settings and in one-on-one sessions.
  • Writing Center: A collaborative learning program dedicated to providing one-on-one assistance to student writers. English majors may be selected to work as tutors.
  • Internships and Practicum: Students gain on-the-job experience through quality internships and opportunities to do apprentice teaching.
  • Argonaut: University of Idaho student newspaper provides opportunities for English majors to work as editors and journalists.
  • Field Trips: Faculty lead groups of students on short trips to regional and national conferences, where students meet professionals and present their work.



Doug Adams
Douglas Adams
Professor
Douglas Adams teaches in the department’s Teaching English as a Second Language master’s program.
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Victoria Arthur
Victoria Arthur
Lecturer
Victoria Arthur teaches composition and British Literature.
» View Victoria Arthur's Profile
Kim Barnes
Kim Barnes
Associate Professor
Kim Barnes teaches creative nonfiction writing and fiction writing.
» View Kim Barnes' Profile
Susan Beegel
Susan Beegel
Affiliate Associate Professor, Editor of the Hemingway Review
Susan F. Beegel is an affiliate associate professor and editor of The Hemingway Review, a scholarly journal on the work and life of Ernest Hemingway, published by the University of Idaho and the Ernest Hemingway Foundation.
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Daniel Berkner
Daniel Berkner
Lecturer
Daniel Berkner teaches composition and beginning poetry writing.
» View Daniel Berkner's Profile
Mary Clearman Blew
Mary Clearman Blew
Professor
Mary Clearman Blew teaches creative nonfiction writing and fiction writing.
» View Mary Clearman Blew's Profile
Cindee Broughton
Cindee Broughton
Lecturer
Cindee “Dee” Broughton teaches research writing for non-native speakers and ESL pedagogy.
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Nancy Burns-McCoy
Nancie Burns-McCoy
Lecturer
Nancie Burns-McCoy teaches business writing.
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Steve Chandler
Steven Chandler
Professor of English and Neuroscience;Director of M.A. TESL Program;
Steven Chandler specializes in linguistics and language acquisition.
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Thomas Drake
Thomas Drake
Permanent Lecturer
Thomas Drake teaches literature, composition, business writing and Core Discovery classes.
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Phil Druker
E. Philip Druker
Senior Instructor
Phil Druker specializes in environmental, technical and travel writing.
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Richard Fehrenbacher
Richard Fehrenbacher
Associate Professor
Richard Fehrenbacher specializes in medieval literature and critical theory.
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Stephan Flores
Stephan Flores
Associate Professor, Director of University Honors Program
Stephan Flores specializes in critical theory and British literature, 1660-1815.
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Warren Hayman
Warren Hayman
Lecturer
Warren Hayman teaches composition, Introduction to Literature and beginning poetry writing.
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Walter Hesford
Walter Hesford
Associate Professor, Director of Undergraduate Studies
Walter Hesford specializes in 19th-century American literature, and teaches the Bible as literature.
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Janis Johnson
Janis Johnson
Assistant Professor
Janis Johnson teaches Native American literature, African-American literature and ethnic studies.
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Jeff Jones
Jeff Jones
Lecturer
Jeff P. Jones teaches composition, creative nonfiction and oral literature.
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Mary Ann Judge
Mary Ann Judge
Senior Instructor, Director of the Writing Center
Mary Ann Judge teaches composition and oversees internships in tutoring writing.
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Annie Lampman
Elizabeth A. Lampman
Lecturer
Annie Lampman teaches composition and beginning fiction writing.
» View Elizabeth A. Lampman's Profile
Michele Leavitt
Michele Leavitt
Lecturer
Michele Leavitt teaches composition and business writing.
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Ron McFarland
Ron McFarland
Professor
Ron McFarland teaches 17th-century British literature, modern British/American literature, global literature and poetry writing.
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Jodie Nicotra
Jodie Nicotra
Assistant Professor, Assistant Director of Writing
Jodie Nicotra teaches rhetoric and composition.
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Daniel Orozco
Daniel Orozco
Assistant Professor
Daniel Orozco teaches fiction writing.
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Joy Passanante
Joy Passanante
Senior Instructor; Associate Director of Creative Writing
Joy Passanate teaches literature, expository and professional writing, and creative writing in three genres.
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Kurt Queller
Kurt Queller
Lecturer
Kurt Queller teaches linguistics and history of the English language.
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Aaron Schab
Aaron Schab
Lecturer
Aaron Schab teaches composition, technical writing and Introduction to Literature.
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Brandon Schrand
Brandon Schrand
Assistant Professor; Director, MFA Program in Creative Writing
Brandon Schrand teaches nonfiction writing and the literature of the American West.
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Dabid Sigler
David Sigler
Assistant Professor and Director of the M.A. Program
David Sigler teaches 19th-century British literature and critical theory.
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Gordon Thomas
Gordon Thomas
Associate Professor, Director of Writing and Adviser for Writing Minors
Gordon Thomas teaches rhetoric and composition, and oversees the writing minor.
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Karen Thompson
Karen Thompson
Permanent Lecturer
Karen Thompson teaches technical writing.
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Gary Williams
Gary Williams
Professor and Department Chair
Gary Williams teaches 19th-century American literature, contemporary fiction and scientific literature.
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Robert Wrigley
Robert Wrigley
Professor
Robert Wrigley teaches poetry writing.
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