Why English Rocks
Great courses
From Chaucer to superhero comics, our classes teach students about print media. If you want to know more about Jane Austen鈥檚 novels or Shakespeare鈥檚 plays, we have the courses for you. If you want to know more about young adult fiction and the poetry of hip hop, we have courses for you, too. Our English major features classes on writing from around the world, including the full diversity of American culture.
Great teachers
Our instructors have won pretty much every teaching award available on campus. Last year, Professor Matthew Stratton won the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Distinguished Teaching Award, which Professor Alessa Johns won in 2016, the same year that Professor Fran Dolan won the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Prize for Undergraduate Teaching and Scholarly Achievement, and the list goes on....
Real community
Our , our peer advisors, our Cafe Voorhies pop-up study space, our , our annual award ceremony: These represent just the beginning of our events and programs for majors that let them know they are always welcome in Voorhies Hall.
For answers to the question 鈥淲hat can I do with an English major?鈥 consider what actual 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis English alums have told us.
Our majors go on to careers in the U.S. armed forces and Silicon Valley, medicine and the law. Our graduates are journalists and veterinarians and teachers.
Some of them travel 鈥 like Jackie DesForges 鈥10, who works as a social media director for Rail Europe. Some of them code 鈥 like 鈥11, whose startup went live in 2016 and was profiled on . Some of them write 鈥 like (who wrote Jarhead: A Soldier鈥檚 Story of Modern War), the celebrated short-fiction writer 鈥01, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter 鈥98 from the San Jose Mercury News, and award-winning 鈥92, who to talk to students.
English majors trained to think
鈥淓nglish majors are trained to think in a way that鈥檚 critical to almost every job type 鈥 read, think and then communicate a perspective,鈥 says Tung. 鈥淭his training is so important to any job, but it鈥檚 invaluable in tech and at startups that need unique perspectives to hit their goals and great communicators to sell stakeholders [both internally and externally] on an idea.鈥
That鈥檚 an argument made recently by entrepreneur and , who told , 鈥淚 personally think there鈥檚 going to be a greater demand in 10 years for liberal arts majors than there are for programming majors and maybe even engineering.鈥
The connection between English and fields like teaching, journalism and public relations is probably pretty clear. You can see the roots of those jobs in skills we value, like the ability to write a persuasive argument that has a clearly articulated thesis and demonstrates close analysis. The fact that we are nationwide by U.S. News & World Report is proof that we are excellent at teaching these skills.
Expect the unexpected as an English major
Studies show that Americans are reading less, but as a recent says, don鈥檛 blame today鈥檚 college students: 鈥淲hen it comes to reading books, the kids are all right,鈥 reports the author, Michael Schaub, about a new . Students entering college today read more, and read more for fun, than older American adults.
And for good reason: There鈥檚 more to read than ever. reports that book sales are up three years in a row.
It鈥檚 true, English majors read serious literature by serious writers: Shakespeare and Jane Austen, Charles Dickens and Virginia Woolf, W.B. Yeats and Chinua Achebe, Ralph Ellison and Sylvia Plath, Claudia Rankine and Junot D铆az.
They also learn how to take seriously a whole range of works that might be surprising to find in an English class like Ta-Nehisi Coates鈥檚 comic book Black Panther, mysteries by Agatha Christie, Michael Crichton鈥檚 thriller Prey, or J.K. Rowling鈥檚 Harry Potter and the Sorcerer鈥檚 Stone, not to mention the video games and movies in our visual media courses. English majors can learn how to analyze video games like Bioshock and early Hollywood cinema as well as the poetry of Chaucer and the fiction of Mark Twain.
By training students to analyze writing and to write creatively (our creative writing classes are rightfully popular), we鈥檙e preparing them for a changing, more diverse world.
How English majors do research
Double majors connect with varied career interests
Because our students have such varied career interests, it should not be surprising that they often double major. Currently, our majors are completing second majors in 38 different fields at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis. We also have a popular minor in English.
The fact that English majors go on to so many different careers creates a real opportunity both for our students and for us as a department. The lists more than a dozen professional careers in which English and other humanities majors work. To help our students navigate this complex world, we are piloting a course in winter 2018 called 鈥淐areer Decision-Making and English.鈥
It鈥檚 a major suited for 鈥榮cience jobs鈥
English also provides tools for success to graduates who work in what we might think of as 鈥渟cience jobs.鈥 A surprising number of our students head to medical or veterinary school. , as reported by NPR.
Bryanna Mariel Andrews 鈥15 credits her success in veterinary school to habits picked up in English classrooms like the 鈥渁bility to respond quickly to a topic or to have well-organized thoughts in a report.鈥
Students interested in medical careers while being English majors will discover that 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis English professors and are doing research in the new field of 鈥渕edical humanities,鈥 and we look forward to offering more courses in this area.
Faculty, staff and peer advisors available
In addition to our faculty, we have a great team of staff advisors and undergraduate peer advisors who offer our students personalized guidance on how to make the most of the major. We are especially excited to welcome students who are the first in their generation to attend college. We published a story recently on our website about our as well.
We invite students and parents to visit us in Voorhies Hall, check out our , like us on and sign up for our .
, chair of the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Department of English, is focused on connecting English majors to careers. His current research focuses on contemporary mass media, including novels, and he has a new book coming out in 2018: Media U: How the Need to Win Audiences Has Shaped Higher Education (Columbia University Press).