Programme/Approved Electives for 2026/27
None
Available as a Free Standing Elective
No
ENG-20100 Professional Experience with Creative Writing (Year 2)
This module broadens your knowledge of the variety of career pathways open to you, enabling you to identify, analyse, and showcase your degree skills and experiences effectively. Through completing and reflecting on problem-based tasks relating to different sectors, such as telling the story of a business, or writing a funding proposal to support a literary festival, you will build your creative and collaborative skills and learn how to articulate them in ways that will be attractive to employers.
Aims
This module builds on the L4 professional development module (Voices and Audiences) by offering students greater opportunity to apply their skills in non-academic settings, to work on a series of workplace briefs as part of a team, and tailored support with showcasing their developing profile to external employers.The module aims to1) Increase Creative Writing students' awareness of career opportunities open to them pre- and post-graduation;2) Build students' confidence in the transferability of Creative Writing degree skills to a broad range of sectors and organisations;3) Develop students' essential professional skills such as working to a brief, collaborative working, creative approaches to problem solving, digital literacy, and pitching;4) Support students in identifying and showcasing their skills, enabling them to build an appropriate and effective external profile;5) Enable students to critically reflect on the skills and knowledge they have gained from taking part in a variety of professional activities.
Intended Learning Outcomes
Articulate the variety of ways in which skills developed during the study of Creative Writing can be deployed in non-academic contexts.: 1Demonstrate an understanding of the aims and priorities of a variety of professional organisations and clients and design and complete effective outputs that support these.: 2Critically reflect on their experiences of completing professional activities, focusing on what they gained from these experiences.: 1,2Identify and articulate their subject-specific and transferable skills developed during the module (and their education more generally) and showcase these effectively.: 1
Active Learning Hours: 271hr workshops: 121hr seminars: 12Collaborative working sessions: 3Independent Study Hours: 123 Session preparation: 73 Assessment preparation: 50
Description of Module Assessment
1: Portfolio weighted 50%PortfolioAt the end of the module, students will submit a portfolio comprising:
1) A short overall reflection on the usefulness of the module to them and what steps they intend to take in future to enrich their professional profile. This should also include reflection on attending at least one careers-related talk by an external speaker timetabled as part of this module, other School Professional Development modules, or an extra-curricular opportunity organised by Careers and Employability Support. (400 words.)
2) A CV, cover letter, or LinkedIn profile tailored in response to one of the job specifications provided, accompanied by a 200-word reflection justifying their decisions. Students will not be judged on the extent of their relevant experiences but on the way they have showcased them in response to the specification. (Output equivalent to 500 words + 200-word justification.)
2: Essay weighted 50%Reflective EssayStudents will produce a critically reflective essay exploring their experience of producing an output in response to a real-world brief, accompanied by the output as evidence (e.g. a reading event strategy for attracting more diverse participants, or a funding bid to support a public engagement event). This should focus on the experience of collaborating with other students, receiving and acting on feedback, as well as justifying the intellectual and creative decisions they made. (Output equivalent to 500 words + 600-word essay.)