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- How to Apply to an MFA in Creative Writing Program in Five Easy Steps
By Judy Halebsky
As the Director of the MFA program at °µÍø½âÃÜ and an associate professor of English, I would like to offer you my guidance about how to successfully apply to an MFA program.
A Master in Fine Art (MFA) Creative Writing application generally has four components: a resume, a writing sample, a statement of purpose (also called a letter of intent or an artist statement), and a letter of recommendation.
I’ll go over each of these items step-by-step, explaining how these parts of the application work and how you can address the requirements in a way that makes your application shine.
Cast your bread upon the waters. The time to decide whether or not to do an MFA in Creative Writing is after you’ve been accepted. There are a hundred reasons to talk yourself out of applying but since you keep thinking about it, listen to that voice and apply.
Added bonus: There’s no application fee to apply to the low-residency MFA in Creative Writing program at °µÍø½âÃÜ. The application materials are the same as applying for writing grants and residencies so you can use the application to apply to other things as well.
A resume gives a sense of where you are from, what you are interested in, and how you’ve spent your time.
Make sure it conveys a clear timeline. An MFA in Creative Writing is not a corporate job. It’s totally fine if you spent years living in a tent in the wilderness or on a meditation retreat or caring for family members. Just make sure there’s a progression in terms of the timeline.
Include anything that might be relevant to an MFA Creative Writing program. Are you a member of a book club? Have you tutored or taught anything (swimming, tennis, Zumba)? Has any of your writing been made public? Do you have a blog? This is a writing resume, not a job resume so include any activities or experiences that you feel are important to your path as a writer.
This is usually called The Statement of Purpose or an Artist Statement.
Submit a sample of your writing. You can either submit poetry or prose. The writing should be somewhat recent, something you have written in the last two or three years. Choose work that you want to share. It does not matter if the writing has been published or shared with a writing workshop. It just needs to be writing you feel reflects where you are right now in your work.
Poetry can be single-spaced. It can be a series of poems or a lengthy poem. Submit no more than 10 pages. There are no requirements on form or style. Just submit a sample of your poems.
Prose (fiction, memoir, creative non-fiction) should be double-spaced. Submit no more than 25 pages. You can assemble a number of short pieces. Or, if you are working in a longer form, you can submit an excerpt of a longer story, memoir, or novel. Most of the time, even an excerpt does not need to have an introduction or explanation. Remember, the people who are reading your writing are also writers. If you do want to have some framing, you can put that in the introduction letter.
Things to remember:
Applicants to the low-residency MFA in Creative Writing program at °µÍø½âÃÜ can choose between submitting a letter of recommendation or a meeting with the program director (that’s me).
These meetings give us a chance to connect in real time. You can ask questions about the program and get a sense of what it would be like to study at °µÍø½âÃÜ on our San Rafael, California campus. This is by far the easiest option. But if you insist on getting a written recommendation, here are some tips:
Ask someone who knows you well. It doesn’t have to be a professor. It can be someone you know through work. Or, someone that knows you through an organization or community group. We’re reading the letter to see if you are going to work well as part of a group, be generous with peers and faculty, embrace new experiences, that sort of thing. We’ll have your transcripts and your writing sample, so we don't need a letter testifying to your brilliance, which will already come through in the other parts of the application.
Those are all the steps! You are on your way to an MFA in Creative Writing.
Apply to °µÍø½âÃÜ's low-residency MFA Creative Writing program
For guidance or more information, reach out to our admissions counselor or me.
Judy Halebsky, MFA Director
Email: judy.halebsky@dominican.edu
Cell: (415) 724-2398
Office of Graduate Admissions
Email: graduate@dominican.edu
Phone: (415) 485-3280