Undergraduate
Scholarships are available for students with an emphasis on Creative Writing or Journalism.
Click on the appropriate link below to learn more about each scholarship, and to access the related application.
- Creative Writing Application
- Journalism Application (incoming freshman and transfer students)
- Marshutz Endowed Journalism Award (current undergraduate students) awards up to $2,500 to a student majoring in English with a Journalism Area of Study, or Journalism or Visual Journalism minors. Created by Journalism alumnus Scott Marshutz, ’87, the award seeks to support and mentor the next generation of outstanding journalists by subsidizing the cost of experiential educational opportunities such as internships. Eligible students must be enrolled a Journalism Area of Study within Wilkinson College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. Interested students should email Professor Susan F. Paterno (paterno@tuwabuki.com resumes, cover letters and at least two but no more than five links to their published work. Selected students will receive funds directly in one single payment.
Graduate
The English Department offers three fellowships each year to select incoming MFA students with an annual stipend of $18,000 plus full tuition remission for the program. Additional full-tuition fellowships are available on a limited basis.
All M.F.A. applicants for fall semester admission are considered for the fellowships. To be considered, the application must be received by February 1. To find out more about these fellowships and other scholarships, please contact the Graduate Programs Coordinator David Krausman.
Scholarships: Graduate students are selected for certain scholarships at the discretion of the Department faculty. If you are selected, you will be notified of your selection via letter and/or Panther email; the notification will include information on the scholarship's name, amount of funds to be dispersed, and date by which you need to confirm your acceptance of the scholarship.
Assistantships: The Graduate Assistantships for MFA students function like work-study in that a student earns an hourly wage for 5-10 hours per week. Each graduate assistant is assigned to a particular faculty member to assist with a course, a reading series, a website, research tasks or other projects. Opportunities vary from semester to semester, and students gain hands-on experience to help them consider a variety of career options.
Teaching Associates: All graduate students (MA, MFA, Dual Degree and 4+1) in the English Department at Chapman University are eligible to apply to participate in the Department’s popular and competitive Graduate Teaching Associate (GTA) program at the end of their first year of study and after taking ENG 580: Teaching Composition (offered every spring semester). Selected graduate students earn a stipend and develop valuable experience teaching composition in a theoretically-informed and supportive environment, especially useful for those who wish to pursue teaching careers at community colleges or four-year universities and/or who wish to continue on to Ph.D. programs.
For more information, contact the English Department office during business hours or via email to the department chair.