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In reply to the discussion: The Death of the English Degree, Brought on by Critical Analysis [View all]UTUSN
(77,701 posts)10. Thanks. I "get" lie/lay and those basics. I wanted (back then) to be grammatically worthy of
English scholarship and felt that college had left me behind. Now I know that fads in "Education" are as faddish as in any other field.
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The Death of the English Degree, Brought on by Critical Analysis [View all]
TheBlackAdder
Apr 2014
OP
R#1 & K for, I are an English (lit) major, & when *was* it not a poor choice for the marketplace?!1
UTUSN
Apr 2014
#3
Thanks. I "get" lie/lay and those basics. I wanted (back then) to be grammatically worthy of
UTUSN
Apr 2014
#10
Real and useful writing can be taught directly, without an English Departments many detours
FarCenter
Apr 2014
#8
IIRC, the only time freshmen saw an English professor was a once a week lecture in the auditorium
FarCenter
Apr 2014
#29
With the exception of playwriting and music, most BFA & MFA limit Creative Writing skills.
TheBlackAdder
Apr 2014
#11
College provides an environment where artists/writers can interact with one another
KittyWampus
Apr 2014
#20
One of my goals, as a continuing education student, is to obtain your skill level or higher.
TheBlackAdder
Apr 2014
#18
Great post! I'm not an English major and I think it shows. :) However...
Sarah Ibarruri
Apr 2014
#21
Yes, I read the OP and that's what it said, but that's why I asked the why of it.
Sarah Ibarruri
Apr 2014
#24
Thank you. Very interesting explanation of how English departments tend to go nowadays
Sarah Ibarruri
Apr 2014
#30
I was a literature major, but this is an example of why I chose a creative writing emphasis.
nomorenomore08
Apr 2014
#36
Um, an English Literature degree is not the same thing as a creative writing degree.
6000eliot
Apr 2014
#38
Many people who obtain English degrees are not doing so to get some crappy job.
bemildred
Apr 2014
#39
Media & Communication also rank in the bottom tier of paying professions. nt
TheBlackAdder
Apr 2014
#40