Low-residency program
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A low-residency program is a form of education, normally at the university level, which involves some amount of distance education and some amount of normal class time. These programs are most frequently offered by colleges and universities which also teach standard full-time courses, and most presently existing are Master's Degree programs in Fine Arts, often teaching creative writing.
[edit] List of Colleges With Low-Residency Programs
- University of Nebraska, MFA creative writing
- Goddard College, MFA creative writing, MFA Interdisciplinary Arts, Individualized, Education, Psychology, Health Arts BA & MA
- Antioch University, creative writing
- University of British Columbia, MFA creative writing
- Danube University Krems, with Transart Institute, new media
- European Graduate School [1] headquartered in the Swiss city of Loèche, canton of Valais, offering Master and Doctorate degrees in 'Media and Communications' and 'Arts Health and Society' (also known as 'Europaische Universitat Fur Interdisziplinare Studien').
- European Humanities University in Lithuania, BA and MA programs in international law, political science, European studies, cultural and visual studies, gender studies, arts, design, journalism, comparative history, cultural heritage. Languages of instruction: Russian and Belarusian, a number of courses are taught in English, German and French
- Fairleigh Dickinson University, creative writing
- Naropa University, MFA creative writing
- University of New Orleans, creative writing
- Pacific University, creative writing
- Queens College, Charlotte
- University of Southern Maine, creative writing
- Spalding University, fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, playwriting, and screenwriting
- Seattle Pacific University, creative writing
- Bennington College, creative writing
- Warren Wilson College, creative writing
- Seton Hill University, MA in Writing of Popular Fiction
- Murray State University, MFA in creative writing