Ask to Study - Ask your questions about online degrees

English - Dana College

Ask your questions about this Campus Bachelor program from Dana College




English Bachelor from Dana College details


Program Format: Campus Program Level: Bachelor

English from Dana College is a Campus Bachelor English degree that prepares you for a Liberal Arts career. The individual attention you receive as an English major at Dana College will help you determine the career path that is best for you. The critical thinking and writing skills you develop as an English major prepare you for a wide variety of career opportunities beyond traditional English professions. Not only can you become a writer, teacher, lawyer or actor, but the skills you learn at Dana College will prepare you for careers in management, administration, advertising, public relations, government service and a variety of other professions. It must also be noted that English is traditionally excellent preparation for a career in law. Our graduates have included one who was named editor of the Law Review at the College of William and Mary and another who was the Outstanding Law Student in her class at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Minors are also available in creative writing and theater arts. The major features a core of courses that are designed to provide every student with a solid grounding in the major works and periods of English , American and World literature and with experience in the critical analysis of one of the greatest of all writers, William Shakespeare. View more details on Dana College . Ask your questions and apply online for this program or find other related English courses.

If you are interested in appling online for this English degree, this Google search for Dana College might help.
More Resources:

Here you have more valuable resources related to this Dana College program. You can discover more about English or other closely related English topics on the next external pages :

Ups, we didn't find any question about English on our external sources. Why don't you ask one yourself?