English Degrees & Programs

Stretch your faith and your reason by journeying into the challenging worlds and words of others.

Go beyond required composition and literature courses into a department rich in writing and globally conscious literary study. Join a Westmont professor and 24 classmates for a semester in England, where literature comes alive in context. Be transformed by close encounters with novels, poems, short stories, plays, and essays from around the world. Explore creative writing, film studies, journalism, gender studies, teacher preparation, and internships. Easily add a second major to broaden your education.

Below find a sample schedule for the English Major. Note that all students should meet regularly with their advisor to discuss their major progress and overall degree plan. Refer to the English major requirements in the College Catalog for more information.

All Majors and Programs

Alumni Stories

Taylor Tejada ’19 is an elementary school teacher and screenwriter. After Westmont, Taylor received his M.F.A. in Screenwriting from the University of Southern California’s prestigious School of Cinematic Arts. His master’s thesis was a feature-length script exploring the world of death metal from the perspective of a runaway teen. Currently, Taylor writes scripts inspired by his Peruvian and Quechuan heritage, where Latine and indigenous characters are forced to confront their pasts after making the biggest mistake of their lives. He also teaches English and Creative Writing. As a teacher, he hopes to embody everything that the Westmont English Department taught him– namely, that stories are the best thing in the world and that everyone has a story to share.

Caylie Cox ’21 adventured through the British Isles on England Semester, worked in Writers’ Corner, and completed a Major Honors Project. She was accepted on the strength of this writing sample into Texas Christian University’s Rhetoric and Composition Ph.D. program, where she received a fellowship and an extra grant for academic achievement. She now researches writing as storytelling while teaching first-year Composition at TCU. Caylie’s Westmont education prepared her well not only for the academic rigor of graduate school but also for keeping her faith strong in an unfamiliar context. She could not have asked for a better foundation for her dream of earning a Ph.D. and demonstrating Christ’s love through teaching others.

Career Pathways

Westmont English majors and minors take their enhanced abilities in reading, writing, and unpacking complex subjects into a variety of career pathways:

  • Law
    Teaching
  • ESL/EFL Education
  • Creative Writing
  • Publishing & Editing
  • Journalism
  • Screenwriting
  • Corporate Communications
  • Ministry
  • Marriage & Family Therapy
  • Technology & Innovation
  • Human Resources
  • Medicine
  • Health Services Administration
  • Grant-Writing
  • Marketing
  • Digital Content Creation
  • Non-Profit Administration
  • Social Entrepreneurship
  • And More!

English Major Graduate Careers Internship Placements

Current Events

Program Requirements

Click on each link for course and program descriptions from the 2025-26 catalogue.
 

Course Descriptions

English Major 

English Minor 

Writing Minor
 

See college catalogue for our most recent minor requirements.

Sample Schedule

Fall
  • ENG 7H, 60 or 90
Spring
  • ENG 44, 45, or 60 (each of these can be repeated when offered with a different instructor or topic)
Fall
  • ENG 44, 45, or a writing elective (ENG 87, 104, or 111)
Spring
  • ENG 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, or 165 or another upper-division literature course to fulfill a core requirement (such as Literature before 1800, Single Author/Pair of Authors, Identity, or Literature of the Americas/Anglophone Literature)
  • ENG 014, 101, or another elective 
Fall
  • Upper-division literature course to fulfill a core requirement (such as Literature before 1800, Single Author/Pair of Authors, Identity, or Literature of the Americas/Anglophone Literature)
  • Upper-division writing elective (ENG 111, 104, 141, 142, or 143)
  • Internship (ENG 190, APP 190), or equivalent work for Horizon, Phoenix, or Writers’ Corner
Spring
  • Upper-division literature course to fulfill a core requirement (such as Literature before 1800, Single Author/Pair of Authors, Identity, or Literature of the Americas/Anglophone Literature)
  • Upper-division literature or writing elective
  • Internship (ENG 190, APP 190), or equivalent work for Horizon, Phoenix, or Writers’ Corner
Fall
  • Upper-division literature course to fulfill a core requirement (such as Literature before 1800, Single Author/Pair of Authors, Identity, or Literature of the Americas/Anglophone Literature) or an upper-division writing elective course
  • Internship (ENG 190, APP 190), or equivalent work for Horizon, Phoenix, or Writers’ Corner
Spring
  • ENG 192 Capstone or 199 Major Honors
  • Internship (ENG 190, APP 190), or equivalent work for Horizon, Phoenix, or Writers’ Corner

Global Opportunities

Westmont’s England Semester 

Westmont’s Europe Semester 

Westmont in Northern Europe 

Food Systems & Food Writing: California, Iceland, Italy Mayterm 

Artist in the City: New York City Mayterm

The Horizon

The Horizon, Westmont’s newspaper, is published by students each week and features news and views on a variety of issues and topics.

To inquire about contributing to the paper or serving on the staff, contact the editor-in-chief through the Horizon email horizon@westmont.edu.

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Phoenix

The Phoenix is Westmont's literary, art, and music publication produced by students and featuring all student work. 

The Phoenix publication is made available during the annual spring semester Phoenix Night, which also spotlights live performances of student original music. For more information, contact the editor-in-chief, Julia White.

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Citadel

The Citadel, Westmont’s yearbook, is produced annually by students and features student portraits, the year's highlights, and honors for seniors.

The yearbook is free for all students and is made available to students at the end of the academic year. To inquire about serving on the staff or acquiring a yearbook, contact the editor-in-chief.

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