Our nationally-acclaimed Writing Program fosters best practices in writing across disciplines and career specializations.
We believe that good writing means cogent thinking. Writing cannot be contained within a single silo, with immutable rules; it is a living practice that evolves and adapts itself across the range of human endeavor to meet society’s needs. As such, our curriculum supports the passions of our students -- be they in business and law; in media and the arts; or in health, science, and high tech.
Undergraduate courses train students first in critical writing, research, and analysis. Later courses apply that to academic, professional, and civic contexts, and to the study of writing as a discipline. Students may gear their writing to the Humanities, Social Sciences and Sciences, or tailor it to fields as specific as the environment, gender studies, and Chicano/a studies. Many delve into the art and craft of writing—from creative nonfiction to copyediting.
We offer a Professional Writing Minor and collaborate with the College of Creative Studies in the Writing and Literature major.
Writing Program News & Features
In a lecture last week, English professor Sowon Park spoke about how human writing is born from creativity and a need to make sense of the world, whereas AI-based writing can only be formed from a prompt and cannot pull from real emotion. Park explored the notion of AI replacing human writing through her own experience as a judge in the UCSB Mellichamp Initiative’s AI and Human Writing Competition.
Writing program faculty member Patricia Fancher has published a book titled “Queer Techné: Bodies, Rhetorics, and Desire in the History of Computing,” which explores the role of relationships, sexuality and gender in the computing community during its early years of invention, specifically surrounding Alan Turing. Her work was supported in 2023 by the Bazerman Fellowship, given to a Writing Program lecturer, which offered her the opportunity to edit her manuscript. In an interview, she discusses her process and challenges that came up.
UC Santa Barbara Philosophy alum Noe Padilla ‘20 was recently awarded three first-place prizes from the Indiana Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists for reporting for the Lafayette Journal & Courier. Now a reporter with the Indianapolis Star, Padilla got his start in journalism writing for student newspaper The Bottom Line, eventually and pursing the journalism track in the Writing Program.
Twenty students in the 2024 Raab Writing Fellowship program presented their final projects at a showcase last week, displaying multimedia works from books and zines to videos games and interactive websites — including research, fiction and creative nonfiction. Topics ranged from jazz, to AI to incarcerated women, and an Athenian prostitute. The program is generously funded by Santa Barbara writer Diana Raab, a former UCSB Foundation Trustee. It is administered by the UCSB Writing Program.
In an interview, UCSB Writing Program faculty member Craig Cotich discusses his new course, "Writing for Change." Cotich designed the course to teach strategies to help students overcome resistance to change with a curriculum that encourages creativity. Cotich's teaching style incorporates storytelling and hand-drawn illustrations to engage students. The course, open to upper-division students, aims to improve writing skills and prepare students to manage both personal and societal change.
This spring, UCSB’s Humanities and Fine Arts Division hosted a creativity contest to highlight the work of creative students across the UCSB campus. The following story won third place in the prose category.
This spring, UCSB’s Humanities and Fine Arts Division hosted a creativity contest to highlight the work of creative students across the UCSB campus. The following story won first place in the prose category.
This spring, UC Santa Barbara’s Humanities and Fine Arts Division hosted an annual contest to highlight creative student voices across the campus. The following are the winning submissions in the Photography category.
An award ceremony and luncheon was held at UC Santa Barbara’s Mosher Alumni House last week to honor the recipients of the Give Day 2024 Student Creativity Contest, sponsored by the Division of Humanities and Fine Arts. HFA dean Daina Ramey Berry joined students, faculty, staff, alumni and donors to celebrate. Winning entries will run in the coming days on the HFA website.
As part of its “Storytelling for the Screen” series, the Carsey-Wolf Center hosted queer and Native American director, writer, and producer Erica Tremblay for a post-screening conversation about her film, “Fancy Dance” with moderator Lisa Parks, a professor in UCSB’s Film and Media Studies department.
UC Santa Barbara Alum and former Daily Nexus reporter Gretchen Macchiarella spoke with journalism students of UCSB’s Professional Writing Minor about ways that they can use their reporting to spur social change. Macchiarella advocated for the implementation of Solutions Journalism, a type of reporting that highlights how people solve social problems.
Humanities and Fine Arts Dean Daina Berry and Film lecturer Wendy Jackson joined student moderator Maya Johnson for a panel discussion celebrating Black life in America. They discussed a variety of topics surrounding Black life both personally and within academia, in honor of Black History Month this February.
The Writing Program at UC Santa Barbara has taken a proactive lead in the field of AI with its recent introduction of a new AI Writing Program Policy. Daniel Frank, a lecturer in the Writing Program and one of the writers of the new policy, explores how instructors and students can implement AI in the classroom.
UC Santa Barbara’s newest construction project, the Interactive Learning Pavilion, has now been used by students and faculty for half a year and is inspiring many as the academic year starts. Working in ILP has motivated students in class and given professors ample resources to best lead their classes.
UC Santa Barbara Religious Studies professor Kathleen Moore recently sat down for an interview to discuss her introduction of Legal Humanities and Medical Humanities to UCSB in hopes of better-preparing students for their post-graduate careers.