Astute observers may notice some slight disparities between the funding rankings here and those that appeared in the November/December 2008 issue of Poets & Writers Magazine. As the task of gathering data on MFA programs is an ongoing one, and as many programs have responded to their prior ranking by making additional data available online, some movement in the rankings has occurred. There have also been changes to the methodology used for the funding rankings.
The funding ranking that appears here is similarly responsive to applicants' stated values: In short, the programs are ranked by both the annual and overall tuition- and health care-exclusive dollar value of their funding packages, as modified by the cost of living in the program locale (compared against a single, national-average locale, randomly selected as Providence, Rhode Island) and the duration of the program. Only monies that are guaranteed programwide are considered in calculating a program's financial aid package. This is consistent with a growing trend among applicants to generally favor longer rather than shorter programs, and full-funding schemes rather than tiered aid systems. (Full funding is defined here as providing the equivalent of a full-tuition waiver and a cost-of-living-adjusted minimum stipend of $8,500 to every student.)
While application strategies will differ greatly from applicant to applicant, and fundamentally are dependent upon individual values—and a careful weighting of those values—it is critical for applicants to have some sense of their chances of admission at a program before adding it to their application list. The selectivity ranking provided here uses available acceptance-rate data, though only programs with more than a hundred annual applicants in fiction and poetry combined are included. (Nonfiction applicants are not included in this data set or in the overall applicant poll.) As most programs receive one nonfiction application for every four poetry applications and six fiction applications, and more than half of all full-residency MFA programs nationally do not offer the nonfiction genre, the absence of nonfiction data from the overall ranking and the selectivity ranking has minimal effect on the final rankings—and what effect it does have is necessary to keep the playing field level for all the programs ranked.
The furor surrounding educational rankings in major areas of graduate study—law, medicine, engineering, business, and doctoral programs in the social sciences, sciences, and humanities—never really dies down, but there is a tacit presumption that carefully collated educational data, organized and ranked on an annual basis, can, in time, produce a substantially better-informed applicant pool. While no ranking can or should ever absolve applicants and MFA faculty members and administrators from the responsibility of making their own independent judgments, any ranking system that reflects the values of its most important consumers offers at least a chance of becoming, in time, a virtuous circle. To the extent aspiring young writers are seeking well-funded communities of artists where they will receive the precious commodity of time, these rankings reflect those values, and, as a result, programs responsive to such applicant needs are the most likely to find favor in the rankings. In turn, these programs will receive more applications in the coming months and years. As the most-applied-to programs also enjoy the luxury of being the most selective—and therefore the most attractive to young writers seeking the inspiration of a community of talented peers—these rankings offer the promise of nudging programs toward doing more for their students and encouraging all students to be more deliberate about how they make a critical life decision.
*For the full article and additional data for each program, including size, duration, cost of living, teaching load, and curriculum focus, see the November/December 2009 issue.
Seth Abramson is the author of The Suburban Ecstasies (Ghost Road Press, 2009) and a contributing author to The Creative Writing MFA Handbook (Continuum, 2008). His poems have recently appeared in Best New Poets 2008, Poetry, the American Poetry Review, New American Writing, Crazyhorse, Subtropics, and elsewhere. In 2008 he was awarded the J. Howard and Barbara M. J. Wood Prize by Poetry. A graduate of Harvard Law School and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, he is currently a doctoral candidate in English at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Comments
jelhai replied on Permalink
Low-residency programs
Seth Abramson wrote: "Generally speaking, low-residency programs do not offer much if any financial aid, cannot offer teaching opportunities to students,...are less likely to be gauged on the basis of their locales (as applicants only spend the briefest of periods on campus), and, because their faculties are part-time, are more likely to feature star-studded faculty rosters."
Given that hundreds, surely thousands, of people DO apply to low-residency programs each year, doesn't that suggest that many of the qualities measured in these rankings are unimportant to a significant number of students? And what is the basis for asserting that low-residency faculties are more star-studded than others? Even if it were true, how would it matter?
Finally, don't rankings merely offer a lazy short cut to school selection, perpetuating the myth that some programs are inherently better than others, when prospective students would benefit most by finding the program that is best suited to their individual aims and needs? You may not intentionally provide these rankings as a template for school selection, but you can bet that many people will foolishly use them that way, just as people use the US News & World Report rankings.
Seth Abramson replied on Permalink
Re:
Hi Jelhai,
You're absolutely right that the hundreds (not thousands; the national total is under 2,000) of aspiring poets and fiction-writers who apply to low-residency programs annually are, generally speaking, a very different demographic than those who apply to full-residency programs: they tend to be older, they are more likely to be married and/or have children, they are more likely to be professionals (i.e. have a career rather than a job), they are more likely to be (only relatively speaking) financially stable, they are more likely to have strong personal, financial, or logistical ties to their current location (hence the decision to apply to low-res programs, which require minimal travel and no moving). That's the reason this article did not contemplate low-res programs, in additional to the reasons already stated in the article. So when the article makes claims about MFA applicants, yes, it is referring to full-residency MFA applicants. Assessing low-residency programs and their applicants would be an entirely different project, requiring a different assessment rubric as well as--as the article implicitly acknowledges--a different series of first principles about applicant values.
As to the rankings that are here, keep in mind that what you're seeing is an abbreviated version. The full version, available either in the upcoming print edition or as an e-book (available for purchase on this site), includes data categories for each school: duration, size, funding scheme, cost of living, teaching load, curriculum focus (studio or academic). These are some of the most important "individual aims and needs" the hundreds and hundreds of MFA applicants I've spoken with over the past three years have referenced. Indeed, I've even done polling (the first-ever polling of its kind) to ask applicants what they value most in making their matriculation decision: in a recent poll of 325 MFA applicants (where applicants could list more than one top choice), 59% said funding was most important, 44% said reputation (e.g. ranking) was most important, 34% said location, 19% said faculty, and much smaller percentages said "curriculum" and "selectivity."
These rankings (and the article above) specifically urge applicants to make their own decisions about location, but provide ample information about funding, reputation, curriculum, and selectivity--four of applicants' top six matriculation considerations. Needless to say, many applicants will have "individual aims and needs" that they need to consider in making their matriculation decision, and I always urge them to look to those needs with the same fervor they consider (as they do) funding, reputation, location, and so on. But to imply these rankings haven't done the necessary footwork to ask applicants what their primary aims and needs are is simply incorrect. In fact, in the poll referenced above applicants were given the opportunity to vote for "none of the above"--meaning, they were invited to say that their top consideration in choosing a school was something other than the six categories referenced above. Only 1% of poll respondents chose this option. So when we speak casually of "individual aims and needs," I think we need to remember that these aims and needs are no longer as unknowable as they once were--largely due to efforts like the one that produced these rankings. And again, for those who don't see their own aims and needs reflected in the data chart that accompanies this ranking (and which you haven't seen yet), I say--as I always say--that these rankings and this data should be used only as a starting point for making an intensely personal and particularized decision.
Take care,
Seth
Seth Abramson replied on Permalink
Re:
P.S. I should say, too, that the poll I mentioned above is just one of many. Another poll (of 371 applicants, where applicants could pick more than one first choice), showed that 57% of applicants have as their top "aim" getting funded "time to write," 42% say employability (i.e. the degree itself), 36% say mentoring (which causes them to primarily consider program size, as program size helps determine student-to-faculty ratio), 34% say "community" (which again causes applicants to consider program size, though it pushes many of these applicants to consider larger programs, i.e. larger communities), 19% say "the credential" (again, as represented by the degree itself, though this also pushes such applicants to favor shorter programs, with a lower time-to-degree), and much smaller percentages said that they wanted an MFA to validate themselves as writers or to avoid full-time employment (very similar to wanting "time to write," per the above, just as "validation" is intimately related to "mentoring" and "the credential"). Again, these polls were not intended to be exhaustive, though it's noteworthy that 0% of poll respondents chose "none of the above."
clairels replied on Permalink
Suspicious
A graduate of Harvard Law School and the Iowa Writers' Workshop
I'm not accusing anyone of anything, but you have to realize how suspicious this looks.
Seth Abramson replied on Permalink
Re:
Hi Clairels,
I'd respond to your comment, but honestly I have absolutely no idea what you mean to imply or what your concern is. I attended both those programs (J.D., 2001; M.F.A. 2009), and certainly don't regret either experience.
Take care,
S.
Seth Abramson replied on Permalink
P.S. I think it was the
P.S. I think it was the reference to HLS that threw me. If you're talking about my IWW affiliation (as I now see you might be), I don't know what to tell you except to say that you won't find a single person who's well-versed in the field of creative writing who's surprised by Iowa's placement in the poll--a poll that was taken publicly and with full transparency, and whose results are echoed in/by the 2007 poll, the 2008 poll, the (ongoing) 2011 poll, USNWR's 1996 poll, and the 2007 MFA research conducted by The Atlantic. Iowa has been regarded as the top MFA program in the United States since the Roosevelt Administration (1936). In three years of running MFA polls I'll say that I think you're the first person to suggest to me (even indirectly) that Iowa might have finished first in the poll for any reason other than that it finished first in the poll (to no one's surprise). So no, I can't say that I see my affiliation with the IWW--an affiliation I share with thousands of poets (Iowa graduates 250 poets every decade) is "suspicious." --S.
sweetjane replied on Permalink
To be fair, Seth, I think
Seth_Abramson replied on Permalink
Hi SJ, Sorry for any
J Thomas Lore replied on Permalink
Acceptance Rates
J Thomas Lore replied on Permalink
And Seth, there was a link
Seth Abramson replied on Permalink
Hi JTL, Per my contract
sweetjane replied on Permalink
"Sorry for any confusion--my
Seth_Abramson replied on Permalink
Hi Phoebe, I've addressed
sstgermain replied on Permalink
question about collection of information
Seth_Abramson replied on Permalink
Hi SSTG, This was one of
ewjunc replied on Permalink
nothing is absolutley objective
sethabramson replied on Permalink
Hi ewjunc, The article's
OKevin replied on Permalink
Hi Seth, Good job. Have a
sethabramson replied on Permalink
Hi there Kevin, thanks so
illingworthl replied on Permalink
Re: UNH Core Faculty--include Mekeel McBride, please!
sashanaomi replied on Permalink
Other factors: health insurance
Since Seth Abramson is considering cost of living and funding, I think he should consider another, really huge factor: Does the school offer health insurance? There are some very highly ranked CUNY programs. Yes, CUNY is cheap, but there is no health insurance. If you really want to commit to a writing program, you don't really have time for a full-time job with health benefits. Health insurance was a big factor in my selection, and I'm sure it is for many others as well.