Department of Children's Literature
Faculty
Cathryn M. Mercier, Professor, Children’s Literature and Director of the Graduate Degree Programs in Children’s Literature, and Director of the Center for the Study of Children’s Literature
Kelly Hager, Professor of English
Abbye Meyer, Assistant Professor NTT, Children’s Literature
Amy Pattee, Associate Professor of Library and Information Science and Children's Literature
Degree Programs
- The Department of Children’s Literature offers the Master of Arts in Children’s Literature (MA)
- In addition, the department offers the Master of Fine Arts in Writing for Children (MFA)
Dual Degree Programs
- The Department of Children’s Literature offers the Master of Arts in Children’s Literature (MA) and the Master of Fine Arts in Writing for Children (MFA)
- The Department of Children’s Literature offers the following dual graduate degree program: Children's Literature (MA)/ Writing for Children (MFA)
- In collaboration with the School of Library and Information Science, the following dual graduate degree program are offered: Children’s Literature (MA) / MS Library and Information Science
Study in Boston or in Amherst
In collaboration with The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art, Simmons offers the MA in Children's Literature, MFA in Writing for Children, and MA in Children's Literature/MFA dual degree. In the MA in Children's Literature/MS in Library Science dual degree, student take their Children's Literature courses at the Carle and their LIS courses in the SLIS-West program on the Mount Holyoke campus in South Hadley.
Internships and Experiential Learning
Children’s Literature students take advantage of internships in Boston and beyond to build their skills and resumes. Learning in the field proves invaluable to one’s choice of profession. Students have interned at publishing houses such as Delacorte, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Charlesbridge, Candlewick, Scholastic, Penguin, David Godine, and St. Martin's in addition to interning at a variety of literary agencies in Boston and New York. The Horn Book, Inc. guarantees two internships per year to Simmons students and students report that this engagement in children’s book reviewing fortifies their coursework in criticism and assessment. Students also find experiential opportunities at advocacy groups, such as Reach Out and Read and the Boston Book Festival. Some students also seek professional internships with local schools and libraries. Internships often carry a stipend or hourly wage; they do not earn academic credit.
The MFA in Writing for Children features two opportunities to work closely with publishing professionals on original creative work through the mentorship course sequence.
General Electives for Children’s Literature programs
The Children’s Literature graduate degree programs offers four-credit and two-credit courses.
Below, please find the list of electives for all graduate degree programs in Children’s Literature and Writing for Children. For a list of Core Courses, please see the individual degree programs. In some cases, a core course in one program (e.g., CHL 430-Writing for Children I is a requirement in the MFA program) counts as an elective in another program (e.g., ChL 430-Writing for Children I counts as an elective in the MA program).
Course |
Title |
Credits |
CHL 404A |
Poetry for Young Readers: You be the Judge (h) (g) |
2 |
CHL 411 |
Victorian Children’s Literature (h) |
4 |
CHL 413 |
Contemporary Realistic Fiction for Young Adults (g) for MFA only; required MA) |
4 |
CHL 414 |
Fantasy and Science Fiction (g for MFA only; required MA) |
4 |
CHL 415 |
The Whole Book Approach |
2 |
CHL 419B |
Humor (g) |
2 |
CHL 420 |
Thesis |
4 |
CHL 421 |
History of Children's Book Publishing (h for MFA only) |
4 |
CHL 422 |
Editing the Children's Book Manuscript |
2 |
CHL 423 |
19th Century American Children’s Literature (h) |
4 |
CHL 424B |
Nonsense and Subversive Rhymes (h)(g) |
2 |
CHL 424C |
Series Fiction (h) (g) |
2 |
CHL 427 |
Special Topics: Folk & Fairy Tales (h) (g) |
2 |
CHL 427B |
The Americanization of Fairy Tales (h) (g) |
2 |
CHL 428A |
A Single Text: The Graphic Novel and The Wizard of Oz (h) (g) |
2 |
CHL 429A |
Re-Reading Race in Classic Children’s Literature (h) |
2 |
CHL 429B |
The Girl Reader 1868 – 1908 |
2 |
CHL 429C |
Culture Matters (h) |
4 |
CHL 429D |
The Girl Reader 1908-1934 (h) |
2 |
CHL 430 |
Writing for Children I |
4 |
CHL 434 |
The Child and the Book |
4 |
CHL 435A |
Creators and Aesthetics: Focus on an Artist |
2 |
CHL 435B |
Creators and Aesthetics: Focus on a Writer |
2 |
CHL 436A |
Nonfiction-Narrative (g) |
2 |
CHL 436B |
Nonfiction-Expository (g) |
2 |
CHL 436C |
Metafiction and Self-Reflexivity (h) (g) |
2 |
CHL 437 |
Special Topics : Positionality |
4 |
CHL 450 |
Independent Study |
1 - 4 |
CHL 451 |
The Reviewer |
2 |
CHL 50X |
Summer Symposium and Institute |
4 |
(h) indicates that the course counts toward the required four credits of history for the MA degree
(g) indicates that the course counts toward the required four credits of genre elective for the MFA degree. A course can count toward one category only. For example, ChL 427 can count two credits toward the MFA student’s history elective or genre elective; however, it cannot count in both categories.
(h) Please note that not every course is offered every semester, or even every year.
Weekend and Intensive Courses
Two (2) credit courses may be scheduled to occur during a weekend, during which students may meet up to eight hours daily to engage in coursework. Similarly, some four (4) credit courses in summers, weekends, or other times of year may follow an intensive, immersive format.