Students pursuing a Bachelor of Arts in Children’s Literature and Drama/Theatre for the Young have the opportunity to interact with works of children’s and young adult literature and plays for the young in multiple ways.
Learn
In the Interdisciplinary Major in Children’s Literature and Drama/Theatre for the Young, students explore different genres and categories of texts for children and young adults and different techniques and styles of theatre and storytelling for young audiences. They study the current issues and debates within children’s literature and theatre, as well as their disciplinary histories, and they envision the future of these fields. They also discover how to bring literary texts to life through performance, theatrical exploration, and storytelling. Through reading, research, discussion, experiential drama, and performance, they consider how children’s books and plays reflect and shape individual lives, different cultures, and society as a whole while developing an appreciation for art in multiple formats. The degree’s scholarly, creative, practical, and reflective curriculum and instruction foster critical thinking, reading, research, writing, and presentation skills that are beneficial in many different professional contexts.
Opportunities
While pursuing this major, students have opportunities to engage in scholarly research related to texts for young people, to complete creative, multimodal projects and performances, and to share their scholarly and creative work as part of the Undergraduate Research Symposium. Students are also able to participate in hands-on, experiential learning through academic-service learning and Learning Beyond the Classroom courses and through school tour performances.
Graduates with this degree have gone on to exciting careers in teaching, librarianship, publishing, bookselling, writing, illustrating, directing, and acting. Other students who have successfully completed this degree have enrolled in graduate programs devoted to children’s literature, children’s theatre, English, education, and library science.