If you need urgent support, call 999 or go to your nearest A&E. To contact our Crisis Messenger (open 24/7) text THEMIX to 85258.
feel a bit fickle!
Former Member
Posts: 1,876,323 The Mix Honorary Guru
Just emailed the English Dept at the uni I want to go to in September asking if it's too late to change my mind to English & American Literature with Creative Writing rather than just English and American Literature.
I feel this would be a good balance and yeah..I really want to do it.
Dya think its too late?
Another thing is I've just applied for Student Finance today quoting Q300 which is English and American Lit.
Arghhh
I feel this would be a good balance and yeah..I really want to do it.
Dya think its too late?
Another thing is I've just applied for Student Finance today quoting Q300 which is English and American Lit.
Arghhh
Post edited by JustV on
0
Comments
As for the finance side, deal with that as and when you get transferred, there's no rush. Mine didn't get corrected until June or something daft like that (as in the June that was at the end of my first year).
unless the different modules that you'd be doing are ridiculously over subscribed I wouldnt have thought your department will have any problems with it at all
Unfortunately they seem to be
Got a really nice email back today but wasn't good news. All the places are filled up but they are considering adding Creative Writing modules to my course but to sign up quickly because they will all get filled. There is still hope I guess!
anyways, I'm sure you'll love your course all the same :thumb:
Leave it for now until you get there - often they won't fill all their places cos people will miss their grades/decide to do something else/hate uni and leave after 2 weeks. Then ask to change. I know a few people who did it that way and it worked for them
That sounds promising - I just took 'plain ole Eng Lit' but actually when I enrolled and picked my modules I found out there was a really diverse range of modules - i.e there's nothing plain about Eng Lit!
I ended up taking modules in American lit and creative writing (which were taught by authors in residence) which were added to the syllabus in my second year.