A high point in the history of Framingham State University’s Master’s in English Program took place in January 2024, when English Department Chair Dr. Lisa Eck opened her home to program alumni.
The evening was a celebration of the seventeen students who had graduated at that point after the English Department launched the program in the 2018-19 academic year.
The alumni spent the evening commemorating their achievements in the company of their peers and the faculty who taught their classes and advised their theses—the very theses that were printed as congratulatory gifts.
English Department Chair Dr. Lisa Eck said, “It was so exciting to host everyone in my house! We have formed such a tight community — graduate students and graduate faculty — that it wasn’t surprising that once the speeches began in my dining room, honoring each advisor/advisee pair, we all just felt like family!”
Dr. Desmond McCarthy, English graduate coordinator, said, “It was so moving to see those who could attend in one place—to hear from them how much they valued their experience with us, and to be able to celebrate their accomplishments.”
Twenty students have now graduated from the program, and three more are preparing to write their theses.
The English Department’s M.A. program fosters many transferable skills necessary in the modern workforce such as time management, critical thinking, and writing, which serve alumni across many fields.
Time in the program is spent taking mostly literature courses from a range of periods and genres.
“What’s great about the program is we have experts in every area of literature who can advise a Master’s thesis,” Dr. McCarthy said. “No one who has wanted to work in a subject area has been turned down. We’ve been able to accommodate everybody.”
He added the English Department does have a “particular strength” in the contemporary period—from Dr. Eck’s course, Salman Rushdie and the Postcolonial Novel, to Dr. Rachel Trousdale’s Transatlantic Modernism to name a few. “We’ve had some extraordinary stand-alone courses that are focused on the modern and contemporary period.”
For current undergraduate students in the English Department, FSU offers a streamlined 4+1 Bachelor’s/Master’s program, in which students are able to complete both degrees in just five years.
This program allows students to take two classes during their undergraduate program for credit toward both degrees, a summer class after they finish their Bachelor’s, and then six courses—including their thesis—during their final year.
Dr. McCarthy said this can be beneficial even for students who don’t take all six of those final courses in a single year.
“Even if you’re attending part time, you’ve got two of your nine graduate courses already taken care of,” he said. “It saves you some money.”
This can be especially important for anyone moving into the field of secondary education—including nine of the twenty program graduates. Two program graduates also work in education-related fields.
Teachers who have already obtained their initial licenses need to earn their Master’s in a related content field within five years, and Dr. McCarthy said FSU is a great choice to fulfill this requirement because of the English Department’s focus on literature.
“What we hear from our students is that they’ve taken their pedagogy courses, they regularly undertake professional training at their schools, and what they want is a deeper and more profound immersion in the subject matter that they teach, which is literature,” he said.
He added the Department’s focus on underrepresented voices in literature also makes it possible for high school and middle school teachers to bring more diverse texts to their classrooms.
“The program gives teachers new material and perspectives,” he said.
For prospective graduate students interested in fields other than education, the English Department can provide a wealth of knowledge and training.
Dr. McCarthy said students learn research, communication, and writing skills on top of literary expertise, and added these are necessary for both classes and the thesis requirement.
“The ability to write a Master’s thesis, to be able to conceive of an original project—to organize it, to research it, to present it in a cogent way—is certainly indicative of your advanced research, analysis, and writing skills. Those abilities never go out of style in any knowledge profession. We live in the information age, and so I think these skills are more valued than ever,” he said.
Dr. Eck reflected on the program, saying, “Our graduate students have managed to energize the intellectual life of the Department, more than I ever imagined was possible. The atmosphere in our dual-enrolled courses is inspiring and rivals discussions I experienced in my own graduate program, back in the day.
“The privilege of working one on one with a graduate student on their Master’s thesis is an experience that feeds us as faculty — it reignites our passion for our field of specialization, and takes us all in new directions!” she added.
Sabrina Grammatic (B.A. ’22, M.A. ’23), a graduate of the 4+1 program in English, said the Master’s program took the skills in organization, research, and writing they developed in their undergraduate degree and further refined them.
They said the thesis in particular really pushed them to learn how they work most efficiently.
Grammatic said she wrote her thesis on Vladimir Nabokov with Dr. Rachel Trousdale and added they first became interested in Nabokov in an undergraduate Seminar in Literature class they took with her.
“In basic terms, it was figuring out how Nabokov differentiates between fiction and reality and how those worlds merge together. I had a lot of fun with it and Rachel was a really great resource to have because she’s very knowledgeable in the subject,” they said.
Grammatic currently works as the Student Experience Manager in the The Center for Student Experience and Career Development at FSU, and they said their experience writing their Master’s thesis helped prepare them for this role.
“That independence of the Master’s thesis definitely comes through in my position right now,” they added.
Grammatic said completing their Master’s degree was “very challenging but also very fulfilling. It was one of the hardest things I’ve done academically but also very rewarding seeing it all come to fruition.
“I would recommend the English graduate program, especially for the price point of it and the timing,” they added. “It’s cool to be at my age and already have a Master’s degree in something I was really passionate about.”