2022 Most Popular Master's Degree Colleges for Playwriting & Screenwriting in the Southwest Region
2Colleges in the Southwest Region
3Master's Degrees
If you plan on getting your master's degree in playwriting and screenwriting, you won't be alone since the degree program is ranked #284 in the country in terms of popularity. As a result, there are many colleges that offer the degree, making your choice of school a hard one.
College Factual reviewed 2 schools in the Southwest Region to determine which ones were the most popular for master's degree seekers in the field of playwriting and screenwriting. Combined, these schools handed out 3 master's degrees in playwriting and screenwriting to qualified students.
This is not our only ranking, nor the only degree level we have ranked.
In addition to this ranking, you may want to take at the rankings for different degree levels as called out above.
You can also narrow your search by location by filtering for a certain area of the country.
On top of that, you can visit our other rankings for playwriting and screenwriting.
Most Popular Schools for Master’s Students to Study Playwriting & Screenwriting in the Southwest Region
Explore the most popular colleges and universities for playwriting and screenwriting students seeking a a master's degree.
Most Well Attended Schools for Playwriting and Screenwriting Students Working on Their Master's
Harness your passion for storytelling with SNHU's Mountainview Low-Residency MFA in Fiction and Nonfiction. In this small, two-year creative writing program, students work one-on-one with our distinguished faculty remotely for most of the semester but convene for weeklong intensive residencies in June and January. At residencies, students critique each other's work face-to-face, meet with major authors, agents and editors and learn how to teach at the college level.
The bars on the spread charts above show the distribution of the schools on this list +/- one standard deviation from the mean.
The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), a branch of the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) serves as the core of the rest of our data about colleges.
Some other college data, including much of the graduate earnings data, comes from the U.S. Department of Education’s (College Scorecard).