Texas State's MFA program ranked 45th out of 131 full-residency graduate writing programs in the Poets & Writers survey for the application year 2012, the final year the rankings were released.[1] The program was also cited by The New York Times as having the vision "to build a program that might rival the famed Iowa Writers' Workshop."[2]
As of Fall 2018, 90% of Texas State MFA students received full funding through a combination of scholarships and assistantships.[3]
MFA students staff Porter House Review, the program's online literary journal. The publication features work by established and emerging writers from around the world. Working for the journal allows students to gain experience as editors, work with visiting instructors from across the publishing industry, and earn up to six credit hours for their work.[4]Porter House Review was preceded as the program's literary journal by Front Porch Journal, which ran from 2006 to 2018.[5][6]
Each year, the Endowed Chair in Creative Writing teaches one graduate MFA workshop. The Chair holder also visits classes and gives two readings. MFA students may take a workshop with only one Endowed Chair holder.
National Book Award Winner Tim O'Brien held the Chair every other year from 2003 through 2012. Now, as Professor of Creative Writing, he teaches six MFA workshops annually. Every workshop is open to every student.[8]
Texas State's adjunct thesis faculty is composed of nationally recognized writers who will read students' entire thesis manuscripts and then send written personal comments, offering one-to-one readings of the books students write during their time in the program.
Every spring, a writer-in-residence joins the MFA program for a series of readings, master classes, workshops, manuscript consultations, and other collaborative events.
The Spring 2019 writer-in-residence was Ada Limón.[14]
Clark Prize
The L.D. and LaVerne Harrell Clark Fiction Prize is a $25,000 award recognizing an exceptional recently-published book-length work of fiction. The Clark Fiction Prize is awarded annually by the Texas State University English Department.[15]