INTERESTED IN STORYTELLING?Students concentrate on performance skill and fostering dialogue across diverse populations. Apply Here Deadline for Spring 2025 is December 1. |
The Creative Arts Scholarship Program is for first-time, out-of-state graduate and undergraduate students, including international and transfer students. Applicants must be accepted to ETSU before they will be considered for a Creative Arts Scholarship.
The Appalachian region is rooted in the art of Storytelling. Inspired by the storytelling revival of the 1970s and the successful National Storytelling Festival in nearby Jonesborough, Dr. Flora Joy established storytelling as an academic program in the 1980s with a focus on education. The program has grown to be recognized for its interdisciplinary applications and has broadened its career training scope. Today, students may pursue an undergraduate storytelling minor, a graduate storytelling certificate, or the Communication and Storytelling Studies master’s degree. They have opportunities to learn from professional tellers through the International Storytelling Center in Jonesborough and through intensive storytelling institutes offered at ETSU. Students can attain mastery as performers and proficiency in storytelling applications across a wide range of occupations.
Students in the ETSU Storytelling Program concentrate on performance skill and craft in order to pursue a professional storytelling career, to foster dialogue across diverse populations, or to enhance their work as teachers, community workers, business leaders, corporate trainers, ministers, counselors, and social justice workers.
Our students also have the opportunity to join TaleTellers, an ETSU student organization that serves our region by bringing storytelling off campus and into the community. Members hone their skill and talent as they gain experience telling for festivals, slams, schools, and community groups. Membership is open to all ETSU students.
Additional Requirements for a Creative Arts Scholarship in Storytelling:
- Be an undergraduate storytelling minor or be a graduate student in Communication and Storytelling Studies
- Maintain a 3.0 GPA in the minor/M.A.
- Be an active member of TaleTellers student organization
- Tell stories each semester in various community venues
- Attend meetings regularly
- Tell at or help produce the Regeneration Story Slam (or its equivalent) each semester