Seminars
Participants are taught in small seminar groups of up to 10 students, and receive two one-on-one tutorials with their tutor.
Sunday
Seminar 1: Course Introduction: Explore why you want to write and discover how to maintain your commitment and self-belief.
Seminar 2: Ideas: How to source them and how to draw on life experience for great stories.
Monday
Seminar 3: Cracking Openings: How to hook your reader and create the right expectations as your story gets underway. How to avoid typical pitfalls.
Seminar 4: Developing Plot 1: Considering different types of plot structure and how much you should plan ahead.
Tuesday
Seminar 5: Developing Plot 2: How to make story choices and create sub-plots. Exploring how these can enrich, sustain and add narrative momentum to your story.
Seminar 6: Creating Character 1: How to use external attributes to convey a sense of personality.
Wednesday
Seminar 7: Creating Character 2: Discussion of the various levels of characterisation within your story. Techniques for conveying the inner lives of your characters.
Seminar 8: Point of View: An in-depth discussion of how your choice of point of view affects the story and the reader’s reaction to it and involvement with it.
Thursday
Seminar 9: Dialogue: How to write believable conversations and how to use dialogue to reveal more than the characters think they are revealing. How to structure and present dialogue and how to avoid the pitfalls.
Seminar 10: Setting: Exploring how location can add meaning and atmosphere to your story. How to describe your settings in such a way the reader feels they are there.
Friday
Seminar 11: Editing and Pitching: How to revise and polish your work, along with advice on how to create your submission package.
Seminar 12: Publishing Choices and Summing Up: Review what you have achieved during the week and take stock of your future aims – where do you want to go from here?
Programme timetable
The daily timetable will normally be as follows:
Saturday
14.00–16.30 - Registration
16.30–17.00 - Orientation meeting
17.00–17.30 - Classroom orientation for tutor and students
17.30–18.00 - Drinks reception
18.00–20.00 - Welcome dinner
Sunday – Friday
09.00–10.30 - Seminar
10.30–11.00 - Tea/coffee break
11.00–12.30 - Seminar
12.30–13.30 - Lunch
13.30–18.00 - Afternoons are free for tutorials, individual study, course-related field trips or exploring the many places of interest in and around Oxford.
18.00–19.00 - Dinner (there is a formal gala dinner every Friday to close each week of the programme).
A range of optional social events will be offered throughout the summer school. These are likely to include: a quiz night, visit to historic pubs in Oxford, visit to Christ Church for Evensong and after-dinner talks and discussions.