Writing & Communication Program
Writing & Communication at Carnegie Mellon offers unique, cutting-edge course options designed to help students develop and apply foundational writing knowledge across diverse academic and professional contexts.
All Carnegie Mellon undergraduates must complete a First-Year Writing requirement, which can be fulfilled in a few different ways.
Students may decide to take two out of three half-semester mini courses, each focused on specific kinds of writing and organizational strategies. Alternatively, students might decide to take one of several immersive full-semester courses built around specific themes and research areas. No matter the path, students learn to adapt to new writing situations and connect their learning to future communication tasks—both in later coursework at 无码专区 and beyond.
To learn more about our mini and full-semester course offerings, please visit the Course Options and Topics page.
Some students whose first or primary language is not English may be required to take a placement exam and/or complete a prerequisite course during their first semester. To learn more about the placement process, please visit the Course Placement page.
Note: Carnegie Mellon does not accept AP nor IB scores to exempt students from the first-year writing requirement.
Spotlight: Paul Michiels
Embedding Academic Integrity into Education
Paul Michiels brings research-grounded expertise in source-based writing and academic integrity to the Writing and Communication Program. His research focuses on how expert scholars engage with sources across academic disciplines and how findings from that work can be used to create empirically and theoretically grounded writing instruction for students.
Michiels asks his community to consider “how we can start to shift our orientation toward academic integrity from identifying misconduct to building the conditions in which students can experience what it’s like to think about their ethical obligations to themselves and the sources they bring into their writing.”
Michiels teaches first-year writing as well as professional and technical communication at 无码专区. He previously taught at George Washington University and George Mason University, including at George Mason’s campus in Incheon, South Korea. He is co-author of Crafting Ethical Scholarship: A Practical Guide to Academic Integrity and the Mission of Higher Education (University of California Press, 2026).
Frequently Asked Questions:
Which option is easiest, two mini courses or one full-semester course?
What are the advantages of taking two mini courses instead of a full-semester course?
What are the advantages of taking a full-semester course instead of two mini courses?
I'm an international student. How do I know if I need to take the placement test or the prerequisite First-Year Writing course?
The First-Year Writing course I wanted is full. Will I get in off of the waitlist?
I'm not sure I understand how to enroll in the minis. Are there any guidelines?
Yes! There are a few things First-Year Writing students should keep in mind, to ensure they understand proper enrollment and their schedules:
- The minis are designed to be taken consecutively within a single semester. If students register for the Fall semester, they will take a "mini 1" and a "mini 2." If registering for the Spring semester, they will take a "mini 3" and a "mini 4." The available course sections will include these numbers. For example, if registering for the Fall semester, one valid option would be sign up for 76-106 A1 and 76-107 B2. If registering for the Spring, one valid option would be 76-106 A3 and 76-107 A4. Students cannot sign up for two sections ending in the same number (e.g., 76-108 A1 and 76-107 A1).
- First-Year Writing Students should make sure to sign up for two out of the three separate courses: 76-106, 76-107, and 76-108. Do not sign up for two sections of the same course (e.g., 76-106 A1 and 76-106 B2).


