English

14 schools compared · Average earnings $24,369/yr

Quick Facts: English Training

Where it's offered

English programs are offered at 14 schools across 10 states. Most students attend a school within driving distance of home — use the state picker below to see programs near you.

Earnings expectations

Graduates earn approximately $24,369/year on average one year after completion, per the U.S. Department of Education's College Scorecard. Pay scales with experience, certifications, and regional cost-of-living.

Apprenticeship pathways

There are no Department of Labor registered apprenticeship pathways currently mapped to English, but related trades may have programs — check apprenticeship.gov directly.

Program quality benchmark

Across the 14 schools we analyze, the average TradeSchoolOutlook Score is 26/100. Higher-scoring programs combine strong graduate earnings, manageable cost, and strong job-market demand — see the leaderboard further down for the highest-rated options.

What English Graduates Do

Your career will likely begin in a secondary school classroom, where you’ll spend your days leading discussions on literature, annotating student essays in Google Docs, and planning lessons that connect classic texts to modern life. With a few years of experience, you can earn tenure and advance to a department head, or pursue a master's degree to teach at a community college, designing your own syllabi and conducting specialized seminars with adult learners.

Read more

While overall job growth is flat, the demand for skilled educators remains steady. Your starting salary as a new teacher will grow with experience and advanced credentials, with postsecondary roles offering higher earning potential over time. It's crucial to know that software and AI are changing this work; tools can now automate basic grammar checks and grading, fundamentally altering roles like proofreading. However, this shift allows you to focus on what humans do best: mentoring students, fostering critical thinking through classroom debate, and providing the nuanced feedback that helps writers find their voice. Successful professionals are learning to leverage these tools to handle routine tasks, freeing them up for the more impactful, human-centered work that technology can't replicate.

You may also want to compare English with Rhetoric & Writing and Linguistics on earnings and ROI.

Schools Offering
14
Avg Grad Earnings
$24,369/yr
Avg TradeSchoolOutlook Score
26/100

Find English Programs in Your State

Trade and community college programs are local decisions — most students pick a school within driving distance. English is offered at 14 schools across 10 states. Pick your state to see a local comparison (states with fewer programs link to the state hub).

Which school is best for English? See our complete ranking of 14 programs →

Top English Programs Nationally

For context, here are the highest-scoring English programs in the country. Most students attend a school within 60 miles of home, so your state list above is usually more actionable — but these are the benchmarks others compete against.

14 schools ranked by TradeSchoolOutlook Score. Click any row for full earnings projections and career analysis.

# School Score Earnings ROI
1 Northern Arizona University
Flagstaff, AZ
44
36–48
$31,087/yr 37.5x
2 San Jacinto Community College
Pasadena, TX
44
35–48
$19,125/yr 75.7x
3 University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
Whitewater, WI
40
36–44
$27,013/yr 31.7x
4 Hodges University
Fort Myers, FL
39
33–42
$29,701/yr 20.0x
5 New Professions Technical Institute
Miami, FL
39
32–42
$26,026/yr
6 Davidson College
Davidson, NC
38
32–42
$34,707/yr 8.6x
7 Interactive College of Technology-Chamblee
Chamblee, GA
36
31–39
$25,434/yr 24.1x
8 CUNY Borough of Manhattan Community College
New York, NY
35
30–38
$24,207/yr 22.8x
9 Columbia College
Vienna, VA
35
29–38
$20,322/yr
10 Manhattan School of Computer Technology
Brooklyn, NY
35
28–38
$19,417/yr
11 Interactive College of Technology
Pasadena, TX
34
29–37
$22,950/yr 21.7x
12 Florida National University-Main Campus
Hialeah, FL
33
25–36
$21,930/yr 19.7x
13 Diversified Vocational College
Los Angeles, CA
33
27–36
$14,943/yr
14 MDT College of Health Sciences
Chicago, IL
32
26–35
$24,304/yr 10.3x

Highest Earning English Programs

Schools where English graduates earn the most in their first year after graduation.

Best ROI for English

Schools with the highest earnings-to-tuition ratio for English.

School ROI Multiple Earnings Score
San Jacinto Community College 75.7x $19,125/yr 44
Northern Arizona University 37.5x $31,087/yr 44
University of Wisconsin-Whitewater 31.7x $27,013/yr 40
Interactive College of Technology-Chamblee 24.1x $25,434/yr 36
CUNY Borough of Manhattan Community College 22.8x $24,207/yr 35
Interactive College of Technology 21.7x $22,950/yr 34
Hodges University 20.0x $29,701/yr 39
Florida National University-Main Campus 19.7x $21,930/yr 33
MDT College of Health Sciences 10.3x $24,304/yr 32
Davidson College 8.6x $34,707/yr 38

Related Majors

Explore similar fields of study.

Considering a 4-Year Degree?

Compare the trade route with a bachelor's degree. See how English degree programs stack up on earnings and ROI.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the typical salary after a English program?
The median first-year salary across 14 English programs is $24,369. School selection matters — the gap between the lowest ($14,943) and highest ($34,707) earning programs is significant.
Will AI replace English jobs?
AI resilience for English is classified as "Exposed." Approximately 37% of typical job tasks are hands-on — a moderate share of the daily work involves skills that current AI technology cannot perform.
Which school has the best English program?
Northern Arizona University leads all 14 programs with a TradeSchoolOutlook Score of 44/100. Graduates earn $31,087/yr — the ranking weighs earnings, ROI, AI resilience, and job market size equally.
Do English graduates get a good return on their tuition?
The average 10-year earnings multiple is 27.2x tuition. This is a strong return on investment. The spread between the best and worst programs is wide, so individual school selection has a major impact.
Data from College Scorecard, Bureau of Labor Statistics 2024–2034, and DOL RAPIDS. Methodology & sources →