Called for More Opportunity
Writing with clarity, purpose, and results.
The Professional Grant Writing minor at the University of Providence develops grant writing professionals who understand how to locate funding opportunities through state and federal governments, private foundations, public charities, and venture philanthropists. The program trains students using storytelling and rhetorical techniques paired with human-centered programmatic design to open the door to the funding necessary to transform communities, industries, and the world.
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Program Highlights
- Human-Centered Storytelling Meets Strategic Funding
This Professional Grant Writing minor is built on a foundation in the humanities that develops ethical storytellers, integrating coursework in ethics, rhetoric, narrative, and analytical reading and writing to support success in the grant writing sector. Interdisciplinary coursework includes:
✔ Community Psychology, offering a richer understanding of the communities to be served and the needs and motivations of individual community members
✔ Business Ethics, offering insight into ethical business programs that create measurable value in their communities
✔ Research Methodologies, deepening students’ ability to locate opportunities, analyze the funding organization, and align their project with that organization’s core mission
✔ Organizational Finance, helping students develop cost-effective budgets that will assure funders of their fiscal responsibility
- Interdisciplinary Insight for Real-World Impact
As part of the Professional Grant Writing minor’s curriculum, students will complete both an internship and a capstone project. The internship will provide students with opportunities to create successful grants while the capstone project will showcase their course of impact throughout their program. These real-world experiences paired with didactic coursework will prepare graduates to become a Certified Grant Professional through GPCI.
- Engaging Career Opportunities
Once fully prepared, trained, and certified as a professional grant writer, graduates can work as independent grant writing professionals or lead fundraising efforts in the nonprofit sector through roles like Development Coordinator, Development Director, or Chief Development Officer. Career opportunities also exist in the for-profit sector, with roles like Director of Grants and Proposals or Program Director.
Program Curriculum
The Professional Grant Writing minor delivers 10 courses totaling 30 credit hours. Students must complete all courses and credit hours to successfully graduate. The minor contains courses in the humanities, English, business, psychology. and additional courses across the liberal arts.
Specific courses found in the Professional Grant Writing minor focus on topics such as Ethics & Enterprise, Research Methods, Organizational Budgeting, Grant Writing & Administration, and more.
Learn More: University of Providence Catalog
Program Cost
The University of Providence is committed to affordability and providing pricing transparency for all academic program offerings. Pricing transparency at UP includes:
- Accessible and up-to-date information on tuition costs, university fees, application and admission fees, deposit amounts, and additional program costs.
- Cost of attendance worksheets
- Information about scholarship opportunities and tuition discounts
- Information about the financial aid process.
Visit our Tuition and Fees page to access the latest pricing information.