Program Overview

  • Duration

    1 Year (Self-Paced)

    Can be done in 6 months

  • Total Courses

    10

  • Total Credit Hours

    60 Hours

The English Program at MIU unfolds the realm of literary art, linguistic intricacies, and expressive writing. With a curriculum rich in canonical and avant-garde literature, critical literary analysis, and writing finesse, our graduates emerge ready to forge pathways in literature dissemination, editorial enterprises, academia, or the communications arena.

Social Science Basics And Analytical Skills:

At MIU, the program is structured to provide a comprehensive grounding in the essential pillars of business, encompassing accounting, marketing, finance, management, and organizational behavior. This foundational curriculum provides students with a holistic grasp of business mechanics and operations.


Community Engagement and Fieldwork:

At MIU, the emphasis on experiential learning within the College of Social Sciences is paramount. Students immerse themselves in practical research projects and community involvement, bridging the gap between classroom concepts and societal application. Such direct engagement not only sharpens their analytical and empirical abilities but also deepens their understanding of societal dynamics.


Cultural Diversity And International Social Issues:

Dedicated to fostering an inclusive understanding of global cultures and social challenges, the College of Social Sciences at MIU incorporates a worldly view into its curriculum. Students are encouraged to dissect and comprehend social patterns from a multinational perspective. Our study abroad options, coupled with global research initiatives and collaborations with international social scientists, equip students with a comprehensive worldview of the social sciences discipline.

Sociology is a comprehensive course that offers you a global perspective to help you better understand your own lives, provides strong focus on social diversity that allows you to see the impact of race, class, and gender, and focuses


This Economics course engages you with familiar real-world examples and applications that bring economics to life. The course explains you with easy-to-understand concepts that how economics is a part of your everyday life, and how it can be a useful tool in making personal decisions and evaluating policy decisions. 


English Literature course is an introduction to reading and writing, it’s founded on the principles of writing about literature. This course emphasizes literature, critical thinking, and the writing process. You learn how thinking, reading, and writing relate to one another by studying poetry, fiction, drama, art, music, and film.


This course retains the emphasis on the challenges of today's media while building on its extensive coverage of media history, effects, technology, and culture. The five part-organization-the media, media channels, media messages, media effects and media issues-provides a framework for you to understand the big picture behind today's media issues.


World History course present the big picture, to facilitate comparison and assessment of change, and to highlight major developments in world's history. This course emphasizes the global interactions of major civilizations so that you can compare and assess changes in the patterns of interaction and the impact of global forces.

Advanced Composition approaches the study of writing with focus on audience, authorial voice, and style. It emphasizes the writing process and rhetorical concerns and principles (matters, for example, of genre, context, and intention) which govern that process. Primary purpose of course is to develop the skills of already strong writers.


This course is an introduction to some of the major genres of fiction, poetry, and drama. Course provides an in-depth analysis and details about what are fiction, poetry and drama; how these three are envisioned and written. Critical theory of literature also helps you to better understand these literary concepts.


This course presents the full diversity of literature on women's issues and experiences, exploring their similarities as well as their interconnected differences. Course critically analyzes the wave of women in literature, in-depth analysis of feminist literature provides you with better understanding of this genre of literature.


This student-friendly and well-balanced course of the field of introductory linguistics pays special attention to linguistic anthropology and reveals the main contributions of linguistics to the study of human communication and how issues of culture are relevant. Language, language acquisition and non-verbal behavior is thoroughly analyzed.


With engaging selections, a strong emphasis on the writing process, and a visually appealing design, this thematically arranged literature course is sure to capture your attention. Course details the elements of literature and writing, the critical thinking process involved and how to use secondary sources for research writing.

Cost of Attendance

Tuition Fee Breakdown Cost
MASTERS DEGREE $27,000
Medical Insurance $0.00
Personal Expenses $0.00
Study Materials $0.00
Food Cost $0.00
Total Tuition Fee $27,000
WHERE AFFORDABILITY

Meets Opportunity

At Mid Island University, we believe in where affordability meets opportunity. Our commitment to accessible education ensures that quality learning doesn't come with a hefty price tag. We open the doors to knowledge, offering students the chance to thrive without the burden of overwhelming tuition fees, empowering them for a brighter future.

Our Eligibility Criteria

Explore HBU’s Eligibility Criteria for Students Worldwide

Eligibility Criteria

Bachelor's Degree or equiv. international education

Credit Hours

60 Hours

Course Duration

1 Year (Self-Paced)

Courses Offered

10