Postgraduate Certificate in Screenwriting and Narrative Design

George Brown College - St. James Campus

Canada,Ontario

 0 Shortlist

12 Months

Duration

CAD 29,050/year

Tuition Fee

CAD 110 FREE

Application Fee

Sep 2025

Apply Date

Canada, Ontario

Type: College

Location Type: Urban

Founded: 1967

Total Students: 32,117 +

Int. Students: 4,900 +

Campus Detail

Main Campus Address

200 King St E, Toronto, ON M5A 3W8, Canada

Postgraduate Certificate in Screenwriting and Narrative Design

Program Overview

The Screenwriting & Narrative Design postgraduate certificate program will help you overcome the challenge of writing a well-structured story within linear and nonlinear contexts. Explore the elements of character, dialogue, scene, setting, texture, style and tone. You’ll master the subtle language variances in structured and open-world storytelling as you create memorable stories and scripts for film, TV, games and interactive media. You’ll also work with fellow students (directors, actors and designers) on student-led and potential research projects.

Program Learning Outcomes
The graduate has reliably demonstrated the ability to:

  • Produce linear and non-linear narrative content to industry standards using current and relevant software.
  • Create content employing traditional and non?traditional dramatic narratives with advanced application for entertainment writing within linear and non?linear mediums.
  • Articulate the differences between the varying mediums’ production processes and how the writer integrates into each process.
  • Investigate the varying guilds, associations, agencies and groups and how they interact with relevance to the different industries.
  • Differentiate the history of film, television, video games and interactive media from that of other media, as well as the intersections between them.
  • Analyze the evolving landscapes for production, distribution and content creation to anticipate challenges and opportunities arising from technological change and consumer demand.
  • Prepare for employment in the field by evaluating the present business climate of the relevant film, television, video game, online, mobile and interactive industries, and using interview and presentation skills, resumé-writing skills, proposal and pitch-development skills and portfolio preparation.
  • Conduct research using a variety of relevant research methods, including online and library resources, to do effective world-building and character creation.
  • Engage and invoke an emotional response from an audience, recognizing and using relevant style and narrative structures, including plot analysis, characterization, setting, dialogue, point of view, structure, length and originality.
  • Evaluate personal and recognized works of entertainment writing for traditional composition techniques, including “unity of effect,” as these apply to both traditional rhetorical structures and narratives with branching structures and/or multiple narratively coherent conclusions.
  • Manipulate point of view to develop narratives, analyze form and structure to apply evolving techniques, and compare setting and atmosphere to adjust narrative time within linear and non-linear narratives.
  • Assess personal and recognized works of traditional and interactive narratives for character development techniques, exploring limitations presented by traditional techniques in character development for non-linear and participatory character creation.