
Maureen Colgan
Program Coordinator
Phone: (914) 773-3855
Email: mcolgan@pace.edu
Join us for a tour, a class, an event, or spend a full day experiencing what it is like to be a English, Writing, and Rhetoric major. We also welcome your correspondence and are available for virtual office hours. We look forward to sharing information with you about our innovative English, Writing, and Rhetoric major and writing community.
Are you interested in coming to one of our events? Being our guest in one of our classes? Speaking to faculty and/or students? Learning more about our English, Writing, and Rhetoric major? If so, please fill out our interest form.
Program Coordinator
Phone: (914) 773-3855
Email: mcolgan@pace.edu
View the latest information, publications, accolades, and more from our full-time faculty.
University at Buffalo, MA in English
Manhattanville College, BA in English, concentration in British Literature
Professor Ellis has taught English at Pace University since September 2015, and also teaches English and developmental writing at Westchester Community College, Berkeley College, Empire State College, and Mildred Elley College. Professor Ellis is a former writing and verbal skills tutor for Huntington Learning Center and has taught courses for WCC's adult education Collegium program.
Quinnipiac University, MS in Instructional Design
Long Island University, MS in Curriculum and Instruction
Pace University, BA in Literature and Communication
Professor Fitzgerald is Senior Adjunct Professor of English at Pace University and at Quinnipiac University. Professor Fitzgerald has expertise in detective fiction and has published scholarship in “Crime and Detective Fiction” and “From Mean Streets to the Imagined World: The Development of Detective Fiction.” She has contributed to “Children Detectives and Crime Stories” and Crime Writing in “The Human Journal.” She also served as a past Director of Pace’s Writing Center.
The New School, MFA in Creative Writing - Fiction
Wesleyan University, BA in English
In the summers, Professor Ginsburg teaches creative writing to middle and high school students through StoryStudio Chicago. Previously, he taught creative writing through Commonpoint Queens, WriteOn NYC, and 826NYC, and has worked as an eighth grade science teacher at Democracy Prep Endurance Middle School in Harlem. He is passionate about helping students find joy in writing and discover their own unique voices. His fiction and nonfiction have appeared in The Brooklyn Rail, Wired, The Adroit Journal, Public Seminar, Midway Journal, The Corvus Review, and The Writing Disorder. His flash fiction story, “Dust,” was nominated for the Best Small Fictions Anthology.
Sarah Lawrence College, MFA in Creative Writing, concentration in Poetry
New York University, BA in English and Literature, minor in Creative Writing
Certified Teaching Artist: Community Word Project
Professor Gonzalez is an adjunct English professor, teaching mostly at Pace University, where she serves on several committees. She also teaches at Kean University and Union County College. Professor Gonzalez’s pedagogical approach is focalized through the lens of social justice and integrates mindfulness and compassion to counteract oppressive forces, allowing students to find, trust and cultivate their voice of empowerment. Currently, she is writing a children’s book and animation series, promoting global kindness and inclusivity, as well as poetry and a graphic novel.
Rutgers School of Law-Newark, JD
Sarah Lawrence College, MFA in Writing, concentration in Creative Nonfiction
Sarah Lawrence College, BA, concentration in Sociology
Professor Linton is an adjunct professor of English at Pace University and of Criminal Justice at Sacred Heart University’s Graduate School of Criminal Justice in Fairfield, Connecticut. She’s also an instructor at the Writing Institute at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York. Prior to entering academia, Professor Linton worked in the criminal justice system on the state and federal levels. Her writing has appeared in the anthology Solo Mom Stories of Grit, Heart, and Humor; Catapult Magazine; Mothermag; Ninth Letter; and other online sites. In 2021, Terri was selected as a 2021 Money for Women/Barbara Deming Memorial Fund nonfiction grant awardee.
City College of New York, MA in Language and Literacy
Professor Matias is an adjunct professor of English at Pace University, City College of New York, and Mercy University. She contributed to curriculum development by authoring a chapter for a First-Year Writing course pack during a semester at Pace University. In 2025, she will present her work at the Conference on College Composition and Communication in Baltimore, reflecting her commitment to advancing scholarship and pedagogy in writing instruction.
Walden University, PhD in Criminal Justice, specialization in Law and Public Policy
St. John's University, MA in Criminology and Justice
College of Mount Saint Vincent, BA in Sociology and English
As an adjunct instructor, Professor Pichardo works with students on developing their writing skills and defining their research and data collection skills. Her research interests include criminal justice policy and administration, the intersection of gender and criminal justice, and drug abuse through a social labeling lens. Professor Pichardo is a proud member of Alpha Phi Sigma Phi Nu and the National Society of Leadership and Success. She is also a notary public in the state of New York.
Professor Sarafa has been working at Pace for nearly four years. A published, award winning poet and founder of Fractyll Culture Magazine, she thrives on teaching languages.
Rutgers University, PhD in Comparative Literature
Tel Aviv University, MA in Literature
Tel Aviv University, BA in Psychology and Literature
Professor Sela-Levavi has published academic articles in English and Hebrew on the author SY Agnon, and articles on Israeli literature in Hebrew language magazines. She teaches literature and philosophy classes in Hebrew for Hebrew culture organizations through Zoom.
Fordham University, PhD in The English Novel and the Oxford Movement
Fordham University, MA
College of New Rochelle, BA in English and Speech Communication
Professor Thompson is Professor Emerita, a former Associate Dean of Dyson College, Director of the CAP Program in Pleasantville, and past President of the international Children’s Literature Association. Professor Thompson has published research on 19th century American journalism, “St. Nicholas Magazine,” and the history and development of the mystery genre in “Crime Journal” and especially on children’s literature, focusing on the ways that children’s books, both words and illustrations, reflect and shape the norms and values of the dominant culture that produces them. This includes the biography, “Mary Mapes Dodge.”
Sarah Lawrence College, MFA in Nonfiction Writing
Syracuse University, BA in History
As a faculty member at the Writing Institute at Sarah Lawrence College, Donna taught creative writing and journalism classes. She has 20 years of experience working as a senior writer, editor, and researcher at publishing houses including Time Inc., Condé Nast, and Scholastic. Her writing has been featured in magazines, books, newspapers and on the radio. In 2008, Donna founded her writing business, Storyguide, with a mission to help people around the globe tell their personal and professional stories.