The origins of the School of English can be traced back to the teaching of English Literature at the College of Commerce during the 1920s, which led to the creation of a Department of English & Secretarial Studies in the same college during the 1950s. In 1959, the department began offering the external University of London BA English degree. One of the graduates during this period was the celebrated novelist
Jim Crace. During the 1960s, the department became the Department of English & Foreign Languages in a Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, and this became one of the constituent faculties when the City of Birmingham Polytechnic was formed in 1971. During the 1980s, the department became the Department of English & Communication Studies in the Faculty of Health and Social Sciences. In 1985 the English degree was revised and renamed BA English Language & Literature. At the time this was one of the few single honours courses that allowed students to combine literary and linguistic study. When polytechnics were given university status in 1992, Birmingham Polytechnic became the University of Central England in Birmingham. English and Communication Studies went their separate ways, Communication Studies to Art & Design, and English (now the School of English) to the Faculty of Computing & Information Studies, which was eventually renamed the Faculty of Computing, Information & English (CIE). In 2004, the School joined the Faculty of Law & Social Sciences. Following a faculty reorganisation in the renamed Birmingham City University in 2007, the School of English found itself in the Faculty of Performance, Media & English (PME), before joining the Arts, Design & Media faculty (ADM) in 2014. In 2019, the School of English and the School of Media were joined together to become the Birmingham Institute for Media and English (BIME). In 2023, BIME was renamed as the College of English and Media (CoEM) and renamed once again in 2025 as the Department of English and Media (DoEM), with film and photography provision being moved to the department. As of 2026, the department is part of the reformulated School of Arts (introduced in 2025). ==Courses==