School of Humanities Course Cards 2015/16
BA (Hons) Creative and Professional Writing
UCAS code: W846 • Full-time: 3 years • Part-time: 5/6 years • Location: City Campus Entry requirements: Our typical offer would be 200 UCAS points normally achieved over a minimum of either two or more A-levels, an AVCE double award, BTEC National Diploma or other equivalent qualification. • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/cpw or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline BA (Hons) Creative and Professional Writing can be studied either on its own as a specialist degree, or jointly with another subject. Choose to study it with one of the following: English, UCAS code: WQ83, English Language, UCAS code: QW38, Film Studies, UCAS code: WP83, Philosophy, UCAS code: VW58 or Media and Communication Studies, UCAS code: WP8H. It’s an exciting time to be a writer. Not only are audiences’ attention changing around how you tell a story to them, you now have a much wider palette than ever before in which to draw them into the story worlds you create. This specialist course combines the practice of writing for different audiences and in different contexts and genres with the development of a reflective and critical understanding of writing. It is one of the only courses in the country to combine creative and professional writing, giving it a real emphasis on employability. Student writing, both in the classroom and in individual conferences, is the heartbeat of this specialist course. You will create, analyse and interpret different forms and styles of writing, focusing on three broad themes: craft of writing; reading as a writer; and working as a writer. In all your creative and professional writing modules, you can expect to spend time exploring theory and technique, reading the work of established writers, experimenting through writing exercises and producing your own original pieces. You’ll be taught by published writers whose books cover a wide range of creative, professional and critical disciplines, we also invite special visiting lecturers from the world of publishing as well as internationally renowned authors.
Typical modules may include:
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The teaching team are highly active and productive as writers - their publications in contemporary fiction, humour writing, literary criticism and creative writing pedagogy are important contributions to their respective fields and ensure the relevance and currency of their teaching.
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External examiner’s report 2012
Year 1: The Craft of Writing; Reading as a Writer; Reading and Writing Poetry; Myth; Popular Culture. Year 2: Auto/Biography: Life Writing; Humour Writing; Journalistic Writing. Year 3: Teaching Writing; Genre (eg. fantasy and crime writing) Writing a Novel; Independent Writing Project.
Careers As well as gaining transferable skills and entrepreneurial ways of thinking valued in the workplace, this subject specifically prepares you for a diversity of writing occupations in journalism, marketing and technical writing. Some of our former students have gone on to become published novelists and poets, web content writers and designers, writing teachers and copy editors.
Contact Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk /WLVArts
@WLV_Arts
BA (Hons) English Language
UCAS code: Q854 • Full-time: 3 years • Part-time: 5/6 years • Location: City Campus Entry requirements: Our typical offer would be 200 UCAS points normally achieved over a minimum of either two or more A-levels, an AVCE double award, BTEC National Diploma or other equivalent qualification. • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/englishlanguage or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline BA (Hons) English Language can be studied either on its own as a specialist degree, or jointly with another subject. Choose to study it with one of the following: Linguistics, UCAS code: QQ31, Creative and Professional Writing, UCAS code: QW38, Media and Cultural Studies, UCAS code: 5P2Q and Media and Communication Studies, UCAS code: QP3H.
Image credit: Aidan Byrne
The course will equip you with a firm understanding of the history and development of English and of the typical features of its use in a wide range of geographical, social and textual contexts. You will discover how English changed from a collection of Germanic dialects to being the global language it is today. You will explore questions such as whether men and women really talk differently, why there is prejudice against certain accents, how media spin is created, and what makes a joke funny. You will learn to analyse spoken and written language using a variety of approaches. You will learn to work with increasing independence and in the third year will undertake a small research project into a topic of your own choosing.
Core modules include: Year 1: How English Works; The Story of English; Year 2: Varieties of English; Text, Context and Spin; Year 3: Gender, Sex and Language; Language and Humour, Communication, Culture and Power; Language and the Mind; Independent Study.
Elective modules include: If you study English Language as a specialist degree, you also take the following modules: Theoretical and practical TESOL modules; How Words and Sentences are Formed; The Craft of Writing; Language in Use; Language and Society; Working with Sounds and Words; Language Variation and Change; Work Placement Module or Materials Evaluation and Design for TESOL. If you study English Language as a joint degree you can also take the following modules: Writing for Academic Success, Writing Poetry; Raising Intercultural Awareness, Popular Texts, Language and Meaning, Research Methods, and Tutoring Writing. You may also study a foreign language or take a module in volunteering.
If you choose to study English Language as a specialist degree, you will gain enhanced knowledge of the social factors influencing the use of English and you will hone your analytical skills through in-depth study of the sounds and structures of the language. The specialist degree also gives you a solid grounding in the theory and practice of teaching English to speakers of other languages (TESOL). You will gain practical teaching experience from the second year onwards and, in your third year, you may choose to undertake a work placement module. Students who have successfully completed the work placement module may be eligible for the Trinity College London (TCL) Certificate in TESOL.
Careers A degree in English Language equips you with the communication skills and problem-solving abilities which employers in many fields require. It will enable you to enter a wide range of careers including teaching, publishing, journalism, broadcasting, PR, management or speech therapy. You may also continue your studies to postgraduate level, as a number of our graduates have done. Students studying the English Language specialist degree and who gain the TCL Cert TESOL are qualified to work as teachers of English to speakers of other languages at home or abroad.
Contact Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk /WLVArts
@WLV_Arts
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BA (Hons) English
UCAS code: Q300 • Full-time: 3 years • Part-time: 5/6 years • Location: City Campus Entry requirements: Our typical offer would be 220 UCAS points normally achieved over a minimum of either two or more A-levels, an AVCE double award, BTEC National Diploma or other equivalent qualification. • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/english or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline English can be studied either on its own as a specialist degree, or jointly with another subject. Choose to study it with one of the following: Creative and Professional Writing, UCAS code: WQ83, Deaf Studies, UCAS code: BQ53, Education Studies, UCAS code: XQ33, Film Studies, UCAS code: WQ63, History, UCAS code: QV31 or Philosophy, UCAS code: QV35. BA (Hons) English combines the study of English literature with options on English language and world literatures. Explore a range of literary and non-literary texts from the Renaissance to the present day and from the West Indies to the West Midlands. This course features canonical writers and genres such as Shakespeare, the Romantics and the great Victorian novelists alongside the challenges to this tradition offered by Modernism, 1960s radicals and others marginalised by class, gender, sexuality and race. Throughout, you will be given the theoretical, philosophical and contextual tools with which to critically examine the process of literary production and reception, and to make informed judgements about literary value and cultural capital. You have the option to study modules on the evolution of sounds, and words and structures of the English language. You will be able to engage in the comprehension, analysis and appreciation of texts, as well as develop your language competence through a range of written, oral and digital resources.
Typical modules may include:
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The subject curriculum continues to be highly relevant both in terms of the student experience and in terms of reflecting the benchmark statements for English, which stress the importance of providing a full range of modules and a diversity of teaching and assessment methods.
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External examiner’s report 2012
Year 1: Reading Literature; Literature and Identity; The Story of English; Literature and History; How English Works. Year 2: Critical Theory/ Textual Practice; Shakespeare and the English Renaissance; Women’s Writing; Writing for Children; American Literatures; Varieties of English; The Realist Novel; Popular Texts. Year 3: Eighteenth-Century Literature; Positions: Literature, Society, Geography; Modernism; Romanticisms; Unpopular Texts; Contemporary Literature; The Victorian Vision; Gender, Sex and Language; The 1960s.
Careers Whilst primary and secondary school teaching is the largest single destination for our graduates, our graduates go into posts ranging from journalism and publishing, through to business and overseas employment.
Contact Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk /WLVArts
@WLV_Arts
BA (Hons) Linguistics
UCAS code: Q695 • Full-time: 3 years • Full-time: 3 years • Part-time: 5/6 years • Location: City Campus Entry requirements: Our typical offer would be 200 UCAS points normally achieved over a minimum of either two or more A-levels, an AVCE double award, BTEC National Diploma or other equivalent qualification. • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/linguistics or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline
Linguistics in a nutshell:
Linguistics can be studied either on its own as a specialist degree, or jointly with another subject. Choose to study it with one of the following: Deaf Studies, UCAS code: QB15, English Language, UCAS code: QQ31 or TESOL, UCAS code: XQ11. BA (Hons) Linguistics introduces you to the study of language and the role it plays in our lives. You will learn about the sound system, grammatical structure, language variation and change, language meaning, and language and the mind. You can also explore linguistics in a wider context, for example in relation to the media, the Deaf community or translation theory. Whatever route you choose, the study of Linguistics provides an analytical look at the most complex and unique form of human behaviour – language. The single honours degree seeks to provide you with the opportunity to combine the study of language and languages. Wolverhampton is the only University in the UK which offers a specialist Linguistics award that requires the study of two languages (including the option of British Sign Language [BSL]) in years one and two, and at least one language in your final year. Students who choose to opt for the BSL strand will acquire the skills necessary to communicate in this medium to post-intermediate level. The combination of Linguistics and Languages will make it easier and more desirable for you to spend a year abroad (usually between years one and two), often in a teaching post, thereby developing your maturity and resourcefulness, and enhancing your independence and spirit of enterprise. Visit our website to take our fun linguistics quiz: wlv.ac.uk/linguistics
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Typical modules may include:
The quality of teaching within Linguistics is excellent, with staff being extremely knowledgeable and enthusiastic, but also very supportive and approachable whenever they are needed. Staff-student relations are great and students are free to visit, phone and email staff and can always expect a speedy, helpful response.
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Graduate, BA (Hons) Linguistics
Contact Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk /WLVArts
@WLV_Arts
Year 1: Introduction to How Words and Sentences are Formed; Language in Use; choice of various Basic Languages (including French, German, Italian, Russian, Spanish and British Sign Language). Year 2: Language and Society; Working with Sounds and Words; Language Meaning (Semantics and Pragmatics); Research Methods for English Language, Linguistics and TESOL; choice of various post-Basic Languages (subject to satisfactory prerequisites). Year 3: Language Variation and Change; More about Words and Sentences; Language and the Mind; Language in Translation; choice of Intermediate Languages.
Careers A degree in Linguistics gives you the perfect grounding for any career requiring critical thinking, literacy competence, and a range of analytical and presentation skills. Graduates typically find work in publishing, journalism, advertising, teaching, public administration and business management. Employers of Linguistics graduates also include the civil service, the diplomatic service, the health service, the police, corporate executives and industrial technology companies.
Philosophy
UCAS code: see joint options for individual codes • Full-time: 3 years • Part-time: 5/6 years • Location: City Campus • Entry requirements: Our typical offer would be 200 UCAS points normally achieved over a minimum of either two or more A-levels, an AVCE double award, BTEC National Diploma or other equivalent qualification. • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/philosophy or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline Philosophy is offered as a joint honours degree which means that you study it in combination with another subject. Choose to study it with one of the following: Creative and Professional Writing, UCAS code: VW58, English, UCAS code: QV35, Film Studies, UCAS code: PV35, Law, UCAS code: MV15, Politics, UCAS code: LV25, Religious Studies, UCAS code: VV65, Sociology, UCAS code: VL53 or War Studies, UCAS code: LVF5.
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Studying Philosophy with English Literature at the University of Wolverhampton was undoubtedly one of the best experiences of my life. It was both challenging and rewarding. The skills I learned during my course, such as the ability to analyse material critically and draw conclusions from them independently, are not only useful for academics but for other career choices, as employers value these skills.
This thought-provoking and stimulating course challenges beliefs, ideas and values held by common sense within everyday social and political life, and by the sciences, religions, arts, moralities, and laws. You will examine the meaning and use of concepts such as mind, justice, truth, morality, freedom and goodness. Throughout the course you will develop core skills that you will draw on in any career including excellent written and verbal communication, presentation skills and working effectively with others. You will also gain specialist skills in critical thinking, problem solving and the ability to distinguish the good from the bad arguments. You will develop sensitivity to others and get to know more about yourself. You will also have the opportunity to listen to internationally renowned scholars through the Royal Institute of Philosophy public lecture series hosted by the University.
Typical philosophy modules may include: Year 1: Introduction to Philosophy; Thinking Ethically; Using Critical Reason: Critically and Creatively. Year 2: Ethical virtues, Principles and Judgements; Knowing the World: Language and Experience; The Enlightenment; Law, Morality and Society; Body Sexuality and Identity. Year 3: Freedom, Recognition and Authenticity; Philosophy of Mind; Self and Other: The Demands of Social Justice.
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Rachel Franklin (2008 graduate)
Careers Philosophical study will equip you with highly desirable skills including critical reasoning, advanced language competence and reasoned argument. Through further postgraduate studies you could move into higher or further education to teach ethics and philosophy. Areas such as diplomacy, charity work, youth work, counselling, administration and management hold other openings.
Contact Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk /WLVArts
@WLV_Arts
BA (Hons) Religious Studies
UCAS code: V600 • Full-time: 3 years • Part-time: 5/6 years • Location: City Campus • Entry requirements: Our typical offer would be 200 UCAS points normally achieved over a minimum of either two or more A-levels, an AVCE double award, BTEC National Diploma or other equivalent qualification. • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/religiousstudies or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline BA (Hons) Religious Studies can be studied either on its own as a specialist degree, or jointly with another subject. Choose to study it with one of the following: Education Studies, UCAS code: VX63, History, UCAS code: VV16, Philosophy, UCAS code: VV65 or Sociology, UCAS code: VV63. This specialist course provides a range of modules in religious studies and ethics for students who intend to enter a career in education or other professional contexts. Central to the course is an opportunity for you to develop your full intellectual potential by introducing you to significant religious, ethical, and philosophical debates whilst developing skills for successful study and future employment.
Careers The majority of our graduates have gone on to a teacher training course in Religious Education and become successful teachers, with responsibility for RE in the primary sector or as RE specialists in secondary schools. Our specialist course content enables you to cover all the subject knowledge requirements for a Secondary RE PGCE in the areas of world religions and philosophy of religion/ ethics. This development of your language competences, together with practical engagement with local religious communities provides a good foundation for employment in the public sector. Social, religious and learning identities are an important aspect of many people’s lives, and possessing an understanding of them is highly relevant to the caring professions, social services, community work, the police, nursing and a wide range of business activities.
The course offers you an insight into one of the most important factors of human life, religion. You will investigate the shift in British society from a largely Christian community to a multi-faith and multi-cultural one. You will benefit from an open, non-confessional study of the world’s major religions, linking theoretical studies with field visits to local religious communities. In addition ethics features heavily in the course, bringing in philosophical ethics, media ethics as well as specific religious ethics. Throughout the course you will gain a thorough knowledge and understanding of the world’s religions and specialist skills in analysis and constructing supported arguments. In addition you will develop core skills that you will draw on in any career including excellent written and verbal communication, presentation skills and working effectively with others. You will also have opportunities to develop your employability skills through volunteering placements and case study options. You will have the opportunity to take field visits to religious communities and meet with members or organised groups concerning religious communities in the city: Wolverhampton Inter Faith and Regeneration Network.
Typical modules may include: Year 1: The Study of Hinduism; Jews, Judaism and the Holocaust; Religions in Wolverhampton; Introduction to Philosophy; Ethical Thinking. Year 2: The Study of Christianity; Sikhism; Religion in Educational and Professional Contexts; Media and Communication Ethics; South Asia; Volunteering. Year 3: The Study of Islam; Philosophy of Religion; Religious Ethics; Media, Religion and Ethics; Fieldwork in Religious Studies (Buddhism + case study); Independent Study in Religious Studies.
Contact Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk /WLVArts
@WLV_Arts
MA English
Full-time: 1 year • Part-time: 2/3 years • Location: City Campus • Start date: October • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/humanities or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline The MA English course aims to provide a stimulating intellectual environment that will enable graduate students to build upon their interests and skills in literary studies at postgraduate level. It features core modules in both advanced critical theory and research methodologies that will deepen and develop graduate abilities in academic research, writing and presentation to meet professional standards. These standards will be evident in a final dissertation, based upon students’ intellectual interests and supported by one-to-one tutorials with a supervising academic who has research expertise in the field. Students will also be guided through the transition from undergraduate to postgraduate study through four taught modules. These seminar-based modules will be taught weekly and will be drawn from three distinctive themes relating to literary genres in history, major author study and literary adaptations. Featured authors and texts will range from Milton and Byron, through Virginia Woolf and the ‘Angry Young Men’ of the 1950s, to science fiction and current adaptations of the work of Sarah Waters.
Careers The MA English qualification is a source of continuing professional development for individuals already engaged in professions such as teaching, journalism and careers within local government and the public sector. On a much broader scale, the programme will also enhance the individual qualities needed for employment in circumstances requiring sound judgement, good communication skills, personal responsibility and initiative in the professional environment. The MA will also provide a sound intellectual and stylistic platform for students to progress on to doctorate level study and a career in higher education.
Entry requirements You should have a good Honours degree (2:1 or above), normally with at least half of that award in English.
Apply Apply online, visit: wlv.ac.uk/humanities
Contact Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk /WLVArts
@WLV_Arts
MA Language and Information Processing
Full-time: 1 year Part-time: 2-3 years • Location: City Campus • Start date: October • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/humanities or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline MA Language and Information Processing is aimed at students from linguistics, computational linguistics, translation, languages, computer science and mathematics backgrounds. The course gives students valuable hands-on experience through lab-based practical sessions as well as a solid theoretical grounding via lectures. The modules offered in this programme focus on different areas within language and information processing, ranging from computational linguistics and programming to translation tools. The course will cover module topics such as:
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• Computational Linguistics • Programming for Corpus Linguistics • Machine Translation and other NLP Applications • Translation Tools for Professional Translators Students will also undertake an independent dissertation project and other researchrelated modules. As well as participating in the obligatory lectures students will have the opportunity to take part in a vibrant research environment and will be given the chance to become involved in various research projects. Attendance at visiting lecturers’ seminars/internal reading groups and various other research activities will support and enhance their studies.
Careers As the teaching on the course is based on research carried out within the Research Institute in Information and Language Processing (RIILP), graduates will be wellplaced to continue their academic/research careers by applying for PhD positions within RIILP or at other leading centres for language and information processing. This degree will also enable graduates to access research and development positions within the natural language processing and human language technology industry, as well as in related areas such as translation, software development and information and communication technologies, depending on their specific module choices and dissertation topic. Our modules teach students not only the theoretical basis of subjects, but also transferable practical skills, such as programming and developing/using tools for language processing, which are necessary for working in industry as well as for continuing in academia.
Contact
Entry requirements
Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk
A good undergraduate degree (minimum classification 2.1) in a related subject such as computational linguistics, linguistics, translation, languages, computer science, mathematics and information sciences. Some experience with linguistics or computational linguistics is desirable. Applicants with a 2:2 undergraduate degree will be considered if they have relevant experience.
/WLVArts
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Apply Apply online, visit: wlv.ac.uk/humanities
MA Popular Culture
Full-time: 1 year • Part-time: 2-3 years • Location: City Campus • Start date: January/October • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/humanities or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline MA Popular Culture – the only course of its kind in the country – introduces you to an advanced level study of the various aspects of popular culture; principally that produced and consumed in Britain since the late nineteenth century.
This is the only postgraduate course on Popular Culture in the UK, and the only one in the world to focus principally on the British experience, either as consumers of international culture, or through Britain’s unique contribution to youth and pop culture.
The programme consists of a broad range of modules from a number of academic disciplines, including History, English, Sociology, Cultural Studies, Religious Studies, and Film Studies. All modules are taught by experts in their respective fields, and informed by research at the forefront of the various disciplines. For your own independent research into popular culture, we can also offer supervision in a wide range of areas and approaches. You will experience a variety of teaching methods with a high level of input from you and other students on the course. While you will undoubtedly bring to your studies a rich and individual experience in the consumption, interpretation, dissemination and – perhaps – the production of popular culture, on the course you will encounter many more varieties of cultural experience, and you will study theories and approaches with which you can make a different kind of sense out of them. On this programme, more than most, where you are when you end the course will depend on what you bring to it, and what you choose to take from it. But you will inevitably encounter materials and analytical methodologies you have not previously had experience of, and you will be given a valuable opportunity to discover and experiment with alternative approaches to the field of popular culture.
Typical modules may include Theories and Concepts for the Analysis of Popular Culture, Popular Consumerism in Britain 1850-1939, Youth Subcultures and National Identity in Post-war England, Science Fiction and Fantasy, The Sacred and the Profane in Popular Culture, Crime of the Century - Murders and the Media, Fads and Fame: the Industrialisation of Culture and Screening Horror: Trauma, Fear and Fantasy in Film.
Careers Skills and knowledge gained throughout the programme will be particularly relevant to archivists and curators, researchers, writers and journalists, librarians, and teachers of popular culture.
Contact
Entry requirements
Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk
You should normally have a good Honours (2:1 or above) degree in an arts, humanities, or social sciences subject.
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Apply online, visit: wlv.ac.uk/humanties
MA Transmedia Screen Writing
Full-time: 1 year • Part-time: 2-3 years • Location: City Campus • Start date: January/October • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/humanities or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline The future for writing and reading is moving towards transmedia and storytelling. Rather than a particular narrative being limited to a book, TV episode or graphic novel, storylines are now being extended into other platforms. MA Transmedia Screen Writing equips you with the creative, professional and technical knowledge and craft skills required by professional screenwriters across a range of media – from interactive narratives, Twitter fiction and blogging to webisodes, mobisodes and movellas, as well as film and television. While it is open to all applicants interested in scriptwriting, it is aimed primarily at those who already have some writing experience and want to further develop their professional skills and expertise as script writers in various media. It is designed to develop your own script writing and distinctive voice, and to enable you to pitch for employment and/or funding in a highly competitive industry.
Modules may include:
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Research Methods: The Screenwriter’s Craft & Practice, Future Narratives: Storytelling for Screens of All Sizes, Business Futures for Transmedia Writers, Writing for Film and Television, Writing for Interactive & New Media: Narrative Forms, Writing for Animation, and Masters Writing Project.
Careers This programme will enhance the individual qualities needed for employment in circumstances requiring sound judgement, good communication skills, personal responsibility, creativity and initiative in the professional environment. It will also provide a sound intellectual and stylistic platform for students to progress on to doctorate level study and a career in higher education. Possible career routes include: scriptwriter, script editor, script reader, script supervisor, researcher, agent, writer-producer or writer-director, technical video scriptwriter, media journalist, teaching, museum, or heritage work and tourism writer (eg. virtual/ interactive tours) or e-learning developer.
Entry requirements Contact Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk
You should have a good Honours degree (2:1 or above) or equivalent in a relevant subject and a commitment to creative writing and a level of practical experience. You are also encouraged to apply if you have a significant professional experience in a relevant subject.
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Apply online, visit: wlv.ac.uk/humanities
MRes Human Sciences
Full-time: 1 year • Part-time: 2-3 years • Location: City Campus • Start date: January/October • Contact: wlv.ac.uk/humanities or tel: 0800 953 3222.
Outline This course provides a comprehensive research training programme enabling you to gain high-level research skills, equipping you for further study at MPhil and PhD level, or for a range of professional careers in the knowledge economy. It consists of both taught and research elements, with modules covering the philosophy and ethics of research; quantitative and qualitative research methodologies; and the application of computerised and virtual research techniques. The course culminates with an option to produce a piece of independent, original research, guided by a supervisor with expertise in your chosen area of study or to complete a grant-funding proposal for potential development as a research project at MPhil or PhD level. Modules studied cover a broad base of academic subjects in law, humanities and social sciences.
Careers Upon successful completion of this course, you will be able to pursue a wide range of opportunities and careers involving advanced level research. These include MPhil and PhD study across a range of disciplines within law, humanities and the social sciences; and professional careers within government and the public sector, the uniformed services, the legal and criminal justice industries, market research and think-tank organisations.
Entry requirements You should normally have a good honours (2:1 or above) degree, or relevant professional qualifications and/or experience will also be considered as an entry qualification.
Apply Apply online, visit: wlv.ac.uk/humanities
Contact Email: arts@wlv.ac.uk /WLVArts
@WLV_Arts