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    Programme Specifications

    Programme Specification

    BA (Hons) English (f/t) (2007 to 2011 entry)

    Academic Year: 2014/15

    This specification provides a concise summary of the main features of the programme and the learning outcomes that a typical student might reasonably be expected to achieve and demonstrate if full advantage is taken of the learning opportunities that are provided.

    This specification applies to delivery of the programme in the Academic Year indicated above. Prospective students reviewing this information for a later year of study should be aware that these details are subject to change as outlined in our Terms and Conditions of Study.

    This specification should be read in conjunction with:

    • Summary
    • Aims
    • Learning outcomes
    • Structure
    • Progression & weighting

    Programme summary

    Awarding body/institution 麻豆視頻_麻豆直播_麻豆传媒官网
    Teaching institution (if different)
    Owning school/department Department of English and Drama - pre 2017
    Details of accreditation by a professional/statutory body
    Final award BA (Hons)/BA (Hons) + DIntS
    Programme title English
    Programme code EAUB01
    Length of programme The duration of the programme is six semesters, full-time (three-year programme) or eight semesters, full-time (four-year programme).
    Candidates entering from 2010 onwards may apply to the Head of Department for permission to follow the four-year thick sandwich programme leading to the Diploma in International Studies. Candidates undertaking this route will be required to spend the third academic year (Part I) undertaking an approved assistantship at a school or other approved placement in a French-, German- or Spanish-speaking country in accordance with Senate Regulation XI. It should be noted that students undertaking a teaching assistantship should have a minimum of AS level in the appropriate language, or its equivalent. The equivalent level in the University Wide Language Programme is level 4.
    UCAS code Q300
    Admissions criteria

    http://www.lboro.hslppt.com/study/undergraduate/courses/departments/english-drama/english/

    Date at which the programme specification was published Mon, 01 Sep 2014 15:12:24 BST

    1. Programme Aims

    The Department seeks to

    • encourage in its students a sense of enthusiasm for the subject and a full understanding of its social and cultural significance
    • develop the ability of students to think creatively, to read critically and to be both sensitive and disciplined in their approach to their studies
    • educate its students to think independently, to reason critically, to weigh the importance of alternative arguments and perspectives and to analyse critically different forms of discourse.
    • The 4 year industrial placement option allows students to explore and apply language skills acquired during their teaching within a foreign environment and culture, becoming more fluent and confident in speaking their chosen second language.

    2. Relevant subject benchmark statements and other external reference points used to inform programme outcomes:

    • The English Benchmark Statement
    • Framework for Higher Education Qualifications (FHEQ)

    3. Programme Learning Outcomes

    3.1 Knowledge and Understanding

    On successful completion of this programme students should be able to demonstrate knowledge and understanding in the following areas: 

    • substantial knowledge of a range of authors and texts from different periods of literary history, including those before 1800;
    • an understanding of the distinctive characteristics of the different literary genres of fiction, poetry and drama, and an appreciation of the structure and functions of the English language;
    • an awareness of the role of critical traditions in shaping literary history and a knowledge of the linguistic, literary, cultural and socio-historical contexts in which literature is written and read;
    • the ability to deploy useful and precise critical terminology;
    • an appreciation of the power of imagination in literary creation and have an awareness of the range and variety of contemporary approaches to literary study. 

    3.2 Skills and other attributes

    a. Subject-specific cognitive skills:

    On successful completion of the programme students will have acquired:

    • critical skills in the close reading and analysis of texts and will have a thorough understanding of texts, concepts and theories relating to English studies;
    • an appreciation of the central role of language in the creation of meaning and will have gained rhetorical skills of effective communication and argument;
    • bibliographic skills appropriate to the discipline and will be practised in the accurate citation of sources and in the use of conventions in the presentation of scholarly work.
    b. Subject-specific practical skills:

    On successful completion of this programme, students should be able to:

    • present cogent and persuasive arguments both in oral and written form;
    • critically assess the effectiveness and value of a wide range of oral and written communications;
    • demonstrate advanced and effective research skills, including the ability to access and assess electronic data.
    c. Key transferable skills:

    On successful completion of this programme, students should

    • possess advanced analytical skills and should be able to handle complex information in a structured and systematic way
    • communicate effectively and work with others through the presentation of ideas and the collective negotiation of solutions
    • understand and apply a variety of theoretical and interpretive positions, and should be able to weigh the importance of alternative perspectives
    • possess effective organisational and time-management skills

    4. Programme structure

    Candidates may apply to the Head of Department for permission to undertake study abroad at Acadia University, Canada, or the National University of Singapore.  Candidates can apply to take a single semester or full academic year abroad. The study abroad option would be in place of study at Loughborough for either a full academic year or a single semester during Part B of the degree programme.

     Candidates may apply to the Head of Department for permission to undertake an approved course of study at a European University which is a member of the EU approved Erasmus exchange programme.  Candidates can apply to take a single semester or a full academic year abroad. The exchange option would be in place of study at Loughborough for either a full academic year or a single semester during Part B of the degree programme.

    4.1 Part A - Introductory Modules

    In the course of Semester 1 and Semester 2, candidates may choose module(s) with a total weight of 20 from modules taught by departments other than English and Drama.

    Candidates may choose optional modules so as few as 50 or as many as 70 credit units are attempted in a semester, provided that 120 credit units are accumulated over the year.


    Semester 1

    Compulsory (total modular weight 30)

    EAA101

    Critical Studies 1

    10 credits

    EAA102

    An Introduction to Language

    10 credits

    EAA104

    Introduction to Poetry 1

    10 credits

    Optional

    EAA006

    Introduction to American Literature

    20 credits

    EAA003

    Introduction to the Short Story

    20 credits

    EAA145

    Performance, Stage and Management

    20 credits

    EAA108

    The Search for Identity

    20 credits

    EAA010

    Writing Women

    20 credits

    EAA023

    Oral Communication

    10 credits

    EAA016

    The Essay

    10 credits

    EAA015

    Introduction to the Short Narrative

    10 credits

    EAA002

    Women’s Voices

    10 credits

     

    Semester 2

    Semester 2

    Compulsory (total modular weight 40)

    EAA201

    Critical Studies 2

    10 credits

    EAA204

    Introduction to Poetry 2

    10 credits

    EAA011

    Writing in History

    20 credits

    Optional

    EAA001

    Introduction to Film Studies

    20 credits

    EAA003

    Introduction to the Short Story

    20 credits

    EAA004

    Language in Context

    20 credits

    EAA023

    Oral Communication

    20 credits

    EAA108

    The Search for Identity

    20 credits

    EAA010

    Writing Women

    20 credits

    EAA016

    The Essay

    10 credits

    EAA015

    Introduction to the Short Narrative

    10 credits

    EAA002

    Women’s Voices

    10 credits

     

    4.2 Part B - Degree Modules

    In the course of Semester 1 and Semester 2, candidates may choose module(s) with a total weight of 20 from modules offered to Single Honours Drama students if they have taken pre-requisite modules, or from modules taught by departments other than English and Drama.

    Candidates may choose optional modules so that as few as 50 or as many as 70 credit units are attempted in a semester, provided that 120 credit units are accumulated over the year.

    Candidates who register for the Erasmus exchange programme must undertake the placement in place of one semester or both semesters at Part B of the degree programme. For one semester, students must register for a total of 60 credits in English and Drama in addition to the 60-credit Semester Abroad module EAB101. Students wishing to study for a full year at Acadia University, Canada, the National University of Singapore, or Delaware University, USA, OR Virginia Tech University, USA must take the 120-credit Study Abroad module, EAB100. Students who cannot take equivalent modules in place of Part B compulsory modules are required to take EAB001 or EAB008 as part of their Part C credits. 

     

     Semesters 1 and 2

    Optional (total modular weight 120)

    EAB100

    Study Abroad

    120 credits

     Semester 1

    Compulsory (total modular weight 20)

    EAB001

     British Drama 1576-1737

    20 credits

    Optional

    EAB154

    Chivalry from Chaucer to Shakespeare

    20 credits

    EAB046

    Dwelling in the Novel

    20 credits

    EAB113

    Introduction to Linguistics

    20 credits

    EAB039

    Nineteenth-Century American Writing

    20 credits

     

    EAB038

    Satire

    20 credits

    EAB032

    Sensation Fiction

    20 credits

    EAB009

    Theatre, Nation and Trauma

    20 credits

     

    EAB109

     

    Contemporary Poetry

     

    10 credits

    EAB020

    Diverse Voices

    10 credits

    EAB203

    Renaissance Lyric Poetry** (also available to Part C students )

    10 credits

    EAB918

    Revolt Against Fate: Literature and Theatre of the Absurd

    10 credits

    EAB101

    Study Abroad

    60 credits


    Semester 2

    Compulsory (total modular weight 20)

    EAB008

    Victorian Literature

    20 credits

    Optional

    EAB012

    African American Culture

    20 credits

    EAB153

    British Renaissance Drama

    20 credits

    EAB114

    Elephants and Engines: An Introduction to Creative Writing

    20 credits

    EAB110

    Introduction to Multimodality

    20 credits

    EAB016

    Language in Society

    20 credits

    EAB050

    Philosophy, Literature and the Arts

    20 credits

    EAB018

    Women’s Writing in the 17th Century

    20 credits

    EAB002

    Writing of the 1790's: The Gothic Revolution

    20 credits

    EAB062

    Moby Dick

    10 credits

    EAB026

    Slavery and Empire

    10 credits

    EAB040

    New Woman Writing of the fin de Siècle

    10 credits

    EAB101

    Study Abroad

    60 credits

     

    4.3 Part I 

    Semesters 1 and 2

    (total modular weight 120)

    EUI002

    Work Placement (DIntS, non-credit bearing)

    120 credits

    Students choosing to undertake the study abroad or exchange options in Part B will only be allowed to additionally participate in an assistantship or placement in exceptional circumstances and at the discretion of the Department. 

    Participation in placement is subject to Departmental approval and satisfactory academic performance during Parts A and B.  Registration on the module EU1002 will be at the discretion of the Department of Politics, International Relations and European Studies. 

     

    4.4 Part C - Degree Modules

    In the course of Semester 1 and Semester 2, candidates may choose module(s) with a total weight of 20 from modules offered to Single Honours Drama students if they have taken the pre-requisites, or from modules taught by departments other than English and Drama.

    Candidates may not choose a total of more than 30 credits in the year that have a prefix of EAB.

    Candidates may choose optional modules so that as few as 50 or as many as 70 credit units are attempted in a semester, provided that 120 credit units are accumulated over the year.

    Semesters 1 and 2

    Compulsory (total modular weight 30)

    EAC009

    Dissertation

    30 credits

    Semester 1

    Compulsory (total modular weight 20)

    EAC103

    Modernisms

    20 credits

    Optional

    EAC012

    America at War

    20 credits

    EAC900

    Analysing Work Experience in the Creative Industries

    20 credits

    EAC003

    Decadence

    20 credits

    EAC042

    Introduction to Systemic Functional Linguistics

    20 credits

    EAC023

    Libertines and Libertinism

    20 credits

    EAC214

    Maps and Motors

    20 credits

    EAC228

    Modern Subjects: Hardy, Conrad, Woolf

    20 credits

    EAC227

    Myth and History: Milton’s Paradise Lost

    20 credits

    EAC222

    Writing for Performance

    20 credits

    EAC024

    Writings of Intimacy

    20 Credits

    EAC016 Cruel and Unusual: Punishment on Trial in American Culture 10 credits

    EAC035

    Poetics and Politics of Contemporary Literature

    10 credits

    EAB203

    Renaissance Lyric Poetry** (cannot be chosen if studied in Part B)

    10 credits

    EAC022

    Ulysses

    10 credits

     

     Semester 2

    Compulsory - NONE

    Optional

    EAC900

    Analysing Work Experience in the Creative Industries (cannot be taken if studied in semester one)

    20 credits

    EAC014

    Contemporary Irish Texts

    20 credits

    EAC703

    Myths of America: Ideology and American Drama

    20 credits

    EAC013

    Postmodern America

    20 credits

    EAC109

    Romantic Writings 1815-1832

    20 credits

    EAC027

    An Unexpected Light: Writing Afghanistan

    20 credits

    EAC026

    The American West

    10 credits

    EAC516

    Bollywood! Bollywood!

    10 credits

    EAC041

    W B Yeats

    10 credits

    EAC018

    Women and Theatre

    10 credits

    5. Criteria for Progression and Degree Award

    In order to progress from Part A to Part B and from Part B to C and to be eligible for the award of an Honours degree, candidates must not only satisfy the minimum credit requirements set out in Regulation XX but also: 

    .1   In order to progress from Part A to Part B, obtain at least 40% in all compulsory modules.

    .2   In order to progress from Part B to Part C, obtain at least 40% in all compulsory modules.

    .3   To be eligible for the award of an Honours degree, obtain at least 40% in all compulsory modules.

    Provision will be made in accordance with Regulation XX for candidates who have the right of re-assessment in any part of the Programme to undergo re-assessment in the University’s special assessment period.

    6. Relative Weighting of Parts of the Programme for the Purposes of Final Degree Classification

    Candidates' final degree classification will be determined on the basis of their performance in degree level Module Assessments in Parts B and C, in accordance with the scheme set out in Regulation XX.  The percentage mark for each Part will be combined in the ratio Part B: 40%, Part C: 60% to determine the final percentage mark.

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