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    Programme Specifications

    Programme Specification

    BA (Hons) Politics with a Minor Subject

    Academic Year: 2016/17

    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 Politics, History and International Relations - pre 2018
    Details of accreditation by a professional/statutory body
    Final award BA (Hons)/BA (Hons) + DPS/BA (Hons) + DIntS
    Programme title Politics with a Minor Subject
    Programme code EUUB03
    Length of programme
    UCAS code L200/L201
    Admissions criteria

    The duration of the Programme is 6 semesters (three-year Programme), 8 semesters (four year programme) or 6 semesters plus one academic year (four-year thick sandwich programme).  The three-year programme allows, at Part B (Semester Two) for a course of study to be taught in English at a foreign University. 

    Date at which the programme specification was published Tue, 27 Sep 2016 10:19:35 BST

    1. Programme Aims

    1. To introduce the concepts and principles that underpin politics, informed by research that fosters critical and independent thought.
    2. To introduce students to debates about power and distribution which lie at the heart of politics (‘who gets what, when, how and why’) and hone the analytic skills required to determine the legitimacy of distributions.
    3. To engage students in debates about political events, institutions and ideas as a route to their engagement in politics as citizens and actors in the global political arena.
    4. To familiarise students with the methodological and theoretical assumptions which underpin political arguments.
    5. To familiarise students with key concepts in critical political analysis, including power, justice, accountability, order, dissent, violence, sovereignty, governance and decision-making.
    6. To combine the study of politics with related disciplines in humanities and social sciences and to enable students to extend, apply and/or reflect on their learning through training in the UK or abroad and/or through the study of a modern language.

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

     

    • QAA Benchmarking statement for Politics and International Relations
    • Framework for Higher Education Qualifications
    • University Learning and Teaching Strategy
    • Departmental Learning and Teaching policies
    • The research interests and specialisms of the teaching staff and their professional involvement in the discipline

    3. Programme Learning Outcomes

    3.1 Knowledge and Understanding

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

    K1. discuss the nature and characteristics of a variety of political issues, ideas and phenomena;

    K2. analyse the social, economic and historical context in which political systems evolve and operate;

    K3. explain competing interpretations of political issues and events;

    K4. apply concepts, theories and methods used in the study of politics to analyse political ideas, institutions and practices;

    K5. explain and evalsuate concepts of political change such as revolution, war, crisis, protest, agency, and modernity.

    3.2 Skills and other attributes

    a. Subject-specific cognitive skills:

     

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

    C1. choose appropriate methods in explanatory and normative political theory and political science to investigate key issues and events in politics;

    C2. evalsuate political opinions, ideas and events and defend personal preferences through reasoned argument;

    C3. use supporting evidence and illustrative examples to discuss and/or explain complex political phenomena and events;

    C4. use sophisticated argument and analysis to propose solutions to complex problems.

    b. Subject-specific practical skills:

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

    P1. use information technology to retrieve information from a variety of primary and secondary sources and to communicate ideas orally, visually and in writing;

    P2. evalsuate sources and the ethical issues relating to research in politics;

    P3. undertake independent research under supervision;

    P4. organise personal learning and development self-critically.

    c. Key transferable skills:

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

    T1. use constructive criticism to improve and strengthen work;

    T2. work independently, demonstrating initiative and the ability to manage time and resources effectively;

    T3. apply research skills and practices to offer interpretations of complex and unfamiliar ideas, abstract concepts, political phenomena and events;

    T4. summarise academic debates drawn from a range of introductory and specialist research literatures, fluently and with sophistication, to a range of specialist and non-specialist audiences;

    T5. evalsuate alternative solutions to complex problems.

    T6. work with others for collective benefit and knowledge advancement

    4. Programme structure

    4.1

    Modules with a total modular weight of 80 must be studied in each Academic Year (Parts A, B and C) from Politics.  Candidates may take 40 credits of minor subject modules in each Part.  Candidates choose modules derived from a list provided by the Department of Politics, History and International Relations, depending on the candidates' previous qualifications.  Due to timetabling constraints, not all option combinations may be available. 

     

    4.2          Content

    (1) Part A – Introductory Modules

     Students must be registered for a minimum of 50 credits and a maximum of 70 credits in each Semester

    (i)           COMPULSORY MODULES (total modular weight 80)

    Code

    Title

    Semester

    Modular Weight

    EUA001

    Introduction to Academic Studies

    1

    10

    EUA601

    The Contemporary World Arena

    1

    20

    EUA607

    Introduction to Democratic Government

    1

    10

    EUA610

    Conceptions of Democracy

    2

    10

    EUA613

    Political Ideologies

    2

    20

    EUA619

    Analysing Current Issues in Politics and International Relations

    2

    10

     

    (ii)          OPTIONAL MODULES – MINOR SUBJECT (total modular weight of 40)

     Candidates should choose two minor subject groups which must be followed through Part A from:

    Code

    Title

    Semester(s)

    Modular Weight

    Economics

     

     

    ECA001

    Principles of Macroeconomics

    1 & 2

    20

    English

     

     

    EAA777

    Narrative Forms and Fiction

    1

    20

    French

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

    German

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

    Geography

     

     

    GYA004

    Geographies of Global Economic Change

    1

    10

    GYA104

    Geographies of Identity

    2

    10

    International Relations

     

     

    EUA702

     

    Modern Europe: From the Enlightenment to the Present (10 Credit) NB: Or EUA701 if the other minor is History

    1

    10

    EUA617

    Approaches to International Relations

    2

    10

    Business

     

     

    BSA505

    Organisational Behaviour

    1

    10

    BSA506

    Management of Human Resources

    2

    10

    Mandarin Chinese

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

    History

     

     

    EUA702

    Modern Europe: From the Enlightenment to the Present (10 Credit) NB: Or EUA701 if the other minor is International Relations

    1

    10

    EUA707

    Modern World History: New Perspectives (10 Credit)

    2

    10

    Social Sciences

     

     

    SSA001

    Introduction to Sociology: Identities and Inequalities

    1

    10

    SSA002

    Introduction to Sociology: Global, Social and Cultural Change

    2

    10

    SSA201

    Introduction to Criminology & Social Policy A

    1

    10

    SSA202

    Introduction to Criminology & Social Policy B

    2

    10

    SSA301

    Introduction to Communication and Media Studies: Contemporary Trends and Issues

    1

    10

    SSA302

    Introduction to Communication and Media Studies: Historical Debates and Perspectives

    2

    10

    Spanish

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

     

     

    (2) Part B – Degree Modules

    EITHER

     

    (a) Standard Route

    Students must be registered for a minimum of 50 credits and a maximum of 70 credits in each Semester

     (i)  COMPULSORY MODULES (total modular weight 40)

    Code

    Title

    Semester

    Modular Weight

    EUB605

    Theories and Methods in Political Research

    1

    10

    EUB628

    History of Political Thought

    1

    20

    EUB608

    Research Design

    2

    10

     

    (ii)  OPTIONAL MODULES

     

    POLITICS (total modular weight 40)

    In addition to the compulsory modules EUB605, EUB628 and EUB608, candidates must choose a total modular weight of 40 credits over Semesters 1 and 2 from the list below, noting the combinations of modules of the same titles but with different credit-weightings are mutually exclusive:

    Code

    Title

    Semester

    Modular Weight

    EUB601

    The European Union (20 Credit)

    1

    20

    EUB625

    The European Union (10 Credit)

    1

    10

    EUB630

    British Politics

    1

    20

    EUB634

    The American Century: US Politics and Society in the 20th Century

    1

    20

    EUB604

    Comparative European Politics (20 Credit)

    2

    20

    EUB620

    Comparative European Politics (10 Credit)

    2

    10

    EUB631

    Protest and Resistance

    2

    20

    EUB633

    Enterprise, Employability and Personal Development

    2

    10

     

    (iii)  OPTIONAL MODULES – MINOR SUBJECT (total modular weight 40)

    Candidates must choose 40 Credits from one of the minor subject groups listed below.  Again, the combinations of modules of the same titles but with different credit-weightings are mutually exclusive. Candidates studying French, German, Spanish or Mandarin Chinese must study 20 Credits from one of the minor subject groups along with 20 Credits of their language modules.  Choices of minor subject modules will be subject to satisfying any prerequisites set out in individual module specifications.

    Code

    Title

    Semester

    Modular Weight

    Business

     

     

    BSB530

    Accounting for Business

    1

    10

    BSB560

    Principles of Marketing

    1

    10

    BSB532

    Accounting for Managers

    2

    10

    BSB562

    The Marketing Mix

    2

    10

    Economics

     

     

    ECB037

    Microeconomics

    1 & 2

    20

    English

     

     

    EAB008

    Victorian Literature

    1

    20

    EAB039

    Nineteenth-Century American Writing

    1

    20

    EAB113

    Introduction to Linguistics

    1

    20

    EAB710

    Renaissance Writings

    1

    20

    EAB012

    African American Culture

    2

    20

    EAB110

    Introduction to Multimodality

    2

    20

    EAB114

    Elephants and Engines

    2

    20

    EAB711

    Eighteenth Century Literature

    2

    20

    French

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

    German

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

    Geography

     

     

    GYB210

    Globalization

    1 & 2

    20

    GYB220

    Geographies of Social Difference

    1 & 2

    20

    GYB211

    Globalization

    1

    10

    GYB222

    Geographies of Social Difference

    1

    10

    GYB110

    Sustainable Urban Geographies

    2

    10

    GYB113

    Geographies of Culture, Media and Representation

    2

    10

    GYB320

    Global Migration

    2

    10

    History

     

     

    EUB702

    Cold War Europe (20 Credit)

    1

    20

    EUB703

    Cold War Europe (10 Credit)

    1

    10

    EUB724

    Slavery in Global History (20 Credit)

    1

    20

    EUB725

    Slavery in Global History (10 Credit)

    1

    10

    EUB712

    Modern Germany: From Racial Dictatorship to Recivilization (20 Credit)

    2

    20

    EUB713

    Modern Germany: From Racial Dictatorship to Recivilization (10 Credit)

    2

    10

    EUB714

    Modern China in a Global Perspective (20 Credit)

    2

    20

    EUB715

    Modern China in a Global Perspective (10 Credit)

    2

    10

    EUB726

    British Social History 1918-1979: Other Worlds of Labour (20 Credit)

    2

    20

    EUB727

    British Social History 1918-1979: Other Worlds of Labour (10 Credit)

    2

    10

    International Relations

     

     

    EUB619

    Security Studies

    1

    20

    EUB615

    Challenges to International Governance

    2

    20

    Mandarin Chinese

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

    Politics

     

     

    EUB628

    History of Political Thought

    1

    20

    EUB630

    British Politics

    1

    20

    EUB604

    Comparative European Politics

    2

    20

    EUB631

    Protest and Resistance

    2

    20

    Social Sciences

     

     

    SSB020

    Race and Racism

    1

    10

    SSB216

    Women and Crime: Victims, Offenders and Survivors

    1

    10

    SSB360

    The Media in Global Context

    1

    10

    SSB023

    Religion and Society

    2

    10

    SSB234

    Media, Culture and Crime

    2

    10

    SSB239

    Drugs: Society, Politics and Policy

    2

    10

    Spanish

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

     

    20

     

    OR

    (b)  INTERNATIONAL SEMESTER ROUTE

    Candidates may replace the modules required for Part B Semester 2 with an approved course of study taught in English at a foreign University.  In Semester 2, candidates will undertake assessed work equivalent to 50 credits, as required by the Department of P{olitics, History and International Relations, along with a Distance Learning Research Design module.  Candidates who opt for this route must ensure that they have selected a total of 60 credits from Semester 1 modules.

     

    (i) COMPULSORY MODULES (total modular weight 100)

    Code

    Title

    Semester

    Modular Weight

    EUB605

    Theories and Methods in Political Research

    1

    10

    EUB628

    History of Political Thought

    1

    20

    EUB625

    The European Union (10 Credit)

    1

    10

    EUB001

    International Semester

    2

    50

    EUB614

    Research Design (Distance Learning)

    2

    10

     

    (ii)  OPTIONAL MODULES – MINOR SUBJECT (total modular weight 20)

    Candidates must choose 20 credits from one of the minor subject groups listed below.  Candidates studying French, German, Spanish or Mandarin Chinese should choose 10 credits from one of the minor subject groups and one 10 credit Language module. Choices of minor subject modules will be subject to satisfying any prerequisites set out in individual module specifications.  

    Code

    Title

    Semester

    Modular Weight

    Business

     

     

    BSB530

    Accounting for Business

    1

    10

    BSB560

    Principles of Marketing

    1

    10

    English

     

     

    EAB008

    Victorian Literature

    1

    20

    EAB039

    Nineteenth-Century American Writing

    1

    20

    EAB113

    Introduction to Linguistics

    1

    20

    EAB710

    Renaissance Writings

    1

    20

    French

     

     

    One 10 credit module from Semester 1 from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1

    10

    German

     

     

    One 10 credit module from Semester 1 from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1

    10

    Geography

     

     

    GYB211

    Globalization

    1

    10

    GYB222

    Geographies of Social Difference

    1

    10

    History

     

     

    EUB702

    Cold War Europe (20 Credit)

    1

    20

    EUB703

    Cold War Europe (10 Credit)

    1

    10

    EUB724

    Slavery in Global History (20 Credit)

    1

    20

    EUB725

    Slavery in Global History (10 Credit)

    1

    10

    International Relations

     

     

    EUB619

    Security Studies

    1

    20

    Mandarin Chinese

     

     

    One 10 credit module from Semester 1 from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1

    10

    Politics

     

     

    EUB628

    History of Political Thought

    1

    20

    EUB630

    British Politics

    1

    20

    Social Sciences

     

     

    SSB020

    Race and Racism

    1

    10

    SSB216

    Women and Crime: Victims, Offenders and Survivors

    1

    10

    SSB360

    The Media in Global Context

    1

    10

    Spanish

     

     

    One 10 credit module from Semester 1 from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1

    10

     

    (3)          Part I

    Candidates following the four-year programme are required to undertake an academic year abroad (Part I) which occurs between Part B and Part C at a French-, German- or Spanish-speaking university, following an approved course of study leading to the Diploma in International Studies in accordance with Senate Regulation XI.  Candidates may also follow an approved course of study at a foreign university where teaching is in English leading to the Diploma in International Studies in accordance with Senate Regulation XI.

     

    Candidates following the four-year thick sandwich programme are required to spend the third academic year (Part I) EITHER undertaking an approved Assistantship at a school or other approved placement in a French-, German- or Spanish-speaking country, leading to the Diploma in International Studies in accordance with Senate Regulation XI, OR undertaking an approved placement in the UK or abroad leading to the Diploma in Professional Studies in accordance with Senate Regulation XI.  Participation in study abroad or a placement is subject to Departmental approval and satisfactory academic performance during parts A and B.

     

    (4)  PART C – Degree Modules

     Students must be registered for a minimum of 50 credits and a maximum of 70 credits in each Semester

    (i) COMPULSORY MODULE (total modular weight 40)

     

    Code

    Title

    Semester

    Modular Weight

    EUC643

    Dissertation in Politics and International Relations

    1 & 2

    40

     

    (ii)  OPTIONAL MODULES (total modular weight 80)

    In choosing optional and minor subjects, candidates must ensure that they study a minimum of 50 and a maximum of 70 credits in each Semester; credit from the Dissertation in Politics and International Relations must be split equally (20:20) over both Semesters

     

    In addition to the compulsory module EUC643, candidates must choose a minimum modular weight of 40 and a maximum modular weight of 60 from Group 1 (optional) modules over semesters 1 and 2, as well as a minimum modular weight of 20 and a maximum modular weight of 40 from Group 2 (Minor) Modules.

    Group 1

    Code

    Title

    Semester

    Modular Weight

    EUC602

    Nationalism: blood, soil and citizens

    1

    20

    EUC604

    State Violence and Terrorism

    1

    20

    EUC628

    The Asia Pacific in Global Politics

    1

    20

    EUC657

    The Civil Rights Movement in the US

    1

    20

    EUC660

    Contemporary Political Philosophy

    1

    20

    EUC677

    Britain and the European Union

    1

    20

    EUC664

    Politics and Religion

    2

    20

    EUC665

    Post-War British Politics: The Start of the Decline

    2

    20

    EUC666

    Gender and Politics

    2

    20

    EUC674

    Power, Violence and Human Suffering

    2

    20

    EUC679

    1968 – World Revolution?

    2

    20

    EUC714

    The Soviet Security State

    2

    20

     

    Group 2 – Choices of elective subject modules will be subject to satisfying any prerequisites set out in individual module specifications.

    Code

    Title

    Semester

    Module Weight

    Business

     

     

    BSB035

    Sales Management

    1

    10

    BSB555

    Organisational Studies

    1

    10

    BSB580

    Operations Management

    1

    10

    BSC105

    International Human Resource Management

    1

    10

    BSC520

    Business Systems

    1

    10

    BSC522

    Entrepreneurship and Innovation

    1

    10

    BSB590

    Contemporary Business Environment

    2

    10

    BSC124

    Marketing Communications

    2

    10

    BSC144

    Project Management

    2

    10

    BSC524

    Entrepreneurship and Small Business Planning

    2

    10

    BSC575

    Leadership and Interpersonal Skills

    2

    10

    Economics

     

     

    ECC012

    Introduction to Finance

    1 & 2

    20

    ECC013

    International Economic Relations

    1 & 2

    20

    ECC014

    Economics of the Financial System

    1 & 2

    20

    ECC017

    Economics of the Welfare State

    2

    20

    English

     

     

    EAC034

    Narratives of American Sport

    1

    20

    EAC042

    Dimensions of Texts

    1

    20

    EAC227

    Myth and History: Milton’s Paradise Lost

    1

    20

    EAC016

    Cruel and Unusual

    1

    20

    EAC014

    Aphra Behn

    1

    20

    EAC022

    Ulysses

    2

    20

    EAC103

    Modernisms

    2

    20

    EAC300

    Rare Shakespeare

    2

    20

    EAC109

    Romantic Writings

    2

    20

    EAC701

    Global America

    2

    20

    French

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

    History

     

     

    EUC703

    Revolution in the Head: The Beatles and Sixties Britain

    1

    20

    EUC713

    Jim Crow, Bootleggers and Okies: American Cultural History 1890-1930

    1

    20

    EUC715

    Fear of East Asia and the Global Order

    1

    20

    EUC705

    The Rise of the Nazis

    2

    20

    EUC714

    The Soviet Security State, 1917 – present

    2

    20

    Geography

     

     

    GYC107

    Regional Worlds

    1

    20

    GYC212

    Globalised Urbanisation

    1

    20

    GYC205

    Central America: Dependency and Development

    2

    10

    GYC214

    Geographies of Children and Youth

    2

    10

    GYC325

    Geographies of Transnational Mobility and Diaspora

    2

    20

    German

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

    International Relations/Politics

     

     

    EUC602

    Nationalism: Blood, soil and citizens

    1

    20

    EUC604

    State Violence and Terrorism

    1

    20

    EUC628

    The Asia Pacific in Global Politics

    1

    20

    EUC657

    The Civil Rights Movement in the US

    1

    20

    EUC660

    Contemporary Political Philosophy

    1

    20

    EUC672

    The European Union and the Global Political Economy

    1

    20

    EUC677

    Britain and the European Union

    1

    20

    EUC658

    Art, Politics and Society

    2

    20

    EUC664

    Politics and Religion

    2

    20

    EUC665

    Post-War British Politics: The Start of the Decline

    2

    20

    EUC666

    Gender and Politics

    2

    20

    EUC674

    Power, Violence and Suffering

    2

    20

    EUC679

    1968 – World Revolution?

    2

    20

    EUC714

    Soviet Security State

    2

    20

    Mandarin Chinese

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

    Social Sciences

     

     

    SSC024

    Gender, Sex and Society

    1

    20

    SSC030

    Debating Society

    1

    20

    SSC128

    Political Psychology

    1

    20

    SSC138

    Forensic Psychology

    1

    20

    SSC238

    Youth Justice

    1

    20

    SSC316

    Media, Memory and History

    1

    20

    SSC022

    The Body, Health and the Digital

    2

    20

    SSC233

    Crime and Deviance in Sport

    2

    20

    SSC237

    Sex Work and Sex Industries

    2

    20

    SSC357

    Producing the News

    2

    20

    Spanish

     

     

    Two x 10 credit modules, one from each Semester from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20

     

    5. Criteria for Progression and Degree Award

    5.1 In order to progress from Part A to Part B and from Part B to Part 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 achieve a module mark of at least 30% in all modules in each Part.

    5.2 Provision will be made in accordance with Regulation XX for candidates who have the right of reassessment 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. The percentage mark for each Part will be combined in the ratio Part B 40%, Part C 60% to determine the final programme percentage mark.

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