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    Programme Specifications

    Programme Specification

    BA (Hons) English (f/t) (2015 to 2017 entry)

    Academic Year: 2020/21

    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 School of Social Sciences and Humanities
    Details of accreditation by a professional/statutory body
    Final award BA (Hons)/BA (Hons) + DIntS + DPS
    Programme title Single Honours English
    Programme code HTUB01
    Length of programme The duration of the programme is 6 or 8 semesters. Candidates following the four year programme are required to spend either: an approved placement in professional industry leading to the award of Diploma in Professional Studies (DPS) or: an approved study at a University abroad leading to the award of the Diploma in International Studies (DIntS). The sandwich year (part I) must be taken after satisfactory completion of Part B and before the commencement of Part C.
    UCAS code Q300, Q301
    Admissions criteria

    BA (Hons) - http://www.lboro.hslppt.com/q300

    BA (Hons) + DIntS + DPS - http://www.lboro.hslppt.com/q301

    Date at which the programme specification was published Thu, 16 Jul 2020 15:34:06 BST

    1. Programme Aims

    The programme seeks to:

    • encourage in students a sense of enthusiasm for the study of English and foster engagement with reading, writing and visual sources, through a broad and diverse curriculum;
    • encourage students to reflect critically upon acts of writing and reading in English, and on the history of textual production and reception;
    • promote understanding of verbal creativity and appreciation of the aesthetic features of literary and non-literary texts;
    • enable students to think independently, reason critically, analyse different forms of discourse, and weigh the importance of alternative arguments and perspectives;
    • instil in students advanced competence in oral and written communication;
    • develop a range of subject specific and generic skills of value in graduate employment, including highly developed critical, analytical and research skills.

    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)

    • SEEC Level Descriptors

    • University Learning and Teaching Strategy

    3. Programme Learning Outcomes

    3.1 Knowledge and Understanding

     

    On successful completion of this programme, students should be able to demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the distinctive characteristics of the different literary genres of fiction, poetry, drama and other kinds of writing and communication;

    a range of authors and texts from different periods of history, including those before 1800;

    the relationship between literature and other forms of cultural production;

    the role of critical traditions in shaping literary history, and the importance of the linguistic, literary, cultural and socio-historical contexts in which literature is written and read;

    the appropriate and precise use of critical, linguistic and stylistic terminology;

    the range and variety of contemporary approaches to literary study which may include creative practice and its theorization;

    how literature and language produce and reflect cultural change;

    the structure and functions of the English language and of its regional and global varieties;

    the discipline’s relationship to other disciplines and forms of knowledge.

    3.2 Skills and other attributes

    a. Subject-specific cognitive skills:

     

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

    use critical skills in the close reading and analysis oftexts;

    show sensitivity to generic conventions and to the shaping effects on communication of

    circumstances, authorship, textual production and intended audience;

    demonstrate awareness of how different social and cultural contexts affect judgments about the

    nature of language and literature;

    show understanding of the critical and theoretical models that apply to their studies;

    appreciate of the central role of language in the creation of meaning;

    rhetorical skills of effective communication and argument;

    where appropriate, demonstrate the use of theories and techniques of writing in their own creative work.

     

     

    b. Subject-specific practical skills:

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

    present cogent and persuasive arguments both in written and oral form and be able to respond to a range of texts through creative or analytical writing;

    critically evalsuate the effectiveness and value of a wide range of oral and written communication.

    demonstrate advanced and effective research skills, including the ability to access, work with and evalsuate digital sources;

    demonstrate the capacity for independent thought and judgment through critical or creative practice;

    deploy a broad range of critical vocabulary and appropriate theoretical terminology;

    demonstrate bibliographic skills appropriate to the discipline, and expertise in accurately citing sources and using scholarly conventions in the presentation of work.

     

     

    c. Key transferable skills:

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

    demonstrate advanced literacy and communication skills;

    demonstrate advanced analytical skills and be able to handle complex information in a structured and systematic way;

    understand and be able to interrogate and apply a variety of theoretical and interpretive positions and be able to weigh the importance of alternative perspectives;

    show the capacity to adapt and transfer the critical methods of the discipline to a variety of working environments;

    show their ability to initiate and take responsibility for their own work;

    work with others through the presentation of ideas and the collective negotiation of solutions;

    demonstrate high-level IT skills and the ability to access, work with and evalsuate electronic resources;

    demonstrate effective organisational and time-management skills.

     

     

    4. Programme structure

    • All modules are 20 credits except for the Part C Dissertation module which is a 40 credit weighting.

    • Optional module titles are indicative of the options typically offered on the programmes, subject to availability and timetable permitting.

    • Students may, by following appropriate academic advice, pursue specialist areas of interest through their degree programme.

    • Students may select modules (with a total weighting of 20 credits) from those listed in the School Catalogue or the University’s Module Catalogue subject to approval by the School.

       Compulsory Modules (total modular weight 100)

     Semester One (60 Credits)

    Semester Two (40 Credits)

    EAA700

    Narrative Forms and Fiction

    EAA011

    Writing in History

    EAA102

    Exploring Language and Linguistics. (Introduction to Language)

    EAA701

    Literary and Critical Theories

    EAA104

    Analysing Poetry: Metre Form and Meaning. (Introduction to Poetry)

     

    Optional Modules In semester two, in addition to the above compulsory modules, the student must choose a 20 credit optional module. 

     

    Semester Two (20 Credits)

    EAA200

    How to Do Things With Digital Texts

    EAA001

    Introduction to Film Studies

    EAA003

    Elephants and Engines. (An Introduction to Creative Writing)

    Part B

    Compulsory Modules (total modular weight 40 – 20 credits per semester)

    For each semester, students must choose at least one module from the modules listed below.  One of these must be a pre-1800 module and one must be a post-1800 module.

     Semester One (Min. 20 Credits)

    Semester Two (Min. 20 Credits)

    EAB710

    Renaissance Writings (pre-1800)

    EAB711

    Eighteenth-Century Literature  (pre-1800)

    EAB008                                                                  

    Victorian Literature (post-1800)

    EAB712

    Modernisms   (post-1800)

     

    Optional Modules

    Optional modules will be available in the following subject areas:
    • Literature from 1350 to the present

    • Language and Linguistics

    • Creative Writing

    • American Literature and Film

    In the 2019-2020 academic year the available modules will be:

     

    Semester One

    Semester Two

     

     

    EAB715

    Modern Irish Literature

    EAB039

    Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture

    EAB018

    Women's Writing in the Seventeenth Century

    EAB113

    Introduction to Linguistics

    EAB403

    Reading Animals

    EAB035

    Weird Tale

    EAB402

    Maps and Motors

    EAB154

    Chivalry from Chaucer to Shakespeare

     

     

    EAB001

     From Fan Fiction to YouTube, Navigating the Digital Sphere.

     EAB904

    Writing for Stage and Screen

        

     

     

     

    EAB710

    Renaissance Writings (if not taken as a compulsory)

    EAB711

    Eighteenth-Century Literature  (if not taken as a compulsory)

    EAB008

    Victorian Literature  (if not taken as a compulsory)

    EAB712

    Modernisms   (if not taken as a compulsory)

      Interdisciplinary Module Options

     

    Students may choose to take one module from the following list in place of an English optional module. 

    Optional modules will be available in the following subject areas:

     

    • History of Art, Architecture and Design

    • Visual Culture

    • Arts Management
    • Creative Writing
    • Language, Litereature and Culture
    • Publishing

     

    In the 2019-2020 academic year the available modules will be:

     

     

    Semester Two

     

         

    Module code

    Module title

         

    EAB012

    African American Culture

         

    EAB017

    America at War

     

         

    EAB065

    Psychiatric Stories: Madness in Literature and Culture

         

    EAB401

    Culture, Society and Technology

         

    EAB713

    Making it New: Modernist Avant Garde Literature, and Culture

         

    EAB809

    From Print to Digital

         

    SAB933

    Material Culture

         

    SAB934

    Fashion Theory

         

    SAB935

    Creative Dissent, Protest, Activism and Art

         

    SAB937

    Experiential Design: Body Adornments and New Technologies

         

    SAB938

    Arts Management

    Part I 

     

    Four year programme – students registered on the four-year programme will undertake one of the following approved study and/or work placements leading to the Diploma in International Studies (DIntS) or Diploma in Professional Studies (DPS) in accordance with Regulation XI.

     

    CODE

    TITLE

    HTI001

    Diploma in Professional Studies (work placement)

    HTI002

    Diploma in International Studies (study abroad)

     

     

     

     

    Part C

     

     Compulsory Modules

     Semester One

    Semester Two

    HTC009

    Dissertation (year-long, 40 credit module)

     

     

     

     Optional Modules (total modular weight 80 credits) 

    Semester 1

    Semester 2

     

     

    HTC016 (20)

     

    Cruel and Unusual: Punishment on Trial in American Culture

     

     HTC806(20)

     

     

     The Child and The Book

    (Publishiing)

     

    HTC024 (20)

    Twenty-First Century Literature

    HTC300 (20)

    Adapting Shakespeare

    HTC027 (20)

    An Unexpected Light: Writing Afghanistan

    HTC001 (20)

    Radicals and Reactionaries: Writing Women in 1890s

    HTC229 (20)

    Neo-Victorianism

    HTC210 (20)

    Better Worlds? Utopian & Dystopian Texts and Contexts

    HTC440 (20)

    The Modern Poet

    HTC320

    (20)

    Driving On: Towards Publication.

    Pre req EAB314

    HTC801 (20)

    Marketing and The Magazine Business (Publishing)

    HTC701 (20)

    Global America

     

    Two 10-Credit modules, one from each semester, from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications.

    1 & 2

    20 Credits

    5. Criteria for Progression and Degree Award

    5.1 In order to progress from Part A to Part B, from Part B to C, and to be eligible for the award of an Honours degree, candidates must satisfy the minimum credit requirements set out in Regulation XX

    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, 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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