(BA) Bachelor of Arts
Literature and Sociology (Including Year Abroad)
Current
University of Essex
University of Essex
Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies
Colchester Campus
Honours Degree
Full-time
English
Sociology
BA QL23
08/05/2024
Details
Professional accreditation
None
Admission criteria
- A-levels: BBB - BBC or 120 - 112 UCAS tariff points from a minimum of 2 full A-levels, including B in one essay based subject.
- BTEC: DDM - DMM or 120 - 112 UCAS tariff points from a minimum of the equivalent of 2 full A-levels. The acceptability of BTECs is dependent on subject studied and optional units taken - email ugquery@essex.ac.uk for advice.
- Combined qualifications on the UCAS tariff: 120 - 112 UCAS tariff points from a minimum of 2 full A levels or equivalent. Tariff point offers may be made if you are taking a qualification, or mixture of qualifications, from the list on our undergraduate application information page.
- IB: 30 - 29 points or three Higher Level certificates with 555-554.
- IB Career-related Programme: We consider combinations of IB Diploma Programme courses with BTECs or other qualifications. Advice on acceptability can be provided, email Undergraduate Admissions.
- QAA-approved Access to HE Diploma: 6 level 3 credits at Distinction and 39 level 3 credits at Merit, depending on subject studied - advice on acceptability can be provided, email Undergraduate Admissions.
- T-levels: We consider T-levels on a case-by-case basis, depending on subject studied. The offer for most courses is Distinction overall. Depending on the course applied for there may be additional requirements, which may include a specific grade in the Core.
Contextual Offers:
We are committed to ensuring that all students with the merit and potential to benefit from an Essex education are supported to do so. For October 2024 entry, if you are a home fee paying student residing in the UK you may be eligible for a Contextual Offer of up to two A-level grades, or equivalent, below our standard conditional offer.
Factors we consider:
- Applicants from underrepresented groups
- Applicants progressing from University of Essex Schools Membership schools/colleges
- Applicants who attend a compulsory admissions interview
- Applicants who attend an Offer Holder Day at our Colchester or Southend campus
Our contextual offers policy outlines additional circumstances and eligibility criteria.
For further information about what a contextual offer may look like for your specific qualification profile, email ugquery@essex.ac.uk.
If you haven't got the grades you hoped for, have a non-traditional academic background, are a mature student, or have any questions about eligibility for your course, more information can be found on our undergraduate application information page. or get in touch with our Undergraduate Admissions Team.
IELTS (International English Language Testing System) code
English language requirements for applicants whose first language is not English: IELTS 6.0 overall, or specified score in another equivalent test that we accept.
Details of English language requirements, including component scores, and the tests we accept for applicants who require a Student visa (excluding Nationals of Majority English Speaking Countries) can be found here
If we accept the English component of an international qualification it will be included in the academic levels listed above for the relevant countries.
English language shelf-life
Most English language qualifications have a validity period of 5 years. The validity period of Pearson Test of English, TOEFL and CBSE or CISCE English is 2 years.
If you require a Student visa to study in the UK please see our immigration webpages for the latest Home Office guidance on English language qualifications.
Pre-sessional English courses
If you do not meet our IELTS requirements then you may be able to complete a pre-sessional English pathway that enables you to start your course without retaking IELTS.
Pending English language qualifications
You don’t need to achieve the required level before making your application, but it will be one of the conditions of your offer.
If you cannot find the qualification that you have achieved or are pending, then please email ugquery@essex.ac.uk
.
Requirements for second and final year entry
Different requirements apply for second and final year entry, and specified component grades are also required for applicants who require a visa to study in the UK. Details of English language requirements, including UK Visas and Immigration minimum component scores, and the tests we accept for applicants who require a Student visa (excluding Nationals of Majority English Speaking Countries) can be found here
Additional Notes
If you’re an international student, but do not meet the English language or academic requirements for direct admission to this degree, you could prepare and gain entry through a pathway course. Find out more about opportunities available to you at the University of Essex International College
Course qualifiers
A course qualifier is a bracketed addition to your course title to denote a specialisation or pathway that you have achieved via the completion of specific modules during your course. The
specific module requirements for each qualifier title are noted below. Eligibility for any selected qualifier will be determined by the department and confirmed by the final year Board of
Examiners. If the required modules are not successfully completed, your course title will remain as described above without any bracketed addition. Selection of a course qualifier is
optional and student can register preferences or opt-out via Online Module Enrolment (eNROL).
None
Rules of assessment
Rules of assessment are the rules, principles and frameworks which the University uses to calculate your course progression and final results.
Additional notes
None
External examiners
Dr Doug Haynes
Reader in American Literature and Visual Culture
University of Sussex
External Examiners provide an independent overview of our courses, offering their expertise and help towards our continual improvement of course content, teaching, learning, and assessment.
External Examiners are normally academics from other higher education institutions, but may be from the industry, business or the profession as appropriate for the course.
They comment on how well courses align with national standards, and on how well the teaching, learning and assessment methods allow students to develop and demonstrate the relevant knowledge and skills needed to achieve their awards.
External Examiners who are responsible for awards are key members of Boards of Examiners. These boards make decisions about student progression within their course and about whether students can receive their final award.
Programme aims
To understand the intellectual and cultural foundations of Western thought.
To experience a varied, flexible and distinctive curriculum focused on the study of English literature and encompassing several genres and periods.
To become acquainted with a range of contextual, conceptual and comparative frameworks used in the study of literature.
To learn how to exercise their own judgements in the reading of both primary and secondary literary texts.
To gain understanding of the distinctive character of sociological thinking.
To learn about the main theoretical traditions of sociology.
To develop their capacity for critical enquiry and independent learning.
To acquire the knowledge and skills to enable them to proceed to further study and research.
Learning outcomes and learning, teaching and assessment methods
On successful completion of the programme a graduate should demonstrate knowledge and skills as follows:
A: Knowledge and understanding
A1: A knowledge of Enlightenment culture and thought
A2: A knowledge of a range of English literature from the early modern period to the present day, including knowledge of a variety of genres (poetry, fiction, and drama)
A3: The basic methods of critical analysis and argument
A4: Specialised study in the final year in areas students have identified as being of particular interest
A5: A knowledge of the intellectual foundations of Sociology
A6: A knowledge of key sociological concepts and theories
A7: An understanding of the relationships between individuals, groups, and social institutions
A8: A knowledge of the relationship between sociological theory, concepts, and substantive issues
A9: An understanding of the analysis and interpretation of substantive materials
A10: An understanding of the complex relationship between literature and culture (an appreciation of the way in which literary texts are embedded in their cultural and historical milieu, and an awareness of their role in creating a cultural change
A11: Develop intercultural skills
Learning methods
Both departments use lectures to present material - ideas, data and arguments - in a clear and structured manner using examples, mapping the field and the contours of debates.
Lectures are also used to stimulate students' interest in the area under discussion.
Issues and arguments covered in lectures are explored further through weekly classes or workshops for which students have to prepare.
The curriculum is designed to involve clear progression between the foundational work in the first year and the subsequent compulsory and then optional courses.
In addition, students are expected to extend and enhance the knowledge and understanding they acquire from classes and lectures by regularly consulting archival materials related to the course.
This independent research is then consolidated in essay work.
Learning techniques in the departments include thinking and writing in an interdisciplinary context (CS101); close textual analysis (all LT courses); the production of a glossary of sociological concepts and a sociological journal on a chosen topic (SC111); and the possibility of independent study and research (SC831, LT831).
Assessment methods
All outcomes are assessed through coursework and unseen written examinations.
Written examinations not only include standard essay type questions, but SC201, and LT201, 202, and 203 involve a compulsory question interpreting a passage of text.
B: Intellectual and cognitive skills
B1: An ability to analyse and critically assess original and complex texts and to comment cogently on them
B2: Reason critically and argue coherently
B3: Identify critical literary positions and interrogate them
B4: Make and account for connections between texts and their contexts
B5: To think independently and to make connections between familiar and new ideas
B6: Understand, summarise and critically assess sociological work
B7: An ability to compare competing theories and explanations and develop a reasoned argument (B)
Learning methods
In Sociology students enhance the above intellectual skills primarily through the work they do for their courses, although lectures and classes provide a means of teachers demonstrating these skills through example, and in the first year staff give specific presentations on their ongoing sociological research.
Preparation for classes and class presentations involve the reading, interpretation and evaluation of original sociological texts and the collection and evaluation of empirical data.
Class tutors provide feedback on class presentations and contributions to classes through comment and discussion.
Similarly the preparation of essays and other assignments also develops the listed intellectual skills.
Students are provided with feedback on all assessed work and this is crucial to their intellectual development.
In Literature intellectual and cognitive skills are initiated through lectures in Year 1 and 2, and further developed in seminars, as well as one-to-one tutorials where appropriate.
The seminar- based work of Year 3, like that of Years 1 and 2, encourages critical discussion arising from the analysis and interpretation of texts with an emphasis on being able to reason cogently, argue coherently and present one's own viewpoint persuasively.
Year 3 students are guided towards the acquisition of a reflective understanding of the arguments they and others propose, the analyses they and others offer, and the critical positions they and others employ.
This is done through in situ feedback (formally and informally, as appropriate) in oral and written presentations, group based critical discussions and the analysis and interpretation of texts and critical positions.
Therefore, Year 3 further develops and hones these skills, but it is also where we seek evidence of the successful deployment of independent thinking in the assessment.
Assessment methods
Outcomes B2-5 are assessed in all courses, B1 in CS101, SC201, and all Literature courses.
B6-7 are judged and evaluated in every piece of assessed sociological work.
In Literature seminars are intended as practice sessions for skills B1-5.
Students translate the skills acquired there collectively into individually assessed essays.
In turn, the essays prepare students for the exam.
As the summative assessment for any given course, the exam tests their ability both to demonstrate and to sustain the same skills in controlled conditions
C: Practical skills
C1: An ability to retrieve relevant sociological evidence using bibliographic and web searches and to summarise, report and evaluate arguments, texts and findings.
C2: Summarise, report and evaluate arguments, texts and findings
C3: An ability to demonstrate reflexive awareness in interpreting sociological material
C4: A vocabulary and a critical terminology for the analysis of literary texts
C5: Use accepted conventions of presenting references and bibliographies in writing
C6: The utilisation of a knowledge of literary and generic conventions
C7: Deploy a critical methodology in written work, employing reasoned argument to appreciate and evaluate a text
C8: An effective style or range of styles to convey a range of responses as readers of literary texts
Learning methods
In the first year, assignments cover tasks such as producing a bibliography on a sociological topic, producing a glossary, describing and evaluating a sociological text and producing a sociological journal.
Throughout the three years of the degree practical skills are developed through preparation for classes, preparing essays and other assessed assignments, giving presentations and doing written examinations.
In SC111, students are required to demonstrate reflexive awareness in the construction of a sociological journal.
The work for SC201 and CS101 includes the detailed examination and interpretation of key texts.
And of these skills are further developed by the work students do for their optional courses.
Students receive detailed feedback on all their coursework and presentations.
Study skills advice and training is available from the Student Support Officer in the Resource Room, which is dedicated to this purpose.
In Literature skills 4 and 6 are introduced in lectures and developed through classes (first and second years) and through seminars (third year).
Guidance on skills 5, 7, and 8 is given in teaching, in supervision of essays, and in Departmental Handbooks.
The strategy ensures that, having acquired a basic command of them, students exercise these skills in the third year in more specialised modules.
Assessment methods
Skill C1 is specifically assessed in a first-year Sociological assignment, but also forms part of the assessment of almost every piece of assessed coursework.
Skill C2 is assessed in the majority of pieces of assessed coursework and written examinations, and particularly in the assignments for SC201, including a compulsory unseen examination question on interpreting a passage from a classic text.
C3 is assessed in the journal for SC111.
The principle methods of assessment are essays and examinations.
Essay questions are designed to test all skills.
Examination questions test skills C2, 3, 4 and 5-7.
D: Key skills
D1: Clear, focused, relevant and effective written expression and oral communication
D2: Use appropriate IT to research and present materials.
D3: Analysing materials, abstracting generalisations and testing hypotheses
D4: Collaborating with others to achieve common goals e.g. in project planning, management and presentation, including the ability to 'read' and respond to arguments in a seminar setting and the ability to work in a variety of group context
D5: Under guidance, working independently, demonstrating self-organisation and time-management, and being receptive to feedback in the form of written comments on coursework and oral communication
Learning methods
Generic skills are taught and learned throughout the degree through a range of strategies, for example, requiring students to give oral presentations, giving them specific assignments such as carrying out bibliographic and web searches, or others requiring numerical skills, and through class discussion and class and essay preparation.
Students have the opportunity to discuss essay plans with staff and are given clear deadlines for their work which they must meet.
They are given feedback on all their coursework and are encouraged to reflect and improve upon their work.
Students also have the opportunity to develop skills in working in groups through their participation in the classes for every module.
Assessment methods
Communication skills are assessed throughout the degree through continuous assessed coursework and examinations and in particular through the Participation Mark for all Literature courses.
IT skills are a component in the evaluation of most assessed work which require bibliographic and web searches, but there is a particular focus on them in first year assessments such as the sociological journal.
Problem solving skills are assessed in almost all assignments.
Since the curriculum is structured in a progressive manner, students' skills in improving learning and performance are also assessed through the related structured progression of formal assessed work.