2019/20 Taught Postgraduate Programme Catalogue
MSc Infection, Immunity and Human Disease
Programme code: | MSC-BSGS/IID | UCAS code: | |
---|---|---|---|
Duration: | 12 Months | Method of Attendance: | Full Time |
Programme manager: | Professor Mark Harris | Contact address: | m.harris@leeds.ac.uk |
No
Total credits: 180
Entry requirements:
- A bachelor degree with 2:1 (hons) in a subject that has covered the cellular and molecular basis of life such as: Genetics, Microbiology, Biochemistry.
- We accept a range of international equivalent qualifications.
- IELTS 6.5 overall, with no less than 6.0 in all components or equivalent.
School/Unit responsible for the parenting of students and programme:
School of Molecular and Cellular Biology
Examination board through which the programme will be considered:
Masters Bioscience Examination Board
Relevant QAA Subject Benchmark Groups:
QAA have published a set of characteristics, graduates from Masters programmes should possess. These are:
A. Subject specific attributes
An in-depth knowledge and understanding of the discipline informed by current scholarship and research including a critical awareness of current issues and developments in the subject
The ability to complete a research project in the subject which may include a critical review of existing literature or other scholarly outputs
B. Generic attributes (Including skills relevant to an employment setting)
A range of generic abilities and skills that include the ability to:
Use initiative and take responsibility
Solve problems in creative an innovative ways
Make decisions and challenge situations
Continue to learn independently and to develop professionally
Programme specification:
The programme will:
consist of 50 credits of compulsory core research training modules designed to equip students with the expertise necessary to work at the cutting edge of a modern bioscience sector - including research planning exercises, methodologies underpinning modern bioscience and an extended practical project intended to give the students experience with the techniques used in molecular biology. Added to this is an independent research project (80 credits) which will be in an area related to infection, immunity or human disease and hence substantial specialist training will be achieved through this project. Specialist taught modules will make up the remaining 50 credits. These modules will describe advanced concepts underpinning the basis of selected human diseases, infectious and non-infectious and will present current treatments and new treatment strategies. In particular, students should gain a strong appreciation of the molecular, genetic and cellular approaches currently being used to understand, diagnose and treat human disease.
As part of the programme, students will be able to interact with a number of external speakers working in the diagnostic and pharmaceutical sector and hence build up an understanding of the employment prospects in these sectors.
Students will also be expected to attend at least one research seminar per week from the various seminar series that the Faculty offers, and therefore will be able to broaden their knowledge of the discipline area that they are working in.
There will be the opportunity to undertake a research project externally (dependent on the Faculty or the student securing a placement of appropriate quality and passing a competitive selection process).
Year1 - View timetable
[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]
Compulsory modules:
All modules are compulsory. Where students have a strong educational background in Immunology, if approved by the programme leader, they should select either BIOL5112M Bioimaging, S1 (10c) OR BIOL5178M High Throughput Technologies, S1 (15c) module instead of BIOL5146M Advanced Immunology. In addition, students may be directed to take BIOL5312M Bioimaging (15c) (mutually exclusive with BIOL5112M) or BIOL5178M High Throughput Technologies, S1 (15c) instead of BIOL5373M Protein Engineering Laboratory Project where appropriate and where material has been covered within undergraduate programmes (mainly University of Leeds graduates from the School of Molecular & Cellular Biology).
BIOL5146M | Advanced Immunology | 10 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
BIOL5171M | Infectious & Non-infectious Diseases | 10 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
BIOL5172M | Practical Bioinformatics | 10 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
BIOL5276M | Medical Diagnostics | 10 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
BIOL5294M | MSc Bioscience Research Project Proposal | 5 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
BIOL5296M | Treatment of Infectious Disease and Cancer | 10 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
BIOL5371M | Research Planning and Scientific Communication | 10 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
BIOL5372M | Advanced Biomolecular Technologies | 20 credits | Semesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun) | |
BIOL5373M | Protein Engineering Laboratory Project | 15 credits | Semesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun) | |
BIOL5392M | Bioscience MSc Research Project | 80 credits | 1 Apr to 31 Aug |
To obtain the award of MSc, students must achieve a pass mark in 30 credits of the 40 credits of subject specialism modules (which include BIOL5146M Advanced Immunology, BIOL5171M Infectious & Non-infectious Diseases, BIOL5276M Medical Diagnostics, and BIOL5296M Treatment Infectious Disease and Cancer) and satisfy the Rules for Award for a Taught Postgraduate Masters programme. Otherwise an appropriate Fall back award would be available.
Last updated: 17/04/2019
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