BA English Language and Literature(For students entering from September 2023 onwards)
Year 3
(Award available for year: Bachelor of Arts)
Learning outcomes
On completion of Level Three, students should have provided evidence of being able to: - • demonstrate a coherent and detailed command of the key concepts, information, practical competencies and techniques which constitute English studies • demonstrate a skilled knowledge of generic and subject-specific qualities, ie, present a structured and coherent argument • have detailed knowledge of critical terminology • have a sound knowledge of the varieties of language and forms; • have experience of a considerable amount of English literature from a range of literary periods and locations, including substantial study of texts before and after 1800; • have a critical and sophisticated command of the importance of the literary, cultural and socio-historical contexts in which literature is written both before and after 1800; • have an advanced knowledge of how to apply concepts of the structure and history of English to the analysis of texts; • develop and deploy dynamically and self-consciously a range of critical skills; • develop and deploy dynamically and self-consciously a range of analytical skills; • demonstrate an advanced and critical knowledge of the social, political cultural contexts of English as a medium for literature; • demonstrate a command of the English language via an engagement with literary materials; • demonstrate a critical knowledge of up to four particular and specific literary fields, facilitated either through the choice and pursuit of research-led option modules or via the planning and production of a dissertation.
Transferable (key) skills
Students will have had the opportunity to acquire key transferable skills as defined in the modules specified for the programme: • research based training; • qualities and transferable skills necessary for employment at graduate level entry; • skills necessary for the exercising of personal responsibility; • decision making.
Assessment
Achievement will be assessed by a variety of methods in accordance with the learning outcomes of the modules specified for the year/programme and will include: • research based learning; • the knowledge and application of concepts, information and techniques relevant to the discipline; • the ability to construct an argument; • knowledge of English Literature; • the ability to be critical of scholarly work.