File 93546
File 93546
I. Programme Details
Programme title Anthropological Research Methods
Anthropological Research Methods &
Intensive Language (any available)
Final award (exit awards will be made as BA MA
outlined in the Taught Degree Regulations) BSc MSc
Other ... LLM
Mode of delivery Distance-learning
On-campus
Professional body accreditation (if applicable) n/a
Academic year this specification was created 2016/17
Dates of any subsequent amendments
II. Programme Aims: What will the programme allow you to achieve?
1. To prepare students for a PhD in social anthropology.
2. To train students in research skills to the level prescribed by the ESRCs
research training guidelines.
3. To enable students to understand key issues in anthropological method and
theory, and to understand the epistemological issues involved in using different
methods.
4. To enable students to achieve practical competence in a range of qualitative and
quantitative research methods and tools.
5. To provide students with the theoretical, practical and linguistic training
necessary for conducting field research.
6. In the two-year pathway, the student will also be provided with a near
proficient ability in a language.
III. Programme Learning Outcomes: What will you learn on the programme?
There are four key areas in which you will develop:
[1/3]
presentation, how to comment on presentations and how to apply for funding.
Term three looks at the strategies for working on the Masters dissertation and
how to be upgraded at the start of the MPhil year.
4. Students can choose an option (or two half units) which they and their supervisor
think necessary to hone their expertise in either a region or subject area. This should
result in a good grounding in the history and contemporary sociocultural and
political issues of the chosen country or region of study, and familiarity with the
scholarly literature on these topics.
5. Many students work on their language skills with a language option in this MA.
Students are expected to achieve proficiency in an African or Asian language
sufficient for the purposes of anthropological field research: ability to conduct
conversations and interviews, and to read and synthesise information from written
sources in that language.
Typical Teaching Methods Typical Assessment Methods
Acquisition of 1 and 4 through Through unseen examinations, long
seminars and classes. Students are essays, course work and a dissertation.
required to attend all classes, study The Research Methods course also
extensively on their own and prepare assesses a mini- ethnography an
non-assessed work regularly. exercise in participant observation and
Acquisition of 2 through the Research Methods writing it up.
course works, through lectures, practical
assessments (including mini ethnographies),
and seminar discussions.
Acquisition of 3 through a seminar
course in which, aside from the sessions
devoted to lectures on fieldwork as an
experience, the students do
presentations, and comment on each
others work. The course also devotes
several sessions to looking a funding
applications and how to best to
approach these.
Acquisition of 5 through language courses.
[2/3]
practice at presenting seminars,
discussing each others work.
[3/3]