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Programme Specification for the 2025/6 academic year

BA (Hons) Sociology and Global Cultural Studies (3-year)

1. Programme Details

Programme nameBA (Hons) Sociology and Global Cultural Studies (3-year) Programme codeUFA3HPSSML21
Study mode(s)Part Time
Full Time
Academic year2025/6
Campus(es)Streatham (Exeter)
NQF Level of the Final Award6 (Honours)

2. Description of the Programme

The BA (Hons) Sociology and Global Cultural Studies (3-year) programme is an exit route only and not available for direct application. Transfer to this programme is subject to agreement from the Director of Education and Student Experience for Languages, Cultures and Visual Studies.

You can switch to BA Sociology and Global Cultural Studies after completing one or two years of BA Sociology and Modern Languages. If you switch into the programme for second year, you will take only optional cultural modules from across Modern Languages and Cultures (no core language modules) in second year. If you pass 60 credits of language modules over years 1 and 2 and then switch to Global Cultural Studies for your third year, this will be recognised in your degree title (see Programme Specific Award Rules).

3. Educational Aims of the Programme

Please see the programme specifications for BA Sociology and Modern Languages (3 year) for full details. The difference between programmes is that you do not take core language modules once you change to BA Sociology and Global Cultural Studies (3 year) and so do not develop your language skills to the same extent.

4. Programme Structure

The BA (Hons) Sociology and Global Cultural Studies (3-year) is a three-year full-time programme of study at Regulated Qualifications Framework (RQF) level 6 (as confirmed against the FHEQ). This programme is divided into three stages. Each stage is normally equivalent to an academic year. The programme may also be taken part-time in up to six years.

 

You begin on BA Sociology and Modern Languages and change to BA Global Cultural Studies (three year) in the following cases:

You fail your core language at first or second year.

You are studying a beginners language and you do not do a year abroad, so transfer at the end of second year.

You decide you no longer want to study any core language modules after first or second year.

5. Programme Modules

The following tables describe the programme and constituent modules. Constituent modules may be updated, deleted or replaced as a consequence of the annual programme review of this programme.

Modern Languages modules https://www.exeter.ac.uk/study/studyinformation/modules/?prog=mod-lang

Sociology and Criminology modules https://www.exeter.ac.uk/study/studyinformation/modules/?prog=sociology

You may take optional modules as long as any prerequisites have been satisfied, where the timetable allows and if you have not already taken the module in question or an equivalent module. You are expected to balance your credits in each stage of the programme, taking 60 credits from Sociology and 60 credits from Global Cultural Studies. You may switch to Global Cultural Studies after studying one or two years of Modern Languages. When you switch to Global Cultural Studies, you will no longer take core language modules, and instead take 60 credits of options per year.

Stage 1


60 credits of compulsory Sociology modules, 30 credits of compulsory modules in your chosen language and 30 credits of optional modules consisting of content related to your chosen language.

Subject to choosing 120 credits for the stage overall, you must:

a - select 30 credits of compulsory modules in your chosen language.

 

Compulsory Modules

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
SOC1000 Contemporary Society: Themes, Perspectives and Case Studies 30No
SOC1001 Social Analysis 30No
Modern Languages Stage 1 Compulsory Language Modules [See note a above]
MLF1001 French Language 30 Yes
MLF1052 French Language for Beginners 30 Yes
MLG1001 German Language 30 Yes
MLG1052 German Language for Beginners 30 Yes
MLI1001 Italian Language 30 Yes
MLI1052 Italian Language for Beginners 30 Yes
MLM1052 Beginners Chinese 30 Yes
MLP1052 Portuguese Language for Beginners 30 Yes
MLR1001 Contemporary Russian Written and Oral 30 Yes
MLR1030 Russian Language for Beginners 30 Yes
MLS1001 Spanish Language 30 Yes
MLS1056 Spanish Language for Beginners 30 Yes

Optional Modules

b - select 30 credits of optional modules consisting of content related to your chosen language; on the Modern Languages side of your programme, you may select a maximum of 15 credits of either the SML- or HUM-coded modules for the year. Please note that certain modules may only be available to students on Single Honours programmes, or to students who have taken a particular language module. This information will be given in the pre-requisites or co-requisites section of the relevant module descriptor.

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
Chinese Stage 1 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note b above]
MLM1010 China of the Senses: Approaching Chinese Culture and Environments 15 No
PHL1010 Introduction to Asian Philosophy 15 No
SML1208 Language, Culture, International Relations 15 No
French Stage 1 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note b above]
MLF1017 The Making of Modern France 15 No
MLF1018 The Devil is in the Detail: An Introduction to the Short Story in French 15 No
SML1207 Introduction to Film 15 No
MLF1103 The French Language, Present and Past 15 No
MLF1121 French Visual History 15 No
MLF1105 An Introduction to French Thought 15 No
SML1208 Language, Culture, International Relations 15 No
German Stage 1 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note b above]
MLG1017 Turning Points in German History 1200 - 2000 15 No
MLG1021 Outside In: An Introduction to Outcasts and Outsiders in German-language Literature and Film 15 No
SML1207 Introduction to Film 15 No
MLG1014 A Nation Remembers: Issues in German Cultural Memory 15 No
MLG1022 Divided Germany in Film and Visual Culture 1949-1990 15 No
SML1208 Language, Culture, International Relations 15 No
Italian Stage 1 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note b above]
MLI1016 Italy Inside Out: Popular Visual Narratives about Italy 15 No
SML1207 Introduction to Film 15 No
MLI1121 A Thousand Faces: Cultures and History in 19th-Century Italy 15 No
Portuguese Stage 1 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note b above]
SML1207 Introduction to Film 15 No
MLP1002 Introduction to the Lusophone World 15 No
SML1208 Language, Culture, International Relations 15 No
Russian Stage 1 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note b above]
MLR1023 Russia: Empire and Identity 15 No
SML1207 Introduction to Film 15 No
MLR1006 An Emotional Experience: Russian Literature and the Expression of Feeling 15 No
Spanish Stage 1 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note b above]
MLS1067 Ideology in the Hispanic World 15 No
MLS1068 An Introduction to the Literature and Film of Spain 15 No
SML1207 Introduction to Film 15 No
MLS1066 The Making of Modern Latin America: History Through Literature and Culture 15 No
MLS1164 A Journey of Discovery: Hispanic Global Culture 15 No
SML1208 Language, Culture, International Relations 15 No
Sociology Stage 1 Option Modules 2025-6
SOC1028 Media and Society 15 No
SOC1053 Imagining Social Worlds: Social Research Methods 15 No

Stage 2


If you move into BA Sociology and Global Cultural Studies (3 year) for your second year, please follow the pattern below. Otherwise, please see BA Sociology and Modern Languages. On Sociology and Global Cultural Studies (3 year) language modules are condonable, so if you fail a core language at second year, you can move onto the BA Sociology and Global Cultural Studies (3 year) as an exit programme.

45 credits of compulsory modules in Sociology, , 15 credits of optional modules in Sociology and 30 credits of optional modules consisting of content related to your chosen language.

Subject to selecting 120 credits in the stage overall, you must:

c - select 30 credits of compulsory modules in your chosen language.

 

Compulsory Modules

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
SOC2005 Theoretical Sociology 30No

Optional Modules

select 30 credits of optional modules in Sociology. Sociology and Criminology modules https://www.exeter.ac.uk/study/studyinformation/modules/?prog=sociology

d - Either select 30 credits of core language modules in your chosen language, if viable, and 30 credits of optional modules in Modern Languages and cultures. Or 60 credits of optional modules in Modern Languages and cultures, including relevant SML or HUM coded modules.

 

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
Chinese Stage 2 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note d above]
HUM2005 Tales of Freedom, Necessity and Providence 15 No
MLM2003 Chinoiserie and Europeenerie: Artistic and cultural exchanges between China and Europe 15 No
MLM2008 Introduction to Modern Chinese Literature 15 No
SML2246 Intercultural Communication 15 No
SML2244 Multilingualism in Society 15 No
French Stage 2 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note d above]
MLF2012 Evolution of the French Language 15 No
MLF2069 East is East? Cross-Cultural Encounters in Medieval French Literature 15 No
MLF2076 Subversive Texts: Baudelaire and Rachilde 15 No
HUM2005 Tales of Freedom, Necessity and Providence 15 No
HIH2208A Medieval Paris 30 No
MLF2070 Violence and Virtue: Early Modern French Theatre 15 No
MLF2029 Varieties of French 15 No
MLF2006 French-language Road Movies: Space, Place and Identity 15 No
HIH2591 Philip Augustus and the Making of France, 1180-1223 30 No
SML2246 Intercultural Communication 15 No
SML2244 Multilingualism in Society 15 No
German Stage 2 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note d above]
MLG2003 Youth and Age: Generations in German Fiction and Film 15 No
MLG2018 Berlin - Culture, History and Politics 15 No
MLG2019 Gender, Race and Migration in 20th and 21st-century German Literature 15 No
SML2246 Intercultural Communication 15 No
SML2244 Multilingualism in Society 15 No
Italian Stage 2 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note d above]
MLI2019 Italian(s) in the World 15 No
HUM2005 Tales of Freedom, Necessity and Providence 15 No
MLI2004 From Page to Screen: The Italian Female Detective in Literature, Film and Television 15 No
SML2246 Intercultural Communication 15 No
SML2244 Multilingualism in Society 15 No
Portuguese Stage 2 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note d above]
SML2004 Contemporary Latin American Cinema 15 No
SML2246 Intercultural Communication 15 No
SML2244 Multilingualism in Society 15 No
Russian Stage 2 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note d above]
MLR2023 A Russian Carnival of the Animals 15 No
MLR2026 The Deceptive City: the Creation of St Petersburg in Russian Literature 15 No
MLR2021 Understanding Russia 15 No
MLR2025 Imperfect Murder: Reading Crime and Punishment 15 No
SML2246 Intercultural Communication 15 No
SML2244 Multilingualism in Society 15 No
Spanish Stage 2 Option Modules 2024-5 [See note d above]
MLS2044 How to be a Knight: Political Lessons from 14th-Century Spain 15 No
MLS2072 Place and Identity in Contemporary Venezuelan Culture 15 No
SML2004 Contemporary Latin American Cinema 15 No
HIH2145A Spain from Absolutism to Democracy 30 No
MLS2045 Federico Garcia Lorca: Theatre and Poetry 15 No
MLS2061 The Latin American Short Story 15 No
MLS2073 Literary Non-Fiction in Argentina: When Writing Meets the Real 15 No
MLS2158 "What is Love? And Do I Need It?" An Introduction to Spanish Renaissance Love Poetry 15 No
SML2246 Intercultural Communication 15 No
SML2244 Multilingualism in Society 15 No
Modern Languages Stage 2 Compulsory Language Modules [See note c above]
MLF2001 French Language, Written and Oral 30 No
MLF2152 Intermediate French 30 No
MLG2001 German Language, Written and Oral 30 No
MLG2052 Intermediate German 30 No
MLI2001 Italian Language, Written and Oral 30 No
MLI2051 Italian Language 30 No
MLM2052 Intermediate Chinese (One) 30 No
MLP2052 Intermediate Portuguese 30 No
MLR2001 Contemporary Russian Written and Oral I 30 No
MLR2030 Intermediate Russian 30 No
MLS2001 Spanish Language, Written and Oral 30 No
MLS2156 Spanish Language (ex-beginners) 30 No
Sociology Stage 2 Option Modules 2025-6
SOC2009 Deviance: Interdisciplinary Perspectives 15 No
SOC2024 Power and Domination 15 No
SOC2025 Current Themes in the Sociology of Sport 15 No
SOC2030 Sociology of Art and Culture 15 No
SOC2034 Gender and Society 1 15 No
SOC2037 Pharmaceutical Cultures 15 No
SOC2038 On Violence 15 No
SOC2039 Sociology of Family and Gender 15 No
SOC2105 Contemporary Capitalism, Critique and Resistance 15 No
SOC2150 Health, Illness and Biomedicine 15 No
Anthropology Stage 2 Option Modules 2025-6
ANT2009 Living Cities: Migration, Place and the Politics of Identities 15 No
ANT2014 Cultures: Food 15 No
ANT2016 Anthropology of the State 15 No
ANT2017 Anthropology of Islam 15 No
ANT2021 Anthropology of the Middle East 15 No
ANT2023 Theory and Methods of Food Preservation 15 No
ANT2041 How Organisations Work: Ethnography in Institutions 15 No
ANT2042 Gardening, Wellbeing and Community 15 No
ANT2089 Cultures of Race, Ethnicity and Racism 15 No
ANT2090 Sound and Society 15 No
ANT2097 Environment and Society 15 No
ANT2109 Anthropology of Forced Migration 15 No
ANT2114 The Anthropology of Prisons 15 No
ANT2116 Animals and Society 15 No
ANT2117 Dogs and Cats: Anthropological Subjects 15 No
ANT2118 Anthropology of Contemporary Britain 15 No
ANT2119 Social movements and collective action 15 No

Stage 3


120 credit of option modules

 

 

Optional Modules

select 60 credits of option modules in Sociology. Sociology and Criminology modules https://www.exeter.ac.uk/study/studyinformation/modules/?prog=sociology

e / f - select 30 credits of optional modules consisting of content related to your chosen language; you may select a maximum of 15 credits of the SML- or HUM-coded modules listed below for the year, these are additional to SML3015. You may, alternatively, take SML3030. Please note you may only select one dissertation module across the two programmes. It is your responsibility to ensure that credit for SML modules can be counted towards the language of your study, where this is necessary for your credit count.

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
Chinese Final Stage Option Modules 2024-5 [See note f above]
HUM3015 The Place of Meaning: Gardens in Britain and China 15 No
SML3015 Dissertation 15 No
SML3013 Through the Language Lens: the Relationship between Language, Culture and the Mind 15 No
SML3043 Migration and Multilingualism 15 No
SML3041 Green Matters in Modern Languages and Cultures 15 No
MLM3008 Introduction to Modern Chinese Literature 15 No
SML3042 Transcultural Devon: Creating, Analysing and Subtitling Interviews in the Context of Migration 15 No
SML3009 Intercultural Communication in a Global World 15 No
HUM3002 Aliens Abroad: Science Fiction in Global Literature 15 No
SML3030 Extended Dissertation 30 No
French Final Stage Option Modules 2024-5 [See note f above]
SML3015 Dissertation 15 No
SML3030 Extended Dissertation 30 No
SML3013 Through the Language Lens: the Relationship between Language, Culture and the Mind 15 No
SML3043 Migration and Multilingualism 15 No
SML3041 Green Matters in Modern Languages and Cultures 15 No
MLF3034 Sociolinguistics of French 15 No
MLF3079 Sex, Subversion and Censorship: Libertine Literature in Seventeenth-Century France 15 No
MLF3007 Multilingualism, Audiovisual Translation and Power in Cinema-monde 15 No
MLF3078 Philosophers, Prophets and Mystics in French Culture 15 No
MLF3080 Les Miserables from the Nineteenth Century to the Present Day 15 No
SML3042 Transcultural Devon: Creating, Analysing and Subtitling Interviews in the Context of Migration 15 No
SML3044 Migration in World Cinema 15 No
SML3009 Intercultural Communication in a Global World 15 No
German Final Stage Option Modules 2024-5 [See note f above]
MLG3040 Sex, Sciences and the Arts 15 No
SML3015 Dissertation 15 No
SML3013 Through the Language Lens: the Relationship between Language, Culture and the Mind 15 No
SML3034 Contemporary French Visual Culture 15 No
SML3041 Green Matters in Modern Languages and Cultures 15 No
MLG3036 Dictatorships on Display: History Exhibitions in Germany and Austria 15 No
SML3042 Transcultural Devon: Creating, Analysing and Subtitling Interviews in the Context of Migration 15 No
SML3009 Intercultural Communication in a Global World 15 No
SML3030 Extended Dissertation 30 No
Italian Final Stage Option Modules 2024-5 [See note f above]
MLI3199 Elena Ferrante's My Brilliant Friend 15 No
SML3015 Dissertation 15 No
SML3013 Through the Language Lens: the Relationship between Language, Culture and the Mind 15 No
SML3043 Migration and Multilingualism 15 No
SML3041 Green Matters in Modern Languages and Cultures 15 No
MLI3033 Multicultural Italy 15 No
HUM3002 Aliens Abroad: Science Fiction in Global Literature 15 No
SML3042 Transcultural Devon: Creating, Analysing and Subtitling Interviews in the Context of Migration 15 No
SML3009 Intercultural Communication in a Global World 15 No
SML3030 Extended Dissertation 30 No
Portuguese Final Stage Option Modules 2024-5 [See note f above]
SML3013 Through the Language Lens: the Relationship between Language, Culture and the Mind 15 No
SML3015 Dissertation 15 No
SML3043 Migration and Multilingualism 15 No
SML3041 Green Matters in Modern Languages and Cultures 15 No
SML3044 Migration in World Cinema 15 No
SML3014 Socialist Thought and Practice in Latin America and Africa 15 No
SML3042 Transcultural Devon: Creating, Analysing and Subtitling Interviews in the Context of Migration 15 No
SML3009 Intercultural Communication in a Global World 15 No
SML3030 Extended Dissertation 30 No
Russian Final Stage Option Modules 2024-5 [See note f above]
MLR3026 The Deceptive City: The Creation of St Petersburg in Russian Literature 15 No
MLR3123 A Russian Carnival of the Animals 15 No
SML3015 Dissertation 15 No
SML3013 Through the Language Lens: the Relationship between Language, Culture and the Mind 15 No
SML3043 Migration and Multilingualism 15 No
SML3041 Green Matters in Modern Languages and Cultures 15 No
MLR3021 Women Writers in Twentieth - century Russian Literure 30 No
MLR3025 Apocalypse/Utopia: The Russian Roots of Revolution 15 No
SML3009 Intercultural Communication in a Global World 15 No
SML3042 Transcultural Devon: Creating, Analysing and Subtitling Interviews in the Context of Migration 15 No
HUM3002 Aliens Abroad: Science Fiction in Global Literature 15 No
SML3030 Extended Dissertation 30 No
Spanish Final Stage Option Modules 2024-5 [See note f above]
MLS3037 Women and Feminism in 20th Century Spain 15 No
MLS3057 Cross Currents: Memory, Myth and Modernity in Latin America 15 No
MLS3071 The Chilean Road to Socialism (1970-1973): What Happened and Why? Elements for a Debate 15 No
SML3015 Dissertation 15 No
SML3013 Through the Language Lens: the Relationship between Language, Culture and the Mind 15 No
SML3043 Migration and Multilingualism 15 No
SML3041 Green Matters in Modern Languages and Cultures 15 No
MLS3072 Unlawful Sex: Sexualities on Trial in Medieval Spain 15 No
SML3031 Advanced Translation Skills 15 No
SML3009 Intercultural Communication in a Global World 15 No
SML3014 Socialist Thought and Practice in Latin America and Africa 15 No
SML3042 Transcultural Devon: Creating, Analysing and Subtitling Interviews in the Context of Migration 15 No
SML3044 Migration in World Cinema 15 No
HUM3002 Aliens Abroad: Science Fiction in Global Literature 15 No
SML3030 Extended Dissertation 30 No
Modern Languages Final Stage Compulsory Language Modules [See note e above]
MLM3111 Advanced Chinese Language Skills 30 No
MLF3111 Advanced French Language Skills 30 No
MLG3111 Advanced German Language Skills 30 No
MLI3111 Advanced Italian Language Skills 30 No
MLP3111 Advanced Portuguese Language Skills 30 No
MLR3111 Advanced Russian Language Skills 30 No
MLS3111 Advanced Spanish Language Skills 30 No
Sociology Final Stage Option Modules 2025-6
SOC3002 On Violence 15 No
SOC3013 Gender and Society 1 15 No
SOC3030 Sociology of Art and Culture 15 No
SOC3035 Deviance: Interdisciplinary Perspectives 15 No
SOC3080 Pharmaceutical Cultures 15 No
SOC3108 Sociology of Family and Gender 15 No
SOC3109 Contemporary Capitalism, Critique and Resistance 15 No
SOC3147 Power and Domination 15 No
SOC3148 Current Themes in the Sociology of Sport 15 No
SOC3150 Health, Illness and Biomedicine 15 No
Anthropology Final Stage Option Modules 2025-6
ANT3004 Living Cities: Migration, Place and the Politics of Identities 15 No
ANT3014 Cultures: Food 15 No
ANT3016 Anthropology of the State 15 No
ANT3017 Anthropology of Islam 15 No
ANT3021 Anthropology of the Middle East 15 No
ANT3023 Theory and Methods of Food Preservation 15 No
ANT3024 Anthropology of Forced Migration 15 No
ANT3025 Social Movements and Collective Action 15 No
ANT3053 How Organisations Work: Ethnography in Institutions 15 No
ANT3054 Gardening, Wellbeing and Community 15 No
ANT3089 Cultures of Race, Ethnicity and Racism 15 No
ANT3090 Sound and Society 15 No
ANT3096 The Anthropology of Prisons 15 No
ANT3097 Environment and Society 15 No
ANT3099 Animals and Society 15 No
ANT3100 Dogs and Cats: Anthropological subjects 15 No
ANT3118 Anthropology of Contemporary Britain 15 No

6. Programme Outcomes Linked to Teaching, Learning and Assessment Methods

Intended Learning Outcomes
A: Specialised Subject Skills and Knowledge

Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs)
On successfully completing this programme you will be able to:
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs) will be...
...accommodated and facilitated by the following learning and teaching activities (in/out of class):...and evidenced by the following assessment methods:

1. Demonstrate an analytical understanding of Sociology, taking into account different sociological perspectives, modes of social analysis and their concomitant theoretical and conceptual frameworks
2. Show awareness of the social, political, historical, and economic origins of Sociology.
3. Show knowledge of a variety of methods of social investigation, including ethnographic and survey methods, questionnaire and interview design
4. Ability to conceptualise social, psychological and personal issues in a specifically sociological manner
5. Demonstrate knowledge of the social organisation, economy and cosmology of a range of societies
6. Show knowledge of some of the main challenges in obtaining and conveying information about a range of societies
7. Demonstrate understanding (at increasing depth, according to level) of issues (increasingly complex, according to level) arising from the subject matter of the elective modules taken.
8. Show wide-ranging knowledge of the history and culture of the relevant country or countries and an understanding of their contribution to western culture as a whole.
9. Show awareness of the linguistic, literary, cultural and socio-historical contexts in which texts, films and so forth are produced and read.
10. Show awareness of how language produces and reflects cultural change and difference.

This skill is developed on all sociology modules, and is a core aim of the sociology side of the programme, especially on SOC1048 and SOC1049.

2-4. These skills are developed initially through lectures, seminars and essay work for SOC1048, SOC1049, SOC1019, SOC1020, SOC2005 and are developed further on subsequent modules.

5-6 These skills are developed through similar methods on SOC1048, SOC1049, and further developed on subsequent modules. 7. This skill is developed through the optional modules taken. The level of competence expected of students intensifies at each stage of the programme.

8-10. These skills are developed through the optional modules taken.

The assessment of these skills is through a combination of term-time essays, oral presentations, other forms of coursework, examinations and, where applicable, Research Methods Project , Dissertation work.

Intended Learning Outcomes
B: Academic Discipline Core Skills and Knowledge

Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs)
On successfully completing this programme you will be able to:
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs) will be...
...accommodated and facilitated by the following learning and teaching activities (in/out of class):...and evidenced by the following assessment methods:

11. Draw thematic comparisons between material from different sources
12. Show awareness of contrasting approaches to research.
13. Understand and demonstrate the different uses of qualitative and quantitative data, and evaluate their relative advantages and disadvantages.
14. Show awareness of the basic philosophical questions arising from academic research.
15. Think and write broadly about large themes
16. Use library and the world-wide web to find appropriate and relevant information
17. Develop and deploy argument, grounded in theoretical frameworks and empirical evidence.
18. Identify problems of reliability and bias in, and more generally evaluate, empirical evidence.
19. Collate data from a range of sources.
20. Produce accurate reference to sources in written work.
21. Answer questions concisely and persuasively in written work
22. Present work and answer questions orally.
23. Deploy complex terminology in a comprehensible manner
24. Analyse texts (including where appropriate non-literary texts and other media, e.g. film) taking account of their cultural, historical and generic contexts, and articulate one's understanding orally and in writing.
25. Show receptiveness to a foreign culture and ability to see the relativity of one's own cultural perspective.

ILOs 11-25 are developed throughout the degree programme, but the emphasis becomes more complex as students move from stage to stage. They are developed through lectures and seminars, written work, and oral work (both presentation and class discussion).

ILOs 11-25 are assessed through term-time essays, assessed presentations, other forms of coursework and examinations.

Intended Learning Outcomes
C: Personal/Transferable/Employment Skills and Knowledge

Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs)
On successfully completing this programme you will be able to:
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs) will be...
...accommodated and facilitated by the following learning and teaching activities (in/out of class):...and evidenced by the following assessment methods:

26. Undertake independent study and work to deadlines.
27. Use a word processor and the world-wide web to a high standard.
28. Digest, select and organise material for written work and oral presentations, and write to varying word lengths.
29. Evaluate own work.
30. Sit timed examinations of a challenging nature.
31. Participate in oral discussions; present and evaluate complex arguments and ideas orally; digest, select and organise material for oral presentations.
32. Work with others as part of a team on challenging material.
33. Interact effectively with peers and staff.
34. Undertake group work, including the presentation and discussion of material in groups.
35. Communicate and argue effectively, both orally and in writing.
36. Express and defend opinions on a wide range of current and abstract issues.
37. If taking Sociology Project and/or Dissertation in either subject: Plan the execution of demanding work over a very long time scale.

26. This skill is an essential part of the successful completion of the programme.

 

27. This skill is developed through the requirement that all written work be word-processed, through forms of assessment such as podcasts or videos for some modules, and through the requirement on students to use the WWW for bibliographical searches.

 

28. This skill is developed through essay and presentation work throughout the programme.

 

29. This skill is encouraged and developed throughout, and is aided by the student Self-Appraisal system which takes place in the inter-semester week of Spring Term.

 

30. This skill is developed through practice: at all stages, students are partly assessed by timed, unseen examinations.

 

31. This skill is developed through seminars, which form the whole or part basis of all modules.

 

Skills 32-36 are developed to some extent in all modules, through interaction in seminars and in discussion with tutors about essay work, and in response to criticism both collective and individual.

 

37. This skill is developed through the through the Dissertation, if chosen, which has a single end of year deadline.

Skills in 26-28 are assessed in all modules.

 

Skill 29 is covered by the fact that students write essays, which are formatively and summatively assessed, of differing lengths and in the Dissertation.

 

Skill 30 is assessed implicitly throughout, and is aided by the student Self-Appraisal exercise conducted in the inter-semester week in Spring Term.

 

31. Timed examinations are used in some modules

 

Skill 32 is a continuous part of formative assessment.

 

The skills in 33-35 are developed to some extent in all modules, through interaction in seminars and in discussion with tutors about essay work, and in response to criticism both collective and individual.

 

Skills 36-37 form the basis of assessment in the core language modules, building in complexity as the student progresses through the programme.

 

Skill 38 is covered by the Dissertation, if chosen.

7. Programme Regulations

Programme-specific Award Rules


Your degree classification will be calculated from the credit-weighted average marks for stages 2 and 3 combined in the ratio 1:2 respectively.

Your degree title will be ‘BA Sociology and Global Cultural Studies (3 year)’. If you have passed at least 60 credits of a language in stages 1 and 2, you will get ‘with proficiency in [language]’. If you have passed at least 60 credits of a language at advanced level (MLx1001, MLx2001 or Language Centre equivalents), you will get ‘with proficiency in advanced [language]’.

Classification

Full details of assessment regulations for all taught programmes can be found in the TQA Manual, specifically in the Credit and Qualifications Framework, and the Assessment, Progression and Awarding: Taught Programmes Handbook. Additional information, including Generic Marking Criteria, can be found in the Learning and Teaching Support Handbook.

8. College Support for Students and Students' Learning

All students within Sociology and Modern Languages and Cultures have a personal tutor for their entire programme of study and who is available at advertised ‘office hours’. There are induction sessions to orientate you at the start of your programme. A personal tutoring system will operate with regular communication throughout the programme. Academic support will be also be provided by module leaders. You can also make an appointment to see individual teaching staff.

9. University Support for Students and Students' Learning

Please refer to the University Academic Policy and Standards guidelines regarding support for students and students' learning.

10. Admissions Criteria

Undergraduate applicants must satisfy the Undergraduate Admissions Policy of the University of Exeter.

Postgraduate applicants must satisfy the Postgraduate Admissions Policy of the University of Exeter.

Specific requirements required to enrol on this programme are available at the respective Undergraduate or Postgraduate Study Site webpages.

11. Regulation of Assessment and Academic Standards

Each academic programme in the University is subject to an agreed College assessment and marking strategy, underpinned by institution-wide assessment procedures.

The security of assessment and academic standards is further supported through the appointment of External Examiners for each programme. External Examiners have access to draft papers, course work and examination scripts. They are required to attend the Board of Examiners and to provide an annual report. Annual External Examiner reports are monitored at both College and University level. Their responsibilities are described in the University's code of practice. See the University's TQA Manual for details.

(Quality Review Framework.

14. Awarding Institution

University of Exeter

15. Lead College / Teaching Institution

Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences (HASS)

16. Partner College / Institution

Partner College(s)

Not applicable to this programme

Partner Institution

Not applicable to this programme.

17. Programme Accredited / Validated by

0

18. Final Award

BA (Hons) Sociology and Global Cultural Studies (3-year)

19. UCAS Code

Not applicable to this programme.

20. NQF Level of Final Award

6 (Honours)

21. Credit

CATS credits

480

ECTS credits

240

22. QAA Subject Benchmarking Group

[Honours] Languages and related studies
[Honours] Sociology

23. Dates

Origin Date

23/08/2019

Date of last revision

25/04/2024