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Programme Specification for the 2024/5 academic year

BA (Hons) Philosophy and Sociology with Employment Experience Abroad

1. Programme Details

Programme nameBA (Hons) Philosophy and Sociology with Employment Experience Abroad Programme codeUFA4HPSHPS67
Study mode(s)Full Time
Academic year2024/5
Campus(es)Streatham (Exeter)
NQF Level of the Final Award6 (Honours)

2. Description of the Programme

The Philosophy and Sociology programme with the Study Abroad at Exeter allows you to develop into graduates that are useful, productive and questioning members of society. You will become grounded in the main themes of Philosophy through a combination of modules which will encourage you to develop a deep understanding of some pervasive and problematic features of the world and of ourselves. You will also become grounded in the main themes of Sociology through a combination of modules which will enable you to develop a deep understanding of how societies, institutions and practices of all kinds came into being, how they are currently organised, and how they might change in the future.

This degree programme will enable you to become competent in the specific skills required in Sociology and in Philosophy, and in core academic and personal and key skills. You will be offered a wide range of choice within the programme of study, insofar as this choice is consistent with the coherence and intellectual rigour of the degree.

 

3. Educational Aims of the Programme

1. To produce graduates from the programme that are useful, productive and questioning members of society.
2. To produce graduates who are grounded in the main themes of Philosophy through a combination of modules which develop a deep understanding of some pervasive and problematic features of the world and of ourselves.
3. To produce graduates who are grounded in the main themes of Sociology through a combination of modules which develop a deep understanding of how societies, institutions and practices of all kinds came into being, how they are currently organised, and how they might change in the future.
4. To develop students competence in the specific skills required in Sociology and in Philosophy, and in core academic and personal and key skills.
5. To offer a wide range of choice within the programme of study, insofar as this choice is consistent with the coherence and intellectual rigour of the degree.
6. To offer students the opportunity to develop their skills and capabilities (including linguistic skills, where appropriate) through the pursuit of study in another University in a different geographical and cultural setting.

The programme aims:

4. Programme Structure

5. Programme Modules

The full list of modules is available (with module descriptions) at https://intranet.exeter.ac.uk/socialsciences/moduledescriptions/

The Philosophy and Sociology degree programme is made up of compulsory (core) and optional modules, which are worth 15 or 30 credits each. Full-time undergraduate students need to complete modules worth a total of 120 credits each year.

Depending on your programme you can take up to 30 credits each year in another subject, for instance a language or business module, to develop career-related skills or just widen your intellectual horizons.

The third year is spent working abroad.

Please note that modules offered are subject to change, depending on staff availability, timetabling, and demand.

Stage 1


The first year gives you a foundational knowledge of philosophical and sociological theory and concepts. You will also gain important analytical techniques that will be useful across a range of subjects and research tasks.

90 credits of compulsory modules, 30 credits of optional modules.

Compulsory Modules

105 credits of compulsory modules, 15 credits of optional modules.

Sociology
You must take the 60 credits of core stage 1 modules

Philosophy
a - You must take 3 of the 5 core stage 1 modules listed below

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
SOC1000 Contemporary Society: Themes, Perspectives and Case Studies 30No
SOC1001 Social Analysis 30No
PHL1013 Philosophy of Morality [See note a above]15No
PHL1002A Knowledge and Reality 1 [See note a above]15No
PHL1002B Knowledge and Reality 2 [See note a above]15No
PHL1005A Evidence and Argument 1 [See note a above]15No
PHL1006 Introduction to Philosophical Analysis [See note a above]15No
HAS1905 Employment Experience HASS 0No
HAS1905 Employment Experience HASS 0No

Optional Modules

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
PHL Stage 1 CH Philosophy option modules 2023-4
PHL1004 Philosophical Problems 1 15 No
PHL1007 Philosophical Reading 1 15 No
PHL1009 Philosophies of Art 15 No
PHL1010 Introduction to Asian Philosophy 15 No
PHL1013 Philosophy of Morality 15 No
PHL1112 Philosophy of Film 15 No

Stage 2


60 credits of compulsory modules (30 credits of Philosophy and 30 credits of Sociology), 30 credits of optional modules

In the second year you will advance your grasp of philosophical and sociological knowledge and methods through a set of compulsory modules. Optional modules enable you to develop specialist knowledge on a range of topics.

 

Compulsory Modules

Philosophy
b - You must choose 30 credits from the list below

Sociology
c - You must choose at least 30 credits of core modules must be chosen from the list below

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
PHL2010A Philosophy of Mind 1 [see note b above]15Yes
PHL2043 Philosophical Research [see note b above]15No
PHL2015 Body and Mind [see note b above]15No
PHL2016 Metaphysics [see note b above]15No
PHL2018 Philosophy of Language [see note b above]15No
PHL2118 Moral agency in social context [see note b above]15No
SPA2000 Knowing the Social World [see note c above]30No
SOC2005 Theoretical Sociology [see note c above]30No
HAS2905 Employment Experience HASS 0No
HAS2905 Employment Experience HASS 0No

Optional Modules

Philosophy
Choose one 15 credit option module

Sociology
Choose up to 30 credits of option modules if less than 60 credits of Sociology core chosen above.

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
PHL Stage 2 CH Philosophy option modules 2023-4
PHL2013 Philosophy of Social Science 15 No
PHL2021 Symbolic Logic 15 No
PHL2022 Sex and Death: Introduction to the Philosophy of Biology 15 No
PHL2026 Philosophy of Science 15 No
PHL2038 The Self 15 No
PHL2040 Critical Theory: The Frankfurt School and Communicative Capitalism 15 No
PHL2041 Feminist Philosophy: Gender, Race and Class 15 No
PHL2042 Philosophical Frontiers 15 No
PHL2045 Aesthetics 15 No
PHL2052 Epistemology 15 No
PHL2053 History of Philosophy 15 No
PHL2054 Philosophy of Psychiatry 15 No
PHL2056 The Nature of Normativity 15 No
PHL2061 Philosophy of Law 15 No
PHL2111 The Deep Past, History and Humanity 15 No
PHL2114 Aristotle's Ethics 15 No
PHL2117 Philosophy and Psychedelics 15 No
PHL2119 Animal Minds and Animal Ethics 15 No
PHL2120 Philosophy and Sociology of Race 15 No
PHL2123 Philosophy of Medicine 15 No
PHL2126 Mind and World in Contemporary Japanese Philosophy 15 No
PHL2127 Hidden Voices in Early Modern Philosophy 15 No
PHL2046A The Holocaust, Genocide and Society 30 No
PHL2096 Cyborg Studies 15 No
SOC Stage 2 CH Sociology option modules 2023-4
SOC2009 Deviance: Interdisciplinary Perspectives 15 No
SOC2030 Sociology of Art and Culture 15 No
SOC2034 Gender and Society 1 15 No
SOC2035 International Criminal Justice: Comparative Criminology 15 No
SOC2036 International Criminal Justice: Application of Theory to Transnational and International Crime 15 No
SOC2037 Pharmaceutical Cultures 15 No
SOC2038 On Violence 15 No
SOC2039 Sociology of Family and Gender 15 No
SOC2050 Knowing the Social World 15 No
SOC2052 Environments in Public 15 No
SOC2063 Policy Analysis in Criminology 15 No
SOC2068 Race, Ethnicity and Criminalisation 15 No
SOC2069 Crimes of the Powerful 15 No
SOC2098 Sociology of Imprisonment 15 No
SOC2085 Health, Illness and Bodies in Contemporary Society Part 1: Medicine and Social Control 15 No
SOC2086 Addiction 30 No
SOC2087 Disability and Society 15 No
SOC2088 Health, Illness and Bodies in Contemporary Society: Part 2: Bodies in Society 15 No
SOC2097 Environment and Society 15 No
SOC2107 Culture and Wellbeing 15 No
SOC2101 Police and Policing 15 No
SOC2104 Victimology 15 No
SOC2110 Consumption and Society 15 No
SOC2116 Sociology and Demography of Religion 15 No
SOC2121 Cybercrime 15 No
SOC2122 Digital Society 15 No
SOC2126 Forensic Science, Conflict and Justice 15 No
SOC2134 Emotions, the Body, and the Social 15 No
SOC2135 Forensic Cultures 15 No
SOC2136 Deprivation of liberty: Imprisonment and beyond 15 No
SOC2064 Critical Theory: The Frankfurt School and Communicative Capitalism 15 No
SOC2127 Philosophy and Sociology of Race 15 No
SOC2046A The Holocaust, Genocide and Society 30 No
SOC2096 Cyborg Studies 15 No
SOC2114 Anthropology of the State 15 No
SOC2062 How Organisations Work: Ethnography in Institutions 15 No
SOC2103 Senses and Society 15 No
SOC2129 Climate Change in Global and Local Perspectives 15 No
SOC2130 When Things Fall Apart: Social Infrastructures 15 No
SOC2131 Social Media, Disinformation, and Authoritarianism 15 No
SOC2133 The Anthropology of Prisons 15 No

Stage 3


Students will spend the third year of their studies in a partner university on an Erasmus/Socrates exchange or other approved programme of study. The year abroad comprises 120 credits and assessment is based on the credits gained at the partner institution.

Compulsory Modules

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
SSI3999 Year Abroad 120No

Stage 4


The centre-point of the final year is the dissertation. This provides you with the opportunity to explore an area of interest and to demonstrate what you have learned over the previous years of your degree. You will also take up to three other specialist modules to create a programme of work fully reflecting your interests.

30 credits of compulsory modules, 90 credits of optional modules.

Compulsory Modules

Philosophy or Sociology Dissertation
d - Students must choose one of the two dissertation modules

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
PHL3040 Philosophy Dissertation [see note d above]30Yes
SOC3040 Dissertation [see note d above]30Yes

Optional Modules

If you choose a Philosophy dissertation, you choose a further 30 credits of Philosophy option modules, and 60 credits of Sociology option modules.

If you choose a Sociology dissertation, you choose a further 30 credits of Sociology option modules, and 60 credits of Philosophy option modules.

CodeModule Credits Non-condonable?
PHL Final Stage CH Philosophy option modules 2023-4
PHL3013 Virtues and Vices 15 No
PHL3014 Symbolic Logic 15 No
PHL3018 Sex and Death: Introduction to the Philosophy of Biology 15 No
PHL3026 Philosophy of Science 15 No
PHL3038 The Self 15 No
PHL3078 Critical Theory: The Frankfurt School and Communicative Capitalism 15 No
PHL3079 Feminist Philosophy: Gender, Race and Class 15 No
PHL3080 Philosophical Frontiers 15 No
PHL3045 Aesthetics 15 No
PHL3052 Epistemology 15 No
PHL3053 History of Philosophy 15 No
PHL3054 Philosophy of Psychiatry 15 No
PHL3056 The Nature of Normativity 15 No
PHL3060 Philosophy of Emotion 15 No
PHL3111 The Deep Past, History and Humanity 15 No
PHL3113 Practical Ethics 15 No
PHL3114 Aristotle's Ethics 15 No
PHL3117 Philosophy and Psychedelics 15 No
PHL3118 Animal Minds and Animal Ethics 15 No
PHL3119 Philosophy and Sociology of Race 15 No
PHL3122 Philosophy of Medicine 15 No
PHL3125 Mind and World in Contemporary Japanese Philosophy 15 No
PHL3126 Hidden Voices in Early Modern Philosophy 15 No
PHL3046A The Holocaust, Genocide and Society 30 No
PHL3096 Cyborg Studies 15 No
SOC Final Stage CH Sociology option modules 2023-4
SOC3147 Power and Domination 15 No
SOC3035 Deviance: Interdisciplinary Perspectives 15 No
SOC3030 Sociology of Art and Culture 15 No
SOC3013 Gender and Society 1 15 No
SOC3034 International Criminal Justice: Comparative Criminology 15 No
SOC3036 International Criminal Justice: Application of Theory to Transnational and International Crime 15 No
SOC3080 Pharmaceutical Cultures 15 No
SOC3002 On Violence 15 No
SOC3108 Sociology of Family and Gender 15 No
SOC3117 Environments in Public 15 No
SOC3121 Policy Analysis in Criminology 15 No
SOC3126 Race, Ethnicity and Criminalisation 15 No
SOC3127 Crimes of the Powerful 15 No
SOC3098 Sociology of Imprisonment 15 No
SOC3085 Health, Illness and Bodies in Contemporary Society Part 1: Medicine and Social Control 15 No
SOC3086 Addiction 30 No
SOC3087 Disability and Society 15 No
SOC3088 Health, Illness and Bodies in Contemporary Society: Part 2: Bodies in Society 15 No
SOC3097 Environment and Society 15 No
SOC3107 Culture and Wellbeing 15 No
SOC3101 Police and Policing 15 No
SOC3104 Victimology 15 No
SOC3110 Consumption and Society 15 No
SOC3118 Sociology and Demography of Religion 15 No
SOC3129 Cybercrime 15 No
SOC3130 Digital Society 15 No
SOC3134 Forensic Science, Conflict and Justice 15 No
SOC3142 Emotions, the Body, and the Social 15 No
SOC3143 Forensic Cultures 15 No
SOC3145 Deprivation of liberty: Imprisonment and beyond 15 No
SOC3144 Security, Society, and Algorithms 15 No
SOC3146 Forensics in Policing 15 No
POL3299 Russian Politics and Society 15 No
SOC3122 Critical Theory: The Frankfurt School and Communicative Capitalism 15 No
SOC3135 Philosophy and Sociology of Race 15 No
SOC3046A The Holocaust, Genocide and Society 30 No
SOC3096 Cyborg Studies 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. Show familiarity with philosophical ideas about the nature of society and the social sciences
2. Reflect upon the conditions of human social life.
3. Show familiarity with the history of modern Philosophy
4. Demonstrate familiarity with basic concepts in epistemology, metaphysics, philosophies of mind and nature
5. Analyse concepts in ethics
6. Analyse and criticise substantial works by important historical and contemporary moral and political philosophers
7. Engage in logical and conceptual analysis and reasoning about abstract matters
8. 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.
9. Demonstrate an analytical understanding of Sociology, taking into account different sociological perspectives, modes of social analysis and their concomitant theoretical and conceptual frameworks.
10. Show awareness of the social, political, historical, and economic origins of Sociology.
11. Show knowledge of a variety of methods of social investigation, including ethnographic and survey methods, questionnaire and interview design.
12. Ability to conceptualise social, psychological and personal issues in a specifically sociological manner.
13. Demonstrate knowledge of the social organisation, economy and cosmology of a range of societies.
14. Show knowledge of some of the main challenges in obtaining and conveying information about a range of societies.
15. 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.

In explicit terms, 1 and 2 are developed through lectures, seminars and essay work in PHL1002A and PHL1002B,; 3 and 4 through similar methods and strategies in PHL1006A, PHL1005a, PHL201a, PHL2016, PHL2015, and PHL2018; 5 and 6 through similar methods in PHL1013 and PHL2118; and 7 through similar methods on PHL2010A, PHL2010B, and PHL2018.

However, depending on the student’s chosen portfolio of modules, they will be developed, with increasing intensity as s/he progresses through the Stages, on the elective modules as well. 8 is developed through the optional modules taken. The level of competence expected of students intensifies at each stage of the programme.

9. Is developed on all Sociology modules, and is a core aim of the whole programme. 10-12. are developed initially through lectures, seminars and essay work for SOC1048, SOC1049, ANT1004, ANT1005 SOC1019, SOC1020, SOC1003, SOC1008, and are developed on subsequent modules. 13-14 is developed through similar methods on ANT1004 and ANT1005, and further developed on subsequent modules. 15. Is developed through the optional modules taken. The level of competence expected of students intensifies at each stage of the programme.

The assessment of these skills is through a combination of the following:
Term-time essays 1-15
Oral presentations 1-15
Examinations (and, where applicable, Research Methods Project , Dissertation work). 1-15

The criteria of assessment pay full recognition to the importance of the various skills outlined.

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:

16. Draw thematic comparisons between material from different sources
17. Show awareness of contrasting approaches to research
18. Understand and demonstrate the different uses of qualitative and quantitative data, and evaluate their relative advantages and disadvantages ((benchmark 6.2.3).
19. Show awareness of the basic philosophical questions arising from academic research.
20. Think and write broadly about large themes
21. Develop and deploy argument, grounded in theoretical frameworks and empirical evidence
22. Identify problems of reliability and bias in, and more generally evaluate, empirical evidence
23. Collate data from a range of sources
24. Produce accurate reference to sources in written work.
25. Answer questions concisely and persuasively in written work
26. Present work and answer questions orally
27. Deploy complex terminology in a comprehensible manner
28. Focus on and comprehend complex texts
29. Where stage 3 is to be spent in a non-English speaking country, work at an advanced level, both orally and in writing, in a foreign language.

These skills 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).


These skills are assessed through the following:

Term-time essays 16-29
Assessed presentations 16-29
Dissertation 16-29
Examinations 16-29

29 is developed through accredited language tuition at stages 1 and 2 and in the year abroad, and assessed in all work done in year abroad.

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:

30. Undertake independent study and ability to work to deadlines.
31. Use library and the world-wide web to find appropriate and relevant information
32. Digest, select and organise material for written work and oral presentations, and write to varying word lengths.
33. Evaluate own work
34. Participate in oral discussions; present and evaluate complex arguments and ideas orally; digest, select and organise material for oral presentations
35. Formulate and express ideas at different levels of abstraction. Formulate and express ideas at different levels of abstraction
36. Work with others as part of a team on challenging material.
37. Interact effectively with peers and staff.
38. Undertake group work, including the presentation and discussion of material in groups.
39. Plan the execution of demanding work over a very long time scale.
40. Advance linguistic competence independently

30 is an essential part of the successful completion of the programme.

31 is developed through the requirement that all written work be word-processed, and through the requirement on students to use the WWW to access texts and other teaching materials.

32 is developed through essay and presentation work throughout the programme.

33 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.

34 is developed through seminars, which form part of all modules.

35 is developed throughout the Philosophy side of the programme.

The skills in 36, 37 and 38 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.

39 is developed through the Dissertation at stage 3, which has a single end of year deadline.

40 is developed through language tuition at stages 1 and 2 where one module (normally for 30 credits) in each of the first and second years is normally replaced with language modules appropriate to the host university, and in the year abroad.

The skills in 30, 31 and 32 are assessed in all modules.

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

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

34 is a continuous part of formative assessment.

35 Forms a basic tenet of examination throughout the Philosophy side of the programme.

36, 37, and 38 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.

39 is covered by the Dissertation (in either subject).

40 is assessed by oral and written work on the Exeter-based language modules, and through the modules taken during year abroad.

7. Programme Regulations

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.

Classification

8. College Support for Students and Students' Learning

Personal and Academic tutoring: It is University policy that all Colleges should have in place a system of academic and personal tutors. The role of academic tutors is to support you on individual modules; the role of personal tutors is to provide you with advice and support for the duration of the programme and extends to providing you with details of how to obtain support and guidance on personal difficulties such as accommodation, financial difficulties and sickness. You can also make an appointment to see individual teaching staff.

As an undergraduate or postgraduate taught student in the College of Social Sciences and International Studies you will be allocated a Personal Tutor at the commencement of your studies. In normal circumstances your Personal Tutor will remain your tutor throughout your study programme. Your Personal Tutor is normally available through scheduled office hours, but should also see you as a matter of course three or four times a year (depending on your year of study); these meetings may typically commence soon after registration. These meetings will take place once or twice mid-year to discuss your progress and to perhaps consider Personal Development Planning (ePDP) and once to discuss your overall performance. The ePDP is a particularly useful developmental tool which you are encouraged to utilize and which is accessible though the Exeter Learning Environment (ELE).

You should feel that you are able to approach your personal tutor for advice, pastoral support or academic support in a wider sense.

Library, ELE and other resources provided to support this programme:
The Library offers you core services for learning and research. Whilst the various locations house a large collection of materials and services, many of our resources are available online through this website http://as.exeter.ac.uk/library/ for you to use at home, work or wherever you are located for your study. Each discipline has a subject librarian on hand to help you to find resources and we also work with tutors to digitize reading lists for inclusion in the Exeter Learning Environment (ELE).

Exeter Learning Environment (ELE) is used throughout the University to make course materials available online. You will be able to access module information, presentations, handouts, reading materials as well as interacting with other students and your tutors. Many tutors use ELE to run assessments and set coursework assignments. In addition to the materials provided by your tutors, there are various other resources available on ELE to help you in your studies, for example, you will be able to access your ePDP, the University’s online PDP system, which has been developed to help you keep an ongoing record of your academic, work and extra-curricular experiences, and help you develop action plans and personal statements.

The University provides a range of IT services, including open and training clusters of PCs (available on a 24/7 basis). In the Social Sciences and International Studies College this includes a 24/7 suite in Amory, based in the Law Library and a second one in the St Luke’s Campus Library. These suites are accessible by swiping your university card. The majority of the College also has access to the university’s wireless network. Network access is available from the majority of rooms in University halls of residence through the ResNet system.

At St Luke’s there is also a college-based open access suite (South Cloisters 14) providing access to another 20 machines. Entry is again made by use of your university card and it is open from 8.30am to 7pm Monday to Friday.

All of these suites have the standard ‘palms’ printing systems in them (printing from credit held on your university card). At the St Luke’s Campus there is also a cash-based printing service at the GSE Print Unit based in South Cloisters.

Please see link below for further information on the IT Services facilities on the Exeter Campuses: http://www.exeter.ac.uk/media/universityofexeter/forum/public/Study_map_A4_2pp_Term3.pdf

Helpdesks are maintained on the Streatham and Cornwall campuses.

Student/Staff Liaison Committee enables students & staff to jointly participate in the management and review of the teaching and learning provision.

9. University Support for Students and Students' Learning

10. Admissions Criteria

11. Regulation of Assessment and Academic Standards

12. Indicators of Quality and Standards

The programme is not subject to accreditation and/ or review by professional and statutory regulatory bodies (PSRBs).

13. Methods for Evaluating and Improving Quality and Standards

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) Philosophy and Sociology with Employment Experience Abroad

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] Philosophy
[Honours] Sociology

23. Dates

Origin Date Date of last revision

25/07/2019