Structure and SCQF credit values
Students are required to complete six courses over the two teaching semesters (September-March), equivalent to 20 credits each (normally 22 hours contact time each). Part-time students complete these courses over four semesters in two consecutive years. These comprise one core course and five optional courses:
Compulsory core course (20 credits, level 11 MSc course):
Research Resources and Strategies in Archaeology (semester 2)
Optional courses that may be available (all 20 credits, level 11 MSc courses):
Archaeological Illustration
Archaeology of Gender
Archaic States of the Near East
Bronze Age Civilisations of the Near East and Greece
Byzantine Archaeology: The archaeology of the Byzantine empire and its neighbours AD 500-850
Conceptualising the Neolithic
Constantinople and the Cities of Asia Minor
Etruscan Italy, 1000-300 BC
Experimental Archaeology and Ancient Technology
From Foraging to farming, the Beginnings of Agriculture in the Mediterranean and Europe
Gallia from the Third Century BC to Augustus
Human Evolution
The Hittites: the archaeology of an ancient Near Eastern civilisation
Island Worlds: prehistoric societies in the western Mediterranean
Courses offered in the Classics subject area:
Roman Imperial Monuments
Roman Funerary Art
Roman Archaeology
Late Antique Visual Culture
The Hellenistic City
Hellenistic Art and Archaeology
Greek Vase Painting
Agricultural Slavery in the Graeco-Roman World
The range of specialist option modules available may vary according to staffing arrangements. Further to discussion with the programme director a student may also choose an option from the suite of courses offered by the School or another subject area in the University. Information on courses can be found at
http://www.drps.ed.ac.uk
The final stage of the MSc programme is a dissertation of about 15,000 words (60 credits) which students complete during the summer months. This is an independent, primary source-based research project supervised by one or more members of the academic staff. Students have considerable freedom to define their own dissertation project—so long as it is viable within the time available and on a subject which one or more staff members have the expertise to supervise.
Due to the time constraints of a one year degree, fieldwork is not specifically offered as part of this programme of study. However, students may be able to participate in an excavation or other type of fieldwork outside the teaching semester if their studies permit.
Progression requirements
Following the coursework stage (based on semester one and two courses), the Board of Examiners meets in May and is responsible for deciding whether students have satisfied the requirements of the Diploma stage of the programme and whether candidates can progress to the dissertation stage of candidature for the Masters programme.
In order to progress to the masters dissertation candidates
Learning Outcomes and Assessment Practices
The programme's outcomes, detailed below, are assessed by means of coursework for the courses taken and the dissertation. Coursework will total approximately 17,000 words, while the dissertation is 15,000 words.
Modes of Study
The programme may be taken full time over twelve months or part-time over twenty four months.
Exit Awards
Requirements for the Award of the Diploma
In order to be awarded the diploma candidates must:
Requirements for the Award of the MSc
In order to be awarded a masters degree candidates must:
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have satisfied the requirements for progression, as laid out above, and
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attain 60 credits, by achieving a pass at masters level for the dissertation
Requirements of the Award of the MSc with Distinction
The Masters degree may be awarded with distinction. To achieve a distinction, a student must have been awarded at least 70% on the University’s Postgraduate Common Marking Scheme for the dissertation and must also have been awarded a mark of at least 69% for the coursework element.
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