THE UNIVERSITY of EDINBURGH |
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Degree Programme Specification MA Honours in Sociology and Psychology |
MA Honours in Sociology and Psychology |
To give you an idea of what to expect from this programme, we publish the latest available information. This information is created when new programmes are established and is only updated periodically as programmes are formally reviewed. It is therefore only accurate on the date of last revision. |
Awarding institution: | The University of Edinburgh |
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Teaching institution: | The University of Edinburgh |
Programme accredited by: | N/A |
Final award: | MA Honours |
Programme title: | Sociology and Psychology |
UCAS code: | LC38 |
Relevant QAA subject benchmarking group(s): | Sociology |
Postholder with overall responsibility for QA: | Professor John MacInnes |
Date of production/revision: | June 2000/November 2008/April 2011/September 2011/May 2012 |
Further Information: | View the prospectus entry for this programme |
Teaching and learning methods and strategies |
In Year 1 Lectures Tutorials Seminars Problem based learning activities Group work with peers One to one meetings with personal tutors In Year 2 Lectures Tutorials Seminars Problem based learning activities Group work with peers One to one meetings with personal tutors In Year 3 Lectures Tutorials Seminars One to one meetings with personal tutors Problem based learning activities One to one supervision (Sociology Project) Workshops to develop data collection and analysis skills (Sociology Project) Workshops to develop bibliographic and presentational skills (Designing and Doing Survey Research) Group-work with peers Computer lab-based work (Doing Survey Research) In Year 4 Lectures Tutorials Seminars One to one meetings with personal tutors Problem based learning activities Group work with peers One to one supervision (Sociology Project) Workshops to develop research skills (Sociology Project) Practical activities – poster development (Project Presentation – optional) |
Assessment methods and strategies |
Assessment Courses can be assessed by a diverse range of methods and can take the form of formative work which provides the student with on-going feedback as well as summative assessment which is submitted for credit. In Year 1 Essays Written Examinations (unseen) Assessment of participation in tutorials In Year 2 Essays Written Examinations (unseen) Assessment of participation in tutorials In Year 3 Essays Written Examinations (unseen) Examination of statistical reasoning and skills (seen – Doing Survey Research) Assessment of Group Project (Designing and Doing Social Research) Research Wiki (Designing and Doing Social Research) Research Proposal (Sociology Project) Exercise applying social theory to everyday news (Social Theory) Assessment of Online Journal (Sociology of Intoxication option course) Online Notice-board Multimedia Exercise (Youth Culture, Media and Society option course) In Year 4 Essays Written Examinations (unseen) Take-home exams Assessment of original research work (Honours Project) Assessment of research-based poster (Project Presentation option course) Assessment of oral presentation (Project Presentation option course) Assessment of Online Journal (Sociology of Intoxication option course) Online Notice-board Multimedia Exercise (Youth Culture, Media and Society option course) |
Career opportunities |
Sociology graduates acquire valuable transferable skills that can lead to a wide range of careers in an ever-changing job market. You can choose to work within local and central government, the voluntary sector or journalism, or use your practical and research skills to work in market research. Many graduates also go on to study postgraduate degrees before entering teaching, social work or urban planning. Some of our students also choose an academic career. |
Other items |
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Further information |