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BA (Hons) WAR STUDIES Undergraduate programme (Specialist and Joint Options) University of Wolverhampton School of Humanities, Languages and Social Sciences.

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Presentation on theme: "BA (Hons) WAR STUDIES Undergraduate programme (Specialist and Joint Options) University of Wolverhampton School of Humanities, Languages and Social Sciences."— Presentation transcript:

1 BA (Hons) WAR STUDIES Undergraduate programme (Specialist and Joint Options) University of Wolverhampton School of Humanities, Languages and Social Sciences

2 Content of Presentation What is War Studies? Brief outline of course structure and programme specifics Content (modules) and progression Teaching and assessment

3 What is War Studies? “War Studies is a multi-disciplinary programme that brings together areas of study such as history and politics within a distinctive theoretical framework. The programme concentrates on a number of key issues of warfare from the late nineteenth century onwards, strategic thought, contemporary security debates and the future of warfare.” Good example because:  Includes most typical features of modular awards  However unlike many awards at UoW combines year-long modules with semester- long ones  A subject not a discipline and therefore draws on various disciplines and include pre- existing modules  No pre-ordained curriculum; can be designed/developed around staff interests/ expertise

4 Brief outline of course structure and programme specifics Specialist and joint options Specialist award requires: –120 credits (typically 8 x 15-credit modules) in each year/level of study –To include 90 credits of core/core option modules and 30 credits of ‘elective’ modules There are 3 Core (compulsory) modules in year one and 1 Core module each in years 2 and 3 System of pre-requisites applies

5 Content (modules) and progression See module listings provided WR denotes dedicated war studies modules; PO,HS, AM coded modules are drawn from other subjects/awards Level 1: essentially ‘foundation’ modules dealing with key concepts, theoretical/intellectual foundations for later study Level 2: survey/’bigger picture’ modules (‘applied’ study) Level 3:study becomes more specialised Clearly cores more important at level 1; at level 3 increasing emphasis on independent learning

6 Teaching and assessment Normal teaching format is mix of lectures, seminars and tutorials. Fieldwork included for some modules Seminars include: individual and group presentations; structured discussion of short texts and historical materials - i.e. videos, cartoons/paintings tutorials Teaching and assessment develop subject-specific knowledge and understanding - also designed to develop key skills At level 1 following skills are emphasised: use IT; gather information (locate, interpret, analyse); work in teams to develop cooperative and leadership skills

7 Teaching and assessment Sample assessment:  WR1002: Group Work Campaign (20%); 1750 word essay (20%); 1750 word essay (20%); exam (40%)  WR2000: Fieldtrip learning journal (25%); Extended ‘project essay’ (75%) Alphanumeric grading system used (A16-F0); A,B,C,D = pass grades; E,F = fails grades Formal student feedback on modules via Module Evaluation Questionnaires (sample provided)

8 Key Skills 1.COMMUNICATE EFFECTIVELY – WRITING, ORAL PRESENTATION, LISTENING SKILLS 2.ORGANISE – OBJECTIVE SETTING, TIME AND RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, & EVALUATION 3.ACT INDEPENDENTLY 4.USE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY 5.GATHER INFORMATION – LOCATE, INTERPRET, ANALYSE (PRIMARY AND SECONDARY) 6.WORK IN TEAMS – COOPERATE/LEAD 7.PROBLEM SOLVING TECHNIQUES – ANALYSE HISTORICAL AND MILITARY DATA SITUATIONS, SIMULATE STRATEGIC THINKING * SKILLS 4,5 AND 6 EMPHASISED AT LEVEL ONE ; 3 BECOMES PARTICULARLY IMPORTANT/EVIDENT AT LEVEL THREE


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