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English with Education

UCAS
Q3X3

Turn your love of books into a top degree! English with Education will fire your imagination and help you to become a persuasive communicator. If you love to get lost in a book, English is the subject for you. Alongside a solid grounding in classic texts, the teaching at UU will give you the opportunity to develop your own interests: whether you prefer historical drama or detective novels, fantasy literature or instapoetry, narratives of slavery or gothic fiction, you're sure to find something you'll enjoy.

Award Name Degree - Honours Bachelor at UK Level 6
NFQ Classification
Awarding Body Ulster University
NFQ Level
Award Name NFQ Classification Awarding Body NFQ Level
Degree - Honours Bachelor at UK Level 6 Ulster University
Location:
Coleraine
Attendance Options:
Daytime, Full time
Qualification Letters:
BA (Hons)
Apply to:
UCAS

Duration

Normally three years.

Attendance
The course normally lasts for three years (four years if you choose to do a placement). During this time, there will be a number of different teaching and learning experiences for you to enjoy. Teachers will talk about the books you are reading in lectures, and you will get the chance to share your views with other students in small group seminars. One-to-one tutorials, video and email consultations are also offered so that you can ask your lecturer the questions that really matter to you. Timetabled sessions usually amount to about 9 hours per week, but we hope you'll spend much more time that than reading!.

Entry Requirements

Irish Leaving Certificate
96 UCAS tariff points to include a minimum of five subjects (four of which must be at higher level) to include English at H6 if studied at Higher level or O4 if studied at Ordinary Level.

Preference may be given to candidates with a H4 at higher level in English.

UCAS Tariff Point Chart

Careers / Further progression

Graduate employers
Graduates from this course are now working for:
BBC
NI Education Authority
Downpatrick Primary School
Next
University of Birmingham
Libraries NI
Lloyds Banking Group

Job roles
With this degree you could become:
Teacher
Teacher of English as a Foreign Language
Human Resource Officer
Journalist
Librarian
Artistic Director
Civil Servant

Career options
English Majors Among Most Desirable Employees, says Google​
The top characteristics of success at Google are so-called "soft skills", such as communication, good leadership, possessing insight into others' values and points of view, having empathy and a supportive nature towards others and possessing good critical thinking and problem solving skills, along with the ability to create connections across complex ideas.

https://bookstr.com/article/english-majors-among-most-desirable-employees-says-google/​

English graduates have the kind of intellectual, social and communicative qualities that employers of all kinds require. The UU English with Education course will give you the necessary skills to be successful in a wide range of fields: our graduates go on to do many wonderful things, pursuing careers in (for example) teaching, publishing, journalism and the media, the creative arts, advertising and marketing, arts administration, charitable organisations, human resources and the civil service.

You also have the option of go on to postgraduate work in all areas of English literary studies, or maybe do a Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) programme with a view to pursuing a career teaching in schools / colleges.

The Career Development Centre (https://www.ulster.ac.uk/campus-life/careers) is available to offer friendly and impartial help and advice with career planning and provide opportunities for you to develop your employability skills. There are Information Centres on each of the campuses.

Course Web Page

Further information

Start date: September 2024

Deadlines for on-time applications

2024 entry application deadlines

For courses starting in 2024 (and for deferred applications), your application should be with us at UCAS by one of these dates – depending on what courses you apply for. If your completed application – including all your personal details and your academic reference – is submitted by the deadline, it is guaranteed to be considered.

16 October 2023 for 2024 entry at 18:00 (UK time) – any course at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, or for most courses in medicine, veterinary medicine/science, and dentistry. You can add choices with a different deadline later, but don’t forget you can only have five choices in total.

31 January 2024 for 2024 entry at 18:00 (UK time) – for the majority of courses.

Some course providers require additional admissions tests to be taken alongside the UCAS application, and these may have a deadline. Find out more about these tests at https://www.ucas.com/undergraduate/applying-university/admissions-tests

Check course information in the search tool to see which deadline applies to you at the application weblink below.

Apply as soon as possible: Student funding arrangements mean that as offers are made and places fill up, some courses may only have vacancies for students from certain locations. It’s therefore really important that you apply for your chosen courses by the appropriate deadlines mentioned above, as not all courses will have places for all students.

All applications received after 30 June are entered into Clearing - find out more about Clearing at https://www.ucas.com/undergraduate/clearing-and-results-day/what-clearing

Overview
Turn your love of books into a top degree! English with Education will fire your imagination and help you to become a persuasive communicator.

Summary
If you love to get lost in a book, English is the subject for you. Alongside a solid grounding in classic texts, the teaching at UU will give you the opportunity to develop your own interests: whether you prefer historical drama or detective novels, fantasy literature or instapoetry, narratives of slavery or gothic fiction, you're sure to find something you'll enjoy.

Our wide range of optional modules also includes courses on creative and professional writing to develop your skills as a communicator and raise your game for the jobs market. All employers love people who think in original and sophisticated ways, who display emotional intelligence and a creative imagination, and who can express themselves persuasively on paper and with confidence when speaking. This is what UU English graduates are like.

Come and join us!

If you are interested in a career in teaching it's a great idea to get an introduction to Education as part of your degree. Forming a third of your course, Education modules will give you a taste of the theory and practice of teaching in different settings, whether primary, secondary, or colleges. This strand will also help you to prepare for application to a Postgraduate Certificate in Education course after you complete your degree. Education modules usually involve a two hour lecture plus a one hour seminar each week.

About
Taking your love of reading as the one essential ingredient, UU English aims to broaden your knowledge and cultivate your abilities as a thinker, writer and communicator.

We will introduce you to the basics of critical writing and literary theory in year one, allowing you to develop the skills and knowledge necessary for success in your later work. Following the groundwork of this introductory year, you will be able to choose from a wide range of options reflecting the interests and expertise of the UU English teaching team. Subjects include women's writing, narratives of slavery, historical fiction, modern drama, detective novels, gothic and romantic writing, the Victorian novel, modern Irish writers, contemporary fiction, love poetry and many more. We love sharing our enthusiasms, but even more importantly, we want you to develop your own interests and follow your own passions. UU English allows you to construct your own path to success, writing on whatever engages you most, whether that be Shakespeare or 'Game of Thrones'.

Educationmodules form a third of this course. If you're interested in a career as a teacher, this is a great way to introduce yourself to this subject. It will also help you to prepare for a future application onto the Postgraduate Certificate in Education course after you graduate.

More detail is available from the Course Director, Dr Kate Byrne (k.byrne@ulster.ac.uk).

Modules
Here is a guide to the subjects studied on this course.

Courses are continually reviewed to take advantage of new teaching approaches and developments in research, industry and the professions. Please be aware that modules may change for your year of entry. The exact modules available and their order may vary depending on course updates, staff availability, timetabling and student demand. Please contact the course team for the most up to date module list.

Year 1
Contemporary Educational Issues
Facilitating An Effective Learning Environment
Elements of Criticism
Modes of Reading
Genres of Writing
Literature and Society in Ireland: An Introduction
Writing Matters - Optional
Pandemic Prose in the Viral Village - Optional

Year 2
Industrial Educational Placement
Learning and Teaching with Technology - Optional
Physical Health and Wellbeing - Optional
Early Modern English Culture 1509-1659: Poetry, Prose, Drama - Optional
Tales of the Familiar and the Exotic: The Beginnings of Modern Fiction in English - Optional
Rhymes Of Passion: A Brief History Of Love Poetry - Optional
Writing and Editing - Optional
Modern Drama and Its Influences - Optional
Sex and the City of God: religion and sexuality in American literature - Optional
Beat Literature and Culture - Optional
Angels, Madwomen and Whores - Optional
Writing the North: Ulster Literature - Optional
Contemporary World Fiction in English - Optional
Samuel Beckett Studies - Optional
Adaptation and Historical Fiction - Optional
Gothic and Romantic Writing
English Exchange 1 - Optional
English Exchange 2 - Optional
English Exchange 3 - Optional
English Exchange 4 - Optional
English Exchange 5 - Optional
English Exchange 6 - Optional
Eighteenth-Century Literature - Optional
Detective Fiction - Optional
Modern North American Feminist Writing - Optional

Year 3
Inclusive Educational Practices
Multicultural education and language learning
English Placement - Optional
English Abroad (DIAS) - Optional

Year 4
Romantics and Victorians - Optional
Twentieth-Century Literature- Optional
How to be Modern: Writing from the Jazz Age, 1910-1930 - Optional
Dissertation - Optional
Bonnets, Beards and Bastards: The Fiction of the Victorian Period - Optional
Writing and Publishing - Optional
Nineteenth-Century American Literature - Optional
Twentieth-Century American Literature - Optional
Body, Mind and Soul in Novels and Non-Fiction from Addison to Austen - Optional
The Ulster-Scots Literary Tradition 1750 - 2000 - Optional
From The Vote To The Pill: C20th And C21st Women's Writing - Optional
20th Century Irish Writers - Optional
Late Victorian And Edwardian Novel - Optional
Shakespeare - Optional
Narratives of Slavery - Optional

Assessment methods vary and are defined explicitly in each module. Assessment can be a combination of examination and coursework but may also be only one of these methods. Assessment is designed to assess your achievement of the module’s stated learning outcomes. You can expect to receive timely feedback on all coursework assessments. This feedback may be issued individually and/or issued to the group and you will be encouraged to act on this feedback for your own development.

Coursework can take many forms, for example: essay, report, seminar paper, test, presentation, dissertation, design, artefacts, portfolio, journal, group work. The precise form and combination of assessment will depend on the course you apply for and the module. Details will be made available in advance through induction, the course handbook, the module specification, the assessment timetable and the assessment brief. The details are subject to change from year to year for quality or enhancement reasons. You will be consulted about any significant changes.

Normally, a module will have 4 learning outcomes, and no more than 2 items of assessment. An item of assessment can comprise more than one task. The notional workload and the equivalence across types of assessment is standardised. The module pass mark for undergraduate courses is 40%. The module pass mark for postgraduate courses is 50%.

Associate awards
Diploma in Professional Practice DPP
Diploma in International Academic Studies DIAS
Diploma in Professional Practice International DPPI

Work placement / study abroad
There is a flexible placement element in the first year of your degree, encouraging you to develop your skills as a writer in the context of a relevant workplace. Opportunities for study abroad, usually during the second year of your degree, are also available: ISEP (International Student Exchange Programme) offers links with over 140 American Universities; Erasmus+ focuses on European destinations.

Ulster University,
Cromore Rd,
Coleraine
BT52 1SA
T: 02870 123 456

Location:
Coleraine
Attendance Options:
Daytime, Full time
Qualification Letters:
BA (Hons)
Apply to:
UCAS