French and an Asian or African Language BA LONDON'S GLOBAL UNIVERSITY www.ucl.ac.uk/prospectus/elcs

advertisement
LONDON'S GLOBAL UNIVERSITY
French and an Asian or African
Language BA
UCAS code: RT19
www.ucl.ac.uk/prospectus/elcs
French and an Asian or African Language BA
The French components of this four-year
programme are taught and taken at UCL, and
the Asian or African language components at
the School of Oriental and African Studies
(SOAS), our near neighbour. There is strong
emphasis on spoken and written language work
and the opportunity to undertake
interdisciplinary study.
Degree summary
•
A strong focus on spoken and written language work. Oral
presentations, comprehension work and translation exercises will be
a feature of your learning. Native speakers of French form an integral
part of our teaching team.
•
Emphasis on film and literature studies, with resources including a
notable French section in the UCL Library. We offer courses covering
all periods of French and francophone literature and thought.
•
You will have access to the facilities of the UCL Centre for
Languages & International Education. The French Society organises
cultural and social events, for example, theatre visits, drama
productions and trips to France.
The structure of the programme allows you to study core courses in
French language (written and oral), literature, culture, history, politics and
society. You will have some flexibility throughout your degree to focus on
areas you find particularly interesting, and these opportunities increase
as you progress.
You may also take School of European Languages, Culture & Society
(ELCS) courses, which allow you to study literature, film, art and culture
from outside your subject area(s), focusing on broad cultural movements,
issues and approaches from an interdisciplinary perspective and drawing
on the full range of specialisms within the school.
The other half will be taught by the School of Oriental and African
Studies.
You will spend half of your third year in France or a French-speaking part
of the world (for example, Switzerland, Québec or Martinique). You can
choose whether to spend the term as a language assistant in a French
school, as a student at a French-speaking university, or to undertake a
work placement abroad.
You will spend the other half of the year in a country where the other
language studied is spoken.
Your learning
Throughout the degree your teaching will be conducted mainly through
small seminar groups, together with some lectures. Seminars are
characterised by a 'hands-on' textual and analytical approach, whereas
lectures are used for discussing general intellectual contexts.
Most courses are examined either by end-of-year examination papers or
by assessed essay work completed during the year. You will also
undertake oral examinations in French.
Your career
In addition to linguistic and cultural understanding, the programme aims
to develop skills in critical reasoning, independent thinking and
application of theoretical concepts. You will learn how to conduct
research and to communicate effectively both orally and in writing.
Graduates of the department have entered a wide range of professions
including finance, commerce, journalism, education, the media, public
relations, translation and interpreting, and the police.
First career destinations of recent graduates (2010-2013) of this
programme include:
•
Operation Co-ordinator, The International News Media Association
(INMA)
•
•
•
Prime Brokerage Sales, UBS
Civil Servant (Fast Track), Department of International Development
Business and Intelligence Officer, Deloitte & Touche
Degree structure
In each year of your degree you will take a number of individual courses,
normally valued at 0.5 or 1.0 credits, adding up to a total of 4.0 credits for
the year. Courses are assessed in the academic year in which they are
taken. The balance of compulsory and optional courses varies from
programme to programme and year to year. A 1.0 credit is considered
equivalent to 15 credits in the European Credit Transfer System (ECTS).
Year One
Compulsory courses
French Oral (compulsory unless Francophone or studying Arabic at SOAS)
Reading French Texts
SOAS Language Study 1
Use of French
Optional courses
Unless you are a student taking Arabic at SOAS, you will select further
credits from:
a wide range of optional courses offered by the School of European
Languages, Culture and Society.
Year Two
Compulsory courses
French Oral (compulsory unless Francophone)
SOAS Language Study 2
The Making of Modern France (for students taking Arabic at SOAS)
Use of French
Optional courses
You will select further courses from a wide range of options. These may
include:
Contesting Frenchness: Francophone Literature
Enlightenment and Revolution: The 18th Century
Exploration of Self and Form: the Contemporary Period
France: Culture and Society
French Film History
19th-Century Literature
The Classical Age: 17th-Century Literature
The Medieval Period
The Renaissance Period
ELCS Intermediate Level courses
Year Three
Year abroad
Students will complete two 2,000-word Year Abroad Projects in each
target language, and:
Any assessment required by a host university (if participating in a
university exchange), or:
A British Council Assistantship or work placement abroad.
Final Year
Compulsory courses
French Oral
SOAS Language Study 3
Use of French
Optional courses
You will select further credits from a wide range of optional courses.
Options may include:
Advanced French Politics
Cultures of AIDS in France: History, Policy and Representation
Desire for Community: Literature as Anthropology
Fictions of Grief
Forms of Feeling in 17th-Century France
Gender, Race and Sexuality
Introduction to Post-Strucuralism
Jean-Luc Godard
Jean-Paul Sartre
Medieval French Literature
Old Worlds, New Worlds, Humanism and Travel Writing
Reading Tintin
Representations of the Algerian War
Screen Cities: Representing the Margins of Paris 1830-2005
Swiss Cinema
ELCS Advanced Level courses
Entry requirements
A levels
If your application demonstrates that you are suitable and you receive an
offer, then we shall invite you to a post-offer Open Day, where you can
experience the sort of teaching which we offer and life in SELCS.
A level grades
AAA
Fees
A level subjects
French required.
UK/EU fee
£9,000 (2016/17)
AS levels
For UK-based students a pass in a further subject
at AS level or equivalent is required.
Overseas fee
£16,130 (2016/17)
Notes
GCSE
English Language at grade B, plus Mathematics
at grade C. For UK-based students, a grade C or
equivalent in a foreign language (other than
Ancient Greek, Biblical Hebrew or Latin) is
required. UCL provides opportunities to meet the
foreign language requirement following
enrolment, further details at:
www.ucl.ac.uk/ug-reqs
Details about financial support are available at:
www.ucl.ac.uk/study/ug-finance
IB diploma
IB points
38
Subjects
A total of 18 points in three higher level subjects
including French grade 6, with no score lower
than 5.
Contacts
Contact
Mrs Jo Wolff
Admissions Officer
Email
selcs.admissions@ucl.ac.uk
Telephone
+44 (0)20 7679 3096
Prospectus entry
www.ucl.ac.uk/prospectus/elcs
Key facts
REF
74% rated 4* (‘world-leading’) or 3*
(‘internationally excellent’)
Other qualifications
Department
Full lists of all degree programmes and other entry requirements can be
found on our website at: www.ucl.ac.uk/otherquals
School of European Languages, Culture and
Society
Faculty
Arts & Humanities
Undergraduate Preparatory
Certificates
UCL's Undergraduate Preparatory Certificates (UPCs) are intensive
one-year foundation courses for international students of high academic
potential, who are aiming to gain access to undergraduate degree
programmes at UCL and other top UK universities.
For more information see our website: www.ucl.ac.uk/upc
Your application
Application for admission should be made through UCAS (the
Universities and Colleges Admissions Service). Applicants currently at
school or college will be provided with advice on the process; however,
applicants who have left school or who are based outside the United
Kingdom may obtain information directly from UCAS.
We aim to ascertain the depth and extent of your intellectual interest in
French culture. Evidence of this may include reading in French beyond
the examination syllabus, in particular of literary works, and experience of
watching French-language films. We may also employ other selection
methods, which we shall inform you about in advance.
PDF Updated: February 19, 2016
Information correct at time of going to press. See website (www.ucl.ac.uk/prospectus/elcs) for latest information
Download