ࡱ>  0idbjbjo>o>  T T|[:008&\Dkl(r"b'`)^k`k`k`k`k`k`k$m;pk(*2"@r"(*(*kkF-F-F-(*j8^kF-(*^kF-F-~]`{f ?I*cXJkk0k0d qt+ qff q~g(*(*F-(*(*(*(*(*kkF-(*(*(*k(*(*(*(* q(*(*(*(*(*(*(*(*(*0 P:  1Programme TitleEnglish Language and Linguistics with Year Abroad2Programme CodeELLU153JACS CodeQ3104Level of StudyUndergraduate5aFinal QualificationBachelor of Arts with Honours (BA Hons)5bQAA FHEQ LevelHonours6Intermediate QualificationsNone7Teaching Institution (if not 91ֱ)Not applicable8FacultyArts and Humanities9DepartmentEnglish10Other Departments involved in teaching the programmeNone11Mode of AttendanceFull-time12Duration of the Programme4 years13Accrediting Professional or Statutory BodyNone14Date of production/revisionJanuary 201715. Background to the programme and subject area Language is an all-pervasive medium through which human beings not only communicate with one another but arrive at an understanding of the world around them. The opportunity to study this medium intensively can transform students understanding of their own experience in exciting and challenging ways. So it is not surprising that the study of language and linguistics is expanding at all levels from A-level through to post-graduate study. The 91ֱ BA in English Language and Linguistics is distinctive because it offers such a wide-ranging experience of language study, developing students understanding of a broad array of linguistic issues how language is structured; how it varies; how it changes; how it is used in spoken and written communication; how it is acquired; how it has been studied; and how it shapes and is shaped by other aspects of human societies and cultures. The programme also enables students to apply this understanding to the study of the English language in its many varieties: spoken and written; contemporary and historical; standard and non-standard; regional, national, and international. It gives students an understanding of how researchers approach these issues both in the different branches of linguistics and in other disciplines that are concerned with language. We strongly believe that students should experience research-led teaching throughout their degree programme and the English Language and Linguistics Subject Area has research groups that feed into undergraduate teaching and learning in the areas of the history of the English language, language variation and change, language acquisition, literary linguistics, and the history of linguistic thought. Some of these groups operate across departmental boundaries. The programme provides students with the practical and intellectual skills to explore a diverse range of linguistic issues for themselves and it encourages them to become progressively more autonomous throughout the programme. The opportunity to study abroad for a semester or a full year provides further opportunities to develop independence and initiative. Students leave the programme with a knowledge base that is highly relevant in any professional context where communication is important. They also have a broad range of skills, which gives them real adaptability: our graduates have experience in collecting and interpreting data, learning to apply technical methods of analysis, evaluating alternative forms of explanation, and situating problems in their social and cultural contexts. In particular, they have excellent communication skills and the ability to plan projects and see them through to completion, qualities that are at a premium in the contemporary employment market. For further detail, see the Department website:  HYPERLINK "http://www.shef.ac.uk/english" http://www.shef.ac.uk/english Completing a degree in English with Year Abroad at 91ֱ thus provides many opportunities for acquiring and refining ICT and other transferable skills as well as a high level of cultural and literary knowledge and understanding. The skills and intellectual training provided by a degree in English with Year Abroad are valued by employers. In recent years, graduates from the Department have gone on to follow careers in marketing and retail, accountancy, media, the civil service and the law, as well as in education, museums and libraries, tourism and the heritage industry. In the 3rd year, students study abroad at an English-speaking university where they build on the core English studies knowledge gained in Years 1 and 2 and also expand their horizons in other cognitive subjects. Through living and studying in a different country, they also develop and enhance their independence, global awareness and cultural horizons.16. Programme aims The following aims of the BA in English Language and Linguistics are in line with the Mission Statement of the University of 91ֱ. 1. to provide students with high quality opportunities for learning about a wide range of areas of language study including language structure, language variation and change, language acquisition, language in use, and interdisciplinary approaches to language and communication. 2. to equip students with the tools of analysis necessary for the investigation of language in general and English in particular at all levels from phonetics to discourse. 3. to provide an engaging and stimulating learning environment with a curriculum that is closely connected with the on-going research of those who teach it. 4. to encourage students to develop independence in their approach to linguistic issues in particular and to learning in general. 5. to equip students with a range of transferable skills that will prepare them for employment in a wide range of careers with particular emphasis on communication, problem-solving, self-reliance, flexibility, and creativity. 6. to develop students intellectual curiosity and build confidence in their ability to learn and to resolve intellectual problems for themselves. 7. to provide a basis for the further study of English language and linguistics at all levels.17. Programme learning outcomes Knowledge and understanding:K1An understanding of the nature of linguistics as a scientific discipline and of what this means in terms of the handling of data and the evaluation of theory.K2An awareness of how the insights of linguistics interact with those of other approaches to language study in the formulation and execution of research.K3An understanding of language as an aspect of human behaviour that changes, interacts with context, and elicits attitudes and judgements from others.K4A comprehensive, detailed, and in-depth knowledge of the English language in its many varieties, a knowledge informed by an understanding of the nature of human language in general.K5A reflective understanding of the importance of language and communication in the context of ones own experience.K6An understanding of the nature of linguistics as a scientific discipline and of what this means in terms of the handling of data and the evaluation of theory.K7An awareness of how the insights of linguistics interact with those of other approaches to language study in the formulation and execution of research. Skills and other attributes:S1The ability to use the tools provided by the discipline of linguistics for the analysis of language structure and use.S2The ability to use appropriate methods to gather, record, and analyse linguistic data from live informants, electronic resources, and primary texts.S3The ability to take a sensitive, critical approach to secondary sources.S4The ability to communicate effectively in speech and writing and to make appropriate judgements about the style of communication used.S5The ability to think analytically and independently, to develop a cogent line of argument, and to reflect critically upon ones own opinions.S6Increasing independence, self-direction, and self-management in formulating, investigating, and resolving intellectual problems.S7The ability to use the tools provided by the discipline of linguistics for the analysis of language structure and use.S8The ability to use appropriate methods to gather, record, and analyse linguistic data from live informants, electronic resources, and primary texts.S9The ability to take a sensitive, critical approach to secondary sources.18. Teaching, learning and assessment Development of the programme learning outcomes is promoted through the following teaching and learning methods: 1. Seminars and Workshops: Teaching and learning take place in a range of different contexts but small-group work is at the heart of the undergraduate experience and within this context students develop their knowledge and skills through a wide range of different activities, all of which require their active participation and develop both their skills of oral communication and their ability to work co-operatively with others (S4): ( working through exercises in order to practise techniques of linguistic analysis (S1); ( responding to data sets provided by the tutor (S1); ( undergoing practical training in areas such as phonetics (S1); ( presenting primary data they have collected themselves (K1, S1, S2, S4); ( comparing and contrasting different theoretical positions (S3); ( reflecting upon the experience of undertaking research (S5, S6); ( analysing and interpreting primary texts (S1); ( using AV material as the basis of discussion (S1); ( giving presentations on research undertaken outside class (S4). 2. Lectures: Large-group lectures support seminar activities by providing students with the information and conceptual frameworks necessary for their successful completion. They also provide a context in which both the skills of the discipline and more general skills of argumentation and analysis can be modelled for students. (K1, K2, K3, K4, K5). 3. Independent Study: The programme requires students to undertake substantial amounts of independent study and again, much of this work is in preparation for seminar activities. Sometimes students may be required to engage in collaborative preparation, developing skills of negotiation and team-working. This emphasis on independent study is crucial to students developing autonomy both in relation to the discipline itself and to learning in general (S6). 4. One-to-one Consultations: Students review completed activities and discuss their plans in one-to-one consultations with members of the teaching staff. Students can meet with their personal tutors in weekly office hours to review the work of the previous semester and discuss the feedback given by tutors of individual modules. This makes it possible for students to take a more holistic view of their work and review general problems arising across modules (S6). 5. Dissertation Seminars: Students who write a dissertation at level three also receive training in research skills in order to develop their independent study skills. They also receive training in the communication of research findings in speech and writing. This training is delivered in a fortnightly seminar, intervening weeks being left available for them to consult with their supervisors. They also participate in a one-day conference at which they present their work and listen to talks by other students (S4). 6. Acquiring Skills: Through all teaching and learning it is expected that English students will acquire and develop skills of articulacy, organisation, research and information technology competence. (S1-7). Opportunities to demonstrate achievement of the programme learning outcomes are provided through the following assessment methods: The wide-ranging nature of the programme is reflected in the diversity of our assessment methods. This diversity ensures that students have opportunities to develop and demonstrate a broad base of knowledge and skills. 1. Writing: Every module requires that students produce a written submission and in many cases this written work takes the form of a discursive essay produced over a number of weeks. However, some modules require students to produce other kinds of texts project reports, learning journals, commentaries, and reviews and to use the conventions appropriate to these genres. In some modules they may also be asked to produce written work in the context of a formal examination or in response to a twenty-four hour take-home paper. The tasks that they tackle in their written work vary considerably depending upon the module and may include: ( writing up practical research projects involving the collection and interpretation of data (K1, S2); ( analysing contemporary or historical linguistic data (K1, S1); ( interpreting and commenting on primary texts; ( evaluating secondary sources (S3); ( comparing different theoretical positions (K1); ( reflecting upon their own practice (S5, S6). 2. Speaking: In some modules there is an oral component to the assessment. Frequently this takes this form of a presentation prepared either individually or in groups, but in areas like phonetics it involves a test in the production and perception of speech sounds. (S2). 3. Developing Independence: Students are given support and guidance on these various kinds of assessed activity. As the degree progresses they are given more opportunity to choose topics and formulate questions for their assessed work in consultation with the members of staff that teach them. This trend culminates in the opportunity to write a dissertation (10,000 words) in their final year. Students at level three may also group together to request teaching in a special subject of their choice and assessment methods will be negotiated with the tutor running the module. The School of English also follows the statement endorsed by the University that, Not everything that is valuable can be separately tested, measured or quantified and that one of the distinctive benefits of a university education is the development of qualities of personal organisation and time-management which follow from the attribution to students of considerable responsibility in directing their own learning. Independence and self-motivation can be fostered but not taught in academic departments. The depth or extent of such personal qualities cannot be directly examined, though successful acquisition of them is expected to show through in the application of other skills which are explicitly assessed. Difficulties such as these should not inhibit attempts to inculcate or formatively assess such skills as part of a degree programme. (S1-6). 19. Reference points The learning outcomes have been developed to reflect appropriate sections of the following points of reference: Subject Benchmark Statements HYPERLINK "http://www.qaa.ac.uk/AssuringStandardsAndQuality/subject-guidance/Pages/Subject-benchmark-statements.aspx"http://www.qaa.ac.uk/AssuringStandardsAndQuality/subject-guidance/Pages/Subject-benchmark-statements.aspx Framework for Higher Education Qualifications (2008) HYPERLINK "http://www.qaa.ac.uk/Publications/InformationAndGuidance/Pages/The-framework-for-higher-education-qualifications-in-England-Wales-and-Northern-Ireland.aspx"http://www.qaa.ac.uk/Publications/InformationAndGuidance/Pages/The-framework-for-higher-education-qualifications-in-England-Wales-and-Northern-Ireland.aspx University Strategic Plan HYPERLINK "http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/strategicplan"http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/strategicplan Learning and Teaching Strategy (2016-21)  HYPERLINK "http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/als/strategy" http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/als/strategy20. Programme structure and regulations Each year, students are required to take modules to the value of 120 Credits. Most modules offered by the School are worth 20 credits and last for a single semester of 15 weeks. Thus students generally follow three 20-credit modules per semester. At Level 1, students may take up to 80 credits in unrestricted modules offered by other departments across the Faculty of Arts and the University. At Levels 2 and 4, students may also take unrestricted modules up to the value of 40 per year credits from those offered across the School of English or in other departments. At level 1, students are required to take: five core modules: Sounds of English (10 credits), Structure of English (10 credits), History of the English Language (20 credits), Introduction to Research Methods in Linguistics (20 credits) and Varieties of English (20 credits). unrestricted modules to the value of 40 credits. This ensures that students obtain a solid foundation in the core areas of linguistics and English language research as well as skills necessary to pursue study at higher levels. At level 2, students are given the opportunity to specialise in their preferred subject areas and are given a great deal of choice. Modules are available across the full breadth of language and linguistics and cover language structure, language variation and change, language acquisition, language in use, and interdisciplinary approaches to language and communication. At Levels 2 and 4, students must obtain 100 credits in approved modules, and 20 credits in unrestricted modules. At Level 3, students study abroad at an English-speaking university, where they build on the core literary and cultural knowledge gained in Years 1 and 2 and also expand their horizons in cognitive subjects. Through living and studying in a different country, they also develop and enhance their independence, global awareness and cultural horizons. Students are encouraged to choose courses that will motivate or interest them, selecting from host university strengths including subjects not offered at 91ֱ. Students must, however, register for a full academic workload, similar to that studied by full-time degree students at the host university. The final programme of selected modules is approved by the departmental Study Abroad Tutor. At Level 4, students are exposed to areas of linguistics that require integration of knowledge from several subdisciplines. For example, Psychology of Language requires a prior knowledge of syntax to allow insights above the level of the word; Conversation Analysis draws on knowledge of phonetics, and discourse; Language and Gender draws upon sociolinguistics, linguistic anthropology and discourse analysis.Detailed information about the structure of programmes, regulations concerning assessment and progression and descriptions of individual modules are published in the University Calendar available on-line at  HYPERLINK "http://www.shef.ac.uk/govern/calendar/regs.html" http://www.shef.ac.uk/govern/calendar/regs.html. 21. Student development over the course of study Principles of Progression: Throughout their learning and assessment, students are encouraged to display evidence of a developing close engagement with texts and a growing conceptual sophistication. By the end of the 4 years of study they will demonstrate the accumulated knowledge of English Literature offered to them by the degrees chronological core. Level 1: By the end of level 1, students will have developed an appreciation of the variety and complexity of language, especially though not exclusively the English language. They will have been made aware of their subconscious knowledge of, and attitudes to, language. They will have an overview of the different areas of linguistics and the different levels of the grammar. They will have come to understand the characteristics of both local and supralocal varieties of English. They will have been introduced to various empirical methods in linguistics, and will have developed the skills necessary to apply these methods. They will also have had the opportunity to consider the status of different varieties of English, including historical varieties, and to learn about the application of tools of linguistic analysis to contemporary literature. Students who come from a wide variety of learning contexts and experiences will reach a common understanding of the teaching and learning methods appropriate to university-level work, and an appreciation of the techniques required to maximise learning outcomes from lectures, workshops, and seminars. Level 2: students study topics introduced at level 1 in greater detail, and have an opportunity to specialise in a particular area of linguistics. Emphasis is placed on developing skills of formal analysis, consideration of the frameworks within which those skills are conceptualised, and learning about relatively self-contained domains within linguistics. Students will be expected to appreciate the problems of these approaches and areas at a practical level. By the end of level 2 students will be confident using the metalanguages current in various branches of linguistics and in some interdisciplinary areas in examining material to which they are directed by tutors. Level 3 The learning outcomes of the year abroad are as follows: Developing an awareness of cultural differences and different approaches to the study of language and linguistics in another country; Broadening knowledge and gaining experience of living in another culture/country; Reflecting critically upon ones own cultural identity in a comparative perspective. Level 4: Students are encouraged to become more independent by formulating their own independent research questions, for instance by deciding their own essay topics for assessment. They can also specialise to a greater extent, for instance by pursuing the option of writing a dissertation (over one or two semesters) or by grouping together to request a Special Subject module.22. Criteria for admission to the programme Detailed information regarding admission to the programme is available in the Universitys On-Line Prospectus at  HYPERLINK "http://www.shef.ac.uk/prospective/" http://www.shef.ac.uk/prospective/ During the course of Level 2, students will have the opportunity to transfer onto the degree of English with Year Abroad. Students will need to have achieved a minimum of a weighted mean of 60, at Level 1, in order to apply to transfer. 23. Additional information Please refer to the Departments web pages at  HYPERLINK http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/history http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/englishEnglish Language and Linguistics is part of the School of English Literature, Language & Linguistics. Several research groups spread across departmental boundaries and this collaborative culture is reflected at undergraduate level in the fact that students regularly integrate modules offered in other parts of the School into their programmes of study. As with all 91ֱs modular degrees, students may also study in other departments for a limited proportion of their time and regularly take complementary modules in a range of other subjects, including journalism, languages, psychology, sociology, philosophy, human communication sciences, and history. This specification represents a concise statement about the main features of the programme and should be considered alongside other sources of information provided by the teaching department(s) and the University. In addition to programme specific information, further information about studying at 91ֱ can be accessed via our Student Services web site at  HYPERLINK "http://www.shef.ac.uk/ssid" www.shef.ac.uk/ssid. Tuition fees for the study-abroad year are paid to 91ֱ. No tuition fees are payable to the host university, though some Universities may have additional fees.      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