English Language and Literature
UCAS Code: Q301
Bachelor of Arts (with Honours) - BA (Hons)
Entry requirements
A level
Pass Access to Higher Education Diploma with 60 credits including 45 credits at Level 3
International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme
OCR Cambridge Technical Extended Diploma
Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma (first teaching from September 2016)
UCAS Tariff
To include grade B at A Level or equivalent in English Language or English Literature. We will generally make you an offer if your predicted grades are at the top of this range and you meet any subject specific requirements (where applicable). If your predicted grades are towards the lower end of this range we can still consider your application but will also take into account subjects studied at Level 3, your GCSE (or equivalent) profile and/or relevant non-academic achievements, references and your motivation for study.
About this course
Bringing together a wide range of modules in literature and language enriches the study of both disciplines.
Understanding how language works allows for a more nuanced analysis of literature, while understanding the social, historical and cultural contexts of literature allows a better understanding of how language reflects and produces human experiences.
The literature part of the degree focusses on works from the Renaissance period to the present day. Core teaching in Tragedy, Critical Theory and Renaissance culture encompasses Shakespeare, Romanticism and Modernism to provide a broad basis for the analysis of text and culture.
The language modules begin with an introduction to the nature of language, setting out to dispel common myths of where it comes from, how it is structured, and who controls it as it changes across time. This basis then supports more focussed study of how language is acquired by children and adults.
Assessment methods
Most of the modules are assessed with essays and other written forms, supplemented - where appropriate - with examinations, presentations, and contributions to digital content such as blogs and wikis.
The Uni
St Mary's University, Twickenham
Department of Humanities

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