Awards

Target Award

Award Description:Bachelor of Arts with Honours (Fnd) - BAHF
Alternative Exit
Alternative Exit
Alternative Exit

Programme Offerings

Full-Time

F2F-JMU-SEP

Educational Aims of the Course

1. To provide students with a stimulating, research informed, academic programme, including both core and optional modules, with clear progression through the degree, and with clear learning outcomes. 2. To provide a dynamic and contemporary programme which stimulates the sociological and criminological imagination and engages students with the history of the discipline, and its central theoretical, methodological and substantive aspects. 3. To provide an environment which facilitates and encourages student centred learning, that is inclusive and accessible to all students, and supports them as they begin to independently research the social world using appropriate quantitative and/or qualitative techniques. 4. To encourage students to acquire a critical understanding of criminology topics which demonstrates an appreciation of criminological theory, of evidence, and of the relevance to current debates, and present the conclusion in a variety of appropriate academic formats. 5. To encourage students to critically evaluate responses to deviance, crime, harm, victimisation, punishment and justice and presentations of these are national, international and global levels. 6. To invite students to consider the continuities and discontinues, similarities and differences between the disciplines of sociology and criminology and dialogue between them. 7. To provide an introduction to sociology and sociological ways of thinking, with special emphasis upon sociological research methods, both quantitative and qualitative, and the opportunities to apply their sociological imaginations to the analysis of a number of substantive areas in sociology. 8. To provide graduates with the appropriate subject knowledge and attributes, together with a range of transferable skills, and the ability to take responsibility for their own learning, to pursue a career related to the subject area, in general employment, or further study. 9. To encourage students to engage with the development of employability skills, including their completion of a self-awareness statement. 10. To provide a programme that enables students to recognise their citizenship in local, national and global communities and societies, and to appreciate their role in addressing social conditions, resisting prejudice, and improving social justice for all utilising the theoretical insights and evidence based findings of sociology and criminology. 11. To appreciate the importance of ethical issues in all forms of sociological and criminological data collection, analysis and argumentation and the contested nature of social life and social order, to develop a reflexive sociological understanding of world views alternative to their own. 12. To provide opportunities to sociologically investigate societies other than the UK and to facilitate exchange and study/field work educational visits to those countries to further understanding, analysis and knowledge.

Teaching, Learning and Assessment

The programme incorporates staff-led and student-centred strategies with a progressive emphasis on the latter as students develop as independent learners. The former includes both formal and interactive lectures, and seminars, which provide opportunities to present ideas, discuss and reflect. The latter involve small group activities, tutorials, workshops and enquiry-based learning. These are designed to foster student progression, stimulate interest and encourage participation, provide equal opportunities to develop learning skills, encourage critical analysis and the application of theory, utilise ICT and Canvas. Criteria of attainment are given in handbooks and module assignments. Assessment across the programme is planned, and designed to be coherent, balanced and to facilitate the achievement of learning outcomes. Assessment meets the criteria (QAA and School) of validity, reliability and consistency. Assessment takes account of students with particular needs. The programme utilises a wide range of assessments including essays, exams, reports, portfolios, projects, self-reflective diaries, biography, leaflet, book reviews, enquiry-based learning, presentations (written and oral) and, at level 6, an optional dissertation, and opportunities for work placement. Intellectual skills are strongly linked to the development of knowledge and understanding. Lectures provide the foundations of and models for students to develop and consolidate their intellectual skills, whole workshops, seminars, tutorials and independent learning provides opportunities for students to practice and apply these intellectual skills. The assessment of intellectual skills is closely linked with subject knowledge and assessment, however the focus is upon the student's ability to recognise, construct and defend arguments, to undertake critical analysis and to identify and resolve intellectual problems. A variety of written coursework and exam based assessments focus directly on the student's ability to construct rigorous arguments and analysis. While the more applied nature of some assessments (briefing papers, blogs, case studies, reports),particularly those requiring students to understand and undertake Sociological research encourages students to creatively develop their intellectual skills. All teaching and learning activities focus on developing and improving communication skills: lectures enable students to become effective listeners who can assimilate ideas and information; discussions in workshops and small group settings develop spoken communication skills, collaboration and interpersonal skills. Students are also encouraged and supported, via tutor guidance and the VLE, to undertake independent learning which, in turn, promotes planning. organisational and time-management skills. All assessment utilized on the programme encourages students to develop their communication skills and to present arguments and ideas with precision and clarity. Achievement of good time management and organizational skills is demonstrated by students completing work on time to a satisfactory standard. These skills are introduced in 4106SOC: Introduction to Sociology, at level four. Thereafter, core and option modules at levels 5 and 6 involve a combination of student-centred learning in both collective (seminars/workshops, group project work etc) and individual contexts (independent learning, tutorials, dissertations). Teaching is block time-tabled into 3 hour sessions. The variety of learning experiences and assessment tasks is designed to stimulate interest and encourage participation, and to provide opportunities for students with differing capabilities and aptitudes to develop transferable skills. The variety of assessment on the programme ensures that these transferable key skills are assessed at various points throughout the degree.

Opportunities for work related learning

Personal development planning is integrated into the personal tutor arrangements at Levels 4, 5 and 6. Work related learning is embedded at Level 5 in the 5117SOC Sociology at Work 1 Module and at Level 6 in the 6114SOC Sociology at Work 2 module- 20 credits each (proposal and placement / report). All LJMU undergraduate programs are required to incorporate into a L4 module an assessment item of the submission of a personal Self Awareness Statement. Students have the opportunity to choose from work-based/related/transferrable skills modules at L5 and L6, while the programme’s PDP system provides opportunities for students to reflect on and document their achievements inside and outside of university and think about future employability paths.

Programme Structure

Programme Structure Description

The programme is taught within the University Academic Framework. Students must take 120 credits at each level of the programme (Levels 3, 4, 5 and 6),with a balance between sociology modules and criminological modules: hence 60 credits from sociology and 60 credits from criminology per level in levels 4, 5 … For more content click the Read More button below.

Structure

Approved variance from Academic Framework Regulations

A variance to the Academic Framework regulation UG.A3.2 which states that modules comprise 10 or 20 credits except for a research project/dissertation module at Level 6 which may comprise 30 or 40 credits has been approved by the Chair of Education Committee on 01.06.17.

Entry Requirements

A levels
Access awards
Alternative qualifications considered
BTECs
GCSEs and equivalents
IELTS
International Baccalaureate
Interview required
Irish awards
NVQ
Reduced offer scheme
T levels
UCAS points
Welsh awards

Extra Entry Requirements

Application and selection

Securing your place at LJMU

​The following criteria are desirable but not essential; we will use them to rank applications. Please demonstrate your development of these attributes in the personal statement included in your application:

  • A critical interest in how societies are constructed and the issues and challenges presented
  • A questioning mind
  • Good written and verbal communication skills, as you will be expected to convey knowledge to other people
  • Good analytical skills, so that you can evaluate policies and practice
  • Good reading and information retrieval skills - obtaining information from a range of sources and using it to support analysis

Can this course be deferred?

Yes

Is a DBS check required?

No

OCR National acceptability

  • National Certificate: Acceptable only when combined with other qualifications
  • National Diploma: Acceptable on its own and combined with other qualifications
  • National Extended Diploma: Acceptable on its own and combined with other qualifications

HECoS Code(s)

(CAH15-01) sociology, social policy and anthropology
(CAH15-01) sociology, social policy and anthropology