Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities
APSQ
Module Submission Sheet
Please submit this form to QSC with any new or amended module specifications. This form should also be used to notify discontinued modules. (Discontinued modules can be revived later, if needed.)
Module Code: UPHPK4-30-1 Module Title: Sources for Courses: History and Evidence | |||||
Summary details of revision to module specification and reasons for the change: | |||||
OR Rationale for introduction of new module: This module acts as a core for the new history first year, designed to introduce students to the requirements and practices of history as an academic discipline and deliver GDP. | |||||
Indicate whether any module(s) can be discontinued to accommodate the new module, or the proposed variation of an existing module : YES If yes, please give details (i.e. module code / title) Themes in Early Modern History, UPHPGC-30-1 | |||||
Contributes towards: | |||||
Programme (include descriptors) |
Comp |
Core |
Opt |
Initials of Programme Leader agreeing to use of module on programme | |
BA (Honours) History and validated combinations |
X |
MS | |||
Before applying to QSC it is essential that your proposal has been approved using School processes at either Department or Programme Committee Level. | |||||
Approved by: HLSS Head of Dept, Dr Raingard Esser AND History Dept Meeting (delete as appropriate) |
Identified External Examiner: Dr Elizabeth Tingle, Plymouth University | ||||
Module Leader: Dr Steve Poole |
Dept / Field: History |
MODULE SPECIFICATION
Code: UPHPK4-30-1 Title: Sources for Courses: History and Evidence Version: 1
Level: 1 UWE credit rating: 30 ECTS credit rating: 15
Module type: Project
Owning Faculty: Social Sciences and Humanities Field: History
Faculty Committee approval: QSC Date: 27th January 2010
Approved for Delivery by:
(indicate name of affiliated institution if module will only be delivered by them)
Valid from: September 2010 Discontinued from:
Contributes towards: Award and Half-Award BA History (Hons)
Pre-requisites: None
Co-requisites: None
Entry requirements:
(if the module is offered as CPD or stand alone, indicate the entry requirements)
Excluded combinations: None
Learning outcomes:
1. Familiarity with co-operative group work and reflective practice in learning. Document-based workshop format facilitates understanding of historical epistemology and empirical ways of learning through research, selectivity, interpretation and argument [GDP]
2. A deeper understanding of why history matters and what historians do [A1-2]
3. A deeper understanding of archival material and other primary sources as the building blocks of all accounts of the past. [A1-2]
Syllabus outline:
Teaching Block 1: History and Society
Taught in thematic blocks, each of about 2-3 weeks. Themes may vary from year to year but might include
Block one: Nationhood and Ethnicity
Block two: God, the Individual and the State
Block three: Gender and the Family
Block four: Money, Property and Power
Teaching Block 2: Approaches to Making History
Practical hands-on workshops leading towards final project
Block five: Sources and archives, including visit to TNA and exercises using digital archives (Times, Parliamentary Papers, EEBO etc)
Block six: Questions and arguments; creating a group research project; formulating questions, using evidence
Block seven: Group project and presentations
Teaching and learning methods:
The distinctive aspect of this project module is not its content but its teaching & learning methods. The module will be delivered in two-hour workshop sessions based around work set by the class tutor: perhaps in each case, one survey-type secondary reading and two or three archival sources (from text, visual, map/plan, oral, material object) or a numerical data-set. Students will be expected to work collectively together and to learn through doing . The module will be designed to introduce a range of skills that are fundamental to the process of historical research, and students will use portfolio work to reflect upon their learning and to identify the processes they are using. The workshop tutor will also act as the personal tutor and GDP tutor. Every session of the module will be, in effect, a Facilitated Learning Action Group.
Reading Strategy:
Workshop sessions will be based firmly around the use of a range of pre-distributed primary sources. Students will also be expected to engage with a small selection of suggested complimentary secondary literature outlined in the course handbook. These will be available through JSTOR or comparable resources where we have a license for electronic access. Most of the secondary and archival material used in workshops will be available online and accessed through Blackboard. For group work, students will be directed to projects where adequate texts are already available in the SM library.
Indicative Reading List:
Bentley, M (1991), Modern Historigraphy: An Introduction London: Routledge
Black, J and MacRaild, D (1997), Studying History Basingstoke: Macmillan
Burke, P (ed) (2001) New Perspectives on Historical Writing Oxford: Blackwell, Polity Press
Dobson, M & Ziemann B, (eds) (2009) Reading Primary Sources: The interpretation of texts from 19th and
20th century History, London: Routledge
Jordanova, L (2000) History in Practice London: Arnold
Tosh, J (2000), The Pursuit of History 3rd edn, Harlow: Pearson
Tosh, J (2000), Historians on History Harlow: Pearson Educational
Assessment
Please state which element of assessment should be recorded as the final assessment for the purposes of submitting data on non-submissions to HEFCE. (For further information please contact Academic Registry.)
Weighting between components A and B (standard modules only) A: 100%
ATTEMPT 1
First Assessment Opportunity
Component A
Description of each element Element weighting
1. Individual Portfolio (3000 words)[FINAL ASSESSMENT] 40%
2. Group Project based on a theme from term one in which students work in small groups to formulate and answer a research question, using individually retrieved and analysed primary evidence from approved electronic resources. 60%
Second Assessment Opportunity (Resit) (further attendance at taught classes is not required)
Component A
Description of each element Element weighting
1. Individual Portfolio (3000 words) 40%
2. Individual Project based on a theme from term one in which student formulates and answers a research question, using retrieved and analysed primary evidence from approved electronic resources 60%
EXCEPTIONAL SECOND ATTEMPT (Retake): Attendance at taught classes is required.
Specification confirmed by …………………………………………………Date ……………………………
(Associate Dean/Programme Director)