| Course Name |
Archaeology |
| Course Provider |
Queen's University Belfast |
| Course Code |
V403 |
| Course Type |
UCAS |
| Qualifications |
|
| Apply To |
UCAS |
| Attendance Options |
Full time, Daytime |
| Location (Districts) |
Belfast |
| Application Date |
Expand+How To Apply
Applications for admission to full-time undergraduate courses at Queen’s should normally be made through the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS). Full information can be obtained from the UCAS website at: www.ucas.com/...
Hide-How To Apply
Applications for admission to full-time undergraduate courses at Queen’s should normally be made through the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS). Full information can be obtained from the UCAS website at: www.ucas.com/apply.
When to Apply
UCAS will start processing applications for entry in Autumn 2017 from 1 September 2016.
The normal closing date for the receipt of applications is 15 January 2017.
Applicants are advised to apply as early as is consistent with having made a careful and considered choice of institutions and courses.
Earlier applicants normally receive decisions more quickly, however, UCAS accepts that some applicants, especially those from outside the UK, may find this difficult. Late applications are, in practice, accepted by UCAS throughout the remainder of the application cycle, but you should understand that they are considered by institutions at their discretion, and there can be no guarantee that they will be given the same full level of consideration as applications received by the advisory closing date.
Take care to enter the details of the institutions and courses clearly and correctly on the application. For Queen's, the institution code name is QBELF and the institution code is Q75. These should be entered in the Choices section of your UCAS application. A Campus Code is not required.
Queen’s University Belfast Terms and Conditions 2017 Entry
The terms and conditions that apply when you accept an offer of a place at the University on a taught programme of study.
http://www.qub.ac.uk/Study/TermsandConditions/
|
| Application Weblink |
Web Page - Click Here |
| Duration |
3 years |
| Qualification Letters |
MSciHons |
| Entry Requirements |
Expand+Selection Criteria
In addition to the entrance requirements below, it is essential that you read the How We Choose Our Students pdf prior to submitting your UCAS application.
Entrance Requirements
MSci Honours
A-level: AAB + GCSE Math...
Hide-Selection Criteria
In addition to the entrance requirements below, it is essential that you read the How We Choose Our Students pdf prior to submitting your UCAS application.
Entrance Requirements
MSci Honours
A-level: AAB + GCSE Mathematics grade C
Irish Leaving Certificate (Higher Level): AB2B2B2B2B2 + if not offered at Higher Level then Ordinary Level grade C in Mathematics
Note: applicants for the the MSci degree will automatically be considered for admission to the BSc degree if they are not eligible for entry to the MSci degree both at initial offer making stage and when results are received.
Note: students intending to study Archaeology with another subject should also refer to the subject requirements for the other course.
All students: there are no specific subject requirements to study Archaeology and Palaeoecology, although subjects as diverse as Art, Physics, Biology, Geography, Geology, Classical Civilisation, History, Chemistry, Mathematics or Languages have all been helpful in the past.
|
| Link to Course Fee |
Web Page - Click Here |
| Course Content |
Expand+Overview
Archaeology explores a wide range of evidence that documents the human past - from artefacts, monuments and settlements to entire landscapes - and from these interprets how societies have adapted and developed. Modules focus on different ...
Hide-Overview
Archaeology explores a wide range of evidence that documents the human past - from artefacts, monuments and settlements to entire landscapes - and from these interprets how societies have adapted and developed. Modules focus on different periods of World, European and Irish/British archaeology from human origins to modern times and heritage.
Palaeoecology studies environmental evidence to assess the impact of natural events and human activities on landscapes, climate and changing environments. Modules examine themes such as ancient environments, evolution, economic and climate change.
The combined disciplines progressively develop general and specific knowledge and skills, through excavation, fieldwork, overseas fieldtrips, laboratory and practical work.
As well as the Single Honours BA in Archaeology and BSc in Archaeology-Palaeoecology, Queen's offers several degrees which combine Archaeology (the study of past human activities) and Palaeoecology (the study of past environments) with other subjects (Languages, Geography and History). We have also introduced the MSci in Archaeology, which is an integrated four-year degree, whereby students can progress directly to Masters-level study in Level 4.
|
| Subjects Taught |
Expand+Course Content (including module information)
All students normally take six Level 1 modules. Single Honours students normally take five Archaeology/Palaeoecology modules. Students on Joint Honours degree programmes normally take three Archaeology...
Hide-Course Content (including module information)
All students normally take six Level 1 modules. Single Honours students normally take five Archaeology/Palaeoecology modules. Students on Joint Honours degree programmes normally take three Archaeology/Palaeoecology modules, in addition to three modules from their second subject.
Level 1
Level 1 covers both disciplines, and the modules are introductory courses which assume no previous knowledge. (They may also interest students who are taking another subject as their main degree, but who wish to enhance their knowledge of their human and environmental past and heritage.)
Level 1 modules
•Ancient Humans and Landscapes
•Barbarians, Vikings and Traders: The Archaeology of Historic Europe
•Environmental Change: Past, Present and Future
•Europe in Prehistory
•Introduction to World Archaeology
•Plus choices from Geography and other Schools
Levels 2 and 3
Students explore in detail the themes introduced in Year 1, and Level 2 and 3 modules allow for specialisation and the development of practical skills. Level 2 modules provide skills and concepts necessary for the dissertation that is normally taken at Level 3 for Single Honours students, and for future employment in Archaeology.
Level 2 modules
•Archaeological Excavation
•Archaeology and Heritage of Rome (including week-long fieldtrip to Rome)
•Flints, Farmers and Forts: Ireland in Prehistory
•From St Patrick to the Plantation: The Archaeology of Historic Ireland
•Landscapes and Geographical Information Systems (GIS)
•Maps and Mappings: From the Stone Age to the Digital Age
•Palaeoenvironmental Techniques
•Thinking Through Things: Theorising Global Archaeology
•Plus choices from Geography and other Schools
Level 3 modules
•Colonialism, Capitalism and Conflict: Exploring the Archaeology of the Modern World
•Climate Change: Science and Society
•Dating the Past
•Medieval Settlement
•Merchants, Metals and Miners: From Stone to Steel
•Monuments and Ritual in European Prehistory
•Quaternary Palaeoecology
•Society, Death and Disease
•The Archaeology of Human Evolution
•Dissertation (double module)
•Plus choices from Geography and other Schools
In the MSci, Level 4 modules enable students to gain practical experience in digital heritage and field techniques.
Note: some modules may be subject to change
|
| Assessment Method |
Expand+Assessment & Feedback
Assessment (general): The way in which students are assessed will vary according to the learning objectives of each module. Details of how each module is assessed are shown in the Student Handbook which is provided to all s...
Hide-Assessment & Feedback
Assessment (general): The way in which students are assessed will vary according to the learning objectives of each module. Details of how each module is assessed are shown in the Student Handbook which is provided to all students during their first year induction. Accounting modules are typically assessed by a combination of continuous assessment and a final written unseen examination. Continuous assessment consists of:
1.Student Tutorial Portfolio – this involves the completion and submission of workshop exercises on a weekly and individual student basis. These are collected in the workshops from students each week and assessed, with the mark awarded contributing to the continuous assessment element of the module mark. The mark awarded reflects timeliness, presentation, accuracy and completeness of the required work. Consistent with employer feedback, students are also required to prepare and make a small group presentation on a pre-assigned case study type or discussion-based topic. In addition students are required to submit a 100 word summary on the accounting significance of each of the presentation tutorial topics. The group tutorial presentation and summaries are assessed, with the mark awarded contributing to the continuous assessment element of the module mark.
2.Small Group Project / Presentations – this involves the completion of a small group project / Presentation (three/four students per group) which is assessed and contributes to the continuous assessment element of the module mark.
Feedback (general): As students progress through their course at Queen’s they will receive general and specific feedback about their work from a variety of sources including lecturers, module co-ordinators, placement supervisors, personal tutors, advisers of study and peers. University students are expected to engage with reflective practice and to use this approach to improve the quality of their work. Feedback may be provided in a variety of forms including:
•Feedback provided via formal written comments and marks relating to work that you, as an individual or as part of a group, have submitted.
•Face to face comment. This may include occasions when you make use of the lecturers’ advertised “office hours” to help you to address a specific query.
•Placement employer comments or references.
•Online or emailed comment.
•General comments or question and answer opportunities at the end of a lecture, seminar or tutorial.
•Pre-submission advice regarding the standards you should aim for and common pitfalls to avoid. In some instances, this may be provided in the form of model answers or exemplars which you can review in your own time.
•Feedback and outcomes from practical classes.
•Comment and guidance provided by staff from specialist support services such as, Careers, Employability and Skills or the Learning Development Service.
Once you have reviewed your feedback, you will be encouraged to identify and implement further improvements to the quality of your work.
|
| Careers or Further Progression |
Expand+Career Prospects
Overview
Studying for an Archaeology degree at Queen’s will assist students in developing the core skills and employment-related experiences that are valued by employers, professional organisations and academic institutions. ...
Hide-Career Prospects
Overview
Studying for an Archaeology degree at Queen’s will assist students in developing the core skills and employment-related experiences that are valued by employers, professional organisations and academic institutions. Graduates from this degree at Queen’s are well regarded by many employers (local, national and international) and over half of all graduate jobs are now open to graduates of any discipline, including Archaeology.
Although the majority of our graduates are interested in pursuing careers in archaeology-related areas (town and country planning, environmental impact, Land and Property Services [formerly Ordnance Survey]) significant numbers develop careers in a wide range of other sectors. The following is a list of the major career sectors that have attracted our graduates in recent years:
•Teaching
•Management
•Marketing
•Civil Service
•Publishing
•Professional archaeology
•Surveying, especially civil engineering
•Varied graduate programmes
Employer Links – Consultations:We regularly consult and develop links with a large number of employers including, for example, the Northern Ireland Environment Agency (NIEA), National Trust, Ulster Wildlife Trust, who provide both snapshot advice on their work, as well as run more in-depth advice sessions, the latter often at taught Masters level. We also run a careers seminar programme with guest speaker employers and further study coordinators (teacher training, Masters and PhD degrees).
Placement Employers: Our past students have also gained work placement with organisations such as:
•NIEA
•Geological Survey of N.Ireland
•Ulster Wildlife Trust
•Land and Property Services
•National Trust
•Forensic Laboratory (NI)
Other Employer Links:We benefit greatly from housing the Centre for Archaeological Fieldwork in the school. This self-funded private unit obtains commercial work from NIEA, the police and civil engineering companies, thus exposing students to employers, but also providing the unit with information on what the modern market requires from Archaeology. This information is then fed into the archaeology modules, especially those on excavation techniques.
Pease take a look at www.prospects.ac.uk for further information concerning the types of jobs that attract Archaeology graduates.
Further study is also an option open to Archaeology graduates. Students can choose from a wide range of Masters programmes as well as a comprehensive list of research topics, see: http://www.qub.ac.uk/gap
|
| Further Enquiries |
Admissions and Access Service
Tel: 028 9097 3838
Fax: 028 9097 5151
Email address: admissions@qub.ac.uk
Website: www.qub.ac.uk/clearing
|
| Course Web Page |
Web Page - Click Here |
|
|