UDJOURFY - BA (Hons) Journalism (including foundation year)
Course Specification
Validation status | Validated | |||||||||||
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Highest award | Bachelor of Arts | Level | Honours | |||||||||
Possible interim awards | ||||||||||||
Total credits for course | 480 | |||||||||||
Awarding institution | London Metropolitan University | |||||||||||
Teaching institutions | London Metropolitan University | |||||||||||
School | School of Computing and Digital Media | |||||||||||
Subject Area | Creative Technologies and Digital Media | |||||||||||
Attendance options |
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Course leader |
About the course and its strategy towards teaching and learning and towards blended learning/e-learning
Students will be taught in practical interactive studios, lectures, seminars, both in groups and in individual sessions. The course has a strong focus on professional practice and placements: all teachers are practitioners in either journalism or photojournalism or photography. Students will be encouraged to make full use of social media, with some use of moving image as well as analogue and digital photography on the course website, and to seek publication on established media outlets alongside emerging and converging platforms. Facilities will include use of photography studios, darkrooms, TV and radio studios and the journalism newsroom, but work will be industry focused and multi-media oriented.
There is a consistent and growing demand for high-quality images in the commercial and journalistic fields, including small independent magazines and websites in commercial and journalistic arenas. The school’s expertise in media studies and access to excellent professionals in the vibrant metropolis means that students can immerse themselves in opportunities to develop their portfolios for a variety of outlets.
Guest speakers will be a regular feature. News weeks will offer them the chance to experience professional pressures and rewards, as well as making contacts in the industry.
A degree show will enable students to display their achievements to the public and employers
Course aims
The course aims:
- to equip students with the skills required in the photojournalism and journalism industries. Students will develop practical and research expertise which will enable them to position and understand their practice in the context of contemporary industries.
-to equip students with the analytical and critical skills essential to higher education, as well as the practical and technical skills of those who work within the photojournalism and journalism industries.
-to help students develop the ability to research and evaluate data from all sources, including scholarly research. It further aims to help students develop interviewing skills for primary research.
-to foster the skills of working autonomously and in groups, as well as the social skills needed to pitch and sell ideas, to present concepts convincingly to different audiences and to respond flexibly to critical input.
-to foster individual learning and problem solving. The course further aims to develop resilient learners, who can evaluate and learn from their learning deficits.
-to help students harness their creativity to produce, ultimately, work worthy of professional publication across any or all media platforms.
- to fit students for further advanced study, should they so wish, in related fields.
Course learning outcomes
On successful completion of this course students will be able to:
University Learning Objective: Demonstrate confidence, resilience, ambition and
creativity and will act as inclusive, collaborative and socially responsible
practitioners/professionals in their discipline.
1. deploy accurately established techniques of analysis and enquiry within photojournalism;
2. devise and sustain arguments, and/or to solve problems, using ideas and techniques, some of which are at the forefront of photojournalism;
3. describe and comment upon particular aspects of current research, or equivalent advanced scholarship, in photojournalism, recognising the uncertainty, ambiguity and limits of knowledge;
4. manage their own learning, and to make use of scholarly reviews and primary sources (for example, refereed research articles and/or original materials appropriate to Photojournalism;
5. apply the methods and techniques that they have learned to review, consolidate, extend and apply their knowledge and understanding, and to initiate and carry out projects;
6. critically evaluate arguments, assumptions, abstract concepts and data (that may be incomplete), to make judgements, and to frame appropriate questions to achieve a solution - or identify a range of solutions - to a problem;
7. communicate information, ideas, problems and solutions to both specialist and non-specialist audiences;
8. exercise initiative and personal responsibility, including decision-making in complex and unpredictable contexts;
9. undertake appropriate further training of a professional or equivalent nature
Principle QAA benchmark statements
Communication, Media, Film and Cultural Studies [Dec-2019]
Guidance at:
https://bit.ly/3ggG0ob
The above latest subject benchmark statement and general guidance available are used in the design, delivery and review of the course and in facilitating the knowledge and skills normally expected of a typical course graduate.
Assessment strategy
The course uses a wide range of assessments, from online journals and contributions to the course website to academic essays, from video footage and sound recordings to magazine and website layouts, class presentations and pop quizzes, in-class examination and longform writing.
Assessment develops with on a coaching model, with formative assessment being offered at drafting and intermediate submission, both face to face and electronically. News and enhancement weeks offer the chance to receive formative assessment whilst engaged on simulations, newsdays and practical activities.
Since much teaching is run on an interactive coaching model, tutorials are built into class sessions as well as offered privately. Feedback on summative assessment is given within one week of submission for the first instance and thereafter two weeks.
Most modules include a reflective assessment, where students evaluate their own contribution to class via an online journal moderated by tutors.
Organised work experience, work based learning, sandwich year or year abroad
A compulsory work experience placement in the second year is credited within the course. News days and news weeks are simulations which offer work-based learning. The London Met Journalism Diversity Network is instrumental in helping students find suitable placements.
The course includes information, training and advice on employability, job applications, CVs and finances. Simulation of the work environment also includes job applications and interviews.
Course specific regulations
N/A
Modules required for interim awards
Cert Ed: All modules specified at L4.
Dip Higher Ed: Credits specified at L4 and L5
BA without hons: Credits specified at L4, L5 and 60 credit core modules at L6
BA hons: all credits specified in Course Spec.
Arrangements for promoting reflective learning and personal development
All modules, apart from the final project, include an online journal, to be completed at the end of each class. Tutors give formative comments before the next class. This ensures a virtuous circle of feedback, allows students to let their tutors what parts of their learning they feel competent about and which areas may need more attention. It helps include students as partners, as it can contribute to the next week’s learning session. It also forms part of assessment, so contributes to students’ ownership of their progress.
Students’ personal blogs and the course website are repositories for successful work, creating portfolios. Students are also asked to design portfolio websites in their second year, where they can showcase published work as well as their CVs. This provides a helpful tool that is useful in gaining work placements as well as jobs after graduation.
Career, employability and opportunities for continuing professional development
Photographic images saturate our everyday life. But who produces them, how and why? It could be you.
Join our new course and learn the array of photographic and journalistic skills which could make you an insightful producer of still and moving images for the developing marketplaces of photojournalism. Be it news, fashion, sports, music, the arts or the rich variety of life in 21st-century Britain, your work will aim to tell stories to hold and enrich an audience’s understanding. Photojournalists work in advertising, communications, fashion, sport, music, food and the motor industry as well as news and features.
Professional Statutory and Regulatory Body (PSRB) accreditations & exemptions
We're currently in the process of applying for accreditation by the Broadcast Journalism Training Council. This should be complete by the time you finish your degree.
Career opportunities
The range of skills and knowledge you’ll gain by the time you graduate will allow you to pursue a career in the following fields:
- journalism
- TV
- radio
- online media
- PR
- media consultancy
- marketing
- social media
This degree will also open doors for postgraduate study in media, journalism or film studies.
Entry requirements
In addition to the University's standard entry requirements, you should have:
- at least one A level (or a minimum of 32 UCAS points from an equivalent Level 3 qualification, eg BTEC Subsidiary/National/BTEC Extended Diploma)
- English Language and Mathematics GCSE at grade C/4 or above (or equivalent, eg Functional Skills at Level 2), if you meet UCAS points criteria but obtained a grade D/3 in English and/or Maths at GCSE you may be offered a University test in these areas
To study a degree at London Met, you must be able to demonstrate proficiency in the English language. If you require a Tier 4 student visa you may need to provide the results of a Secure English Language Test (SELT) such as Academic IELTS. For more information about English qualifications please see our English language requirements.
If you need (or wish) to improve your English before starting your degree, the University offers a Pre-sessional Academic English course to help you build your confidence and reach the level of English you require.
Official use and codes
Approved to run from | 2019/20 | Specification version | 1 | Specification status | Validated |
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Original validation date | 25 Jul 2019 | Last validation date | 25 Jul 2019 | ||
Sources of funding | HE FUNDING COUNCIL FOR ENGLAND | ||||
JACS codes | |||||
Route code | JOURFY |
Stage 1 Level 03 September start Offered
Code | Module title | Info | Type | Credits | Location | Period | Day | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SJ3002 | Introduction: Journalism and Writing for Media | Core | 30 | |||||
SM3017 | Introduction: Media and Communications | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | WED | AM | |
SM3018 | Introduction : Film, TV and Broadcast Media | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | TUE | AM | |
NORTH | AUT+SPR | TUE | PM | |||||
SM3019 | Introduction: Digital Media | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | WED | PM |
Stage 1 Level 03 January start Offered
Code | Module title | Info | Type | Credits | Location | Period | Day | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SJ3002 | Introduction: Journalism and Writing for Media | Core | 30 | |||||
SM3017 | Introduction: Media and Communications | Core | 30 | |||||
SM3018 | Introduction : Film, TV and Broadcast Media | Core | 30 | |||||
SM3019 | Introduction: Digital Media | Core | 30 |
Stage 2 Level 04 September start Offered
Code | Module title | Info | Type | Credits | Location | Period | Day | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SJ4034 | Journalism: History and Ideas | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | TUE | PM | |
SJ4035 | Practical Journalism | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | WED | AM | |
SJ4037 | Writing Skills | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | THU | AM | |
SJ4048 | Reporting and Photography Skills | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | FRI | AM |
Stage 3 Level 05 September start Offered
Code | Module title | Info | Type | Credits | Location | Period | Day | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SJ5033 | Media Law and Ethics; Public Administration | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | THU | AM | |
SJ5034 | Newsroom Production | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | TUE | AM | |
NORTH | AUT+SPR | TUE | PM | |||||
SJ5035 | Advanced Reporting | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | WED | PM | |
SJ5W78 | Journalism Work Placement | Core | 15 | NORTH | SPR | WED | AM | |
SJ5079 | Styling and Journalism | Option | 15 | NORTH | AUT | FRI | AM | |
SM5072 | Documentary Photography | Option | 15 | NORTH | AUT | THU | PM |
Stage 4 Level 06 September start Offered
Code | Module title | Info | Type | Credits | Location | Period | Day | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SJ6034 | Creating Packages | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | WED | AM | |
SJ6035 | Broadcast Journalism | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | THU | AM | |
SJ6P35 | Journalism Project | Core | 30 | NORTH | AUT+SPR | WED | PM | |
SM6070 | Research in Visual Culture | Core | 15 | NORTH | AUT | MON | AM | |
SJ6074 | Arts Journalism | Option | 15 | NORTH | SPR | FRI | AM | |
SJ6080 | Campaigning Journalism | Option | 15 | NORTH | AUT | TUE | AM | |
SJ6086 | Fashion Writing and Reporting | Option | 15 | NORTH | AUT | FRI | PM |