Course summary
Our well-established Sports History and Culture distance-learning MA will give you a firm grounding in the development of modern sport, from its traditional forms to present-day practices. This is a flexible and interactive programme that, thanks to its close links with the International Centre for Sports History and Culture (ICSHC), ensures your learning is at the cutting edge of research in this area. You will investigate the origins of modern sport, examine its cultural and global significance, discover how sport can help us understand society and different communities, as well as consider how historians of sport can use primary sources. The scope of the course is global, not only analysing how modern sport spread from its British origins but also how other nations embraced sport within their own cultural contexts. The course is set up in such a way as to allow you to personalise your study. Though there are multiple core elements, all students have a choice of module options, select where and when to undertake certain assignments within their chosen study pathway and can customise essays and, especially, dissertation topics to reflect their interests. In this fully online MA degree, module materials such as written lectures and related reading and tasks are all placed in our Virtual Learning Environment – Learning Zone – at regular intervals. Though course staff will offer broad recommendations on when certain module tasks should be completed, and while there are set assignment deadlines to work towards, students have a great degree of freedom over how they approach and organise their study. Though it is a distance-learning degree, course staff are easily accessible through video/phone calls and tutorials, email communication and, where practicable, in-person. You will also be invited to attend numerous seminars and conferences, such as those organised by the ICSHC and partnership groups such as the British Society of Sports History and the European Committee for Sports History. These partnerships, coupled with our academic team’s expertise and real-world experience, will provide you with a challenging and rewarding intellectual experience. Alongside gaining a deep understanding of the history of sport, you will develop skills in independent research by producing sustained pieces of writing and primary source analysis assignments. As a graduate, you will be ideally placed for a career in sports writing, sport development, management, the media, teaching or to undertake PhD research.
Assessment method
The Sports History and Culture MA allows you to study at your own pace. Study materials for your coursework are accessed via Learning Zone, DMU's virtual learning environment. For each module there are sets of written lecture materials plus online reading, in addition to the resources available via the DMU Library. Module materials are released to students electronically at regular intervals, and whilst each has its own set of assignments and related deadlines, students are free to work through lecture and reading materials at a pace and at times that suit them. There are module leaders for each module and they will provide input regarding your coursework. Module leaders will be available each week by video/phone call and email. Alongside set assignments, you are encouraged to suggest your own proposals in preparation for writing essays and, particularly, your dissertation. For most modules, there are two types of assessments: a critical analysis assignment and an essay. The length of the essay is 5,000 words; critical analysis assignments are 2,000 words in length. For the module, Investigating Sport: Research Methods, you will write a primary source analysis (3,000 words) and a dissertation plan (3,000 words). Deadlines will be set for each assessment.
Entry requirements
You should have the equivalent or above of a 2:2 UK bachelor’s honours degree in a relevant subject such as history, other humanities-based subjects, sports studies or sociology. We welcome applications from a wide sector and all non-standard applications will be carefully considered.
Fees and funding
Tuition fees
No fee information has been provided for this course
Tuition fee status depends on a number of criteria and varies according to where in the UK you will study. For further guidance on the criteria for home or overseas tuition fees, please refer to the UKCISA website .
Additional fee information
Provider information
De Montfort University
The Gateway
Leicester
LE1 9BH