Linguistics (Theoretical and Applied Linguistics) at University of Cambridge - UCAS

University of Cambridge

Degree level: Postgraduate

Linguistics (Theoretical and Applied Linguistics) (Research)

There are other course options available which may have a different vacancy status or entry requirements – view the full list of options

Course summary

The Linguistics Section is unique in the UK in that it integrates theoretical and applied linguistics in a single section. The Section provides great variety and flexibility in course contents as well as subject-specific training and diversity of intellectual interactions. PhD topics in the range of research specialisms represented in the section and beyond the section in the Faculty of MMLL are accepted. Thus, students may choose to focus on a theoretically oriented study of the language sciences (eg interest in the syntactic organisation or sound structure of different languages or in the analysis of meaning in semantics and pragmatics), but may also be interested in a more applied direction of Linguistics (language acquisition, language processing, data mining of language corpora), or may choose to look at Linguistics from a specific language point of view (Italian linguistics). In British universities, the PhD (Doctorate of Philosophy) is traditionally awarded solely on the basis of a thesis, a substantial piece of writing which reports original research into a closely defined area of enquiry. Within linguistics, some PhD students may do most of their work in libraries, spend part of their time collecting and analysing fieldwork data, or carry out experiments in the phonetics laboratory or psycholinguistics laboratory. The completion of the PhD thesis is generally expected to take three to four years, and most funding is based on this assumption. It is also possible to take a part-time route, and the expected timeframe would be five to seven years. In addition to providing special supervision, both the Section and the Faculty run a programme of professional training for the benefit of all research students. The programme includes seminars and workshops on library resources, giving conference papers, publishing, applications and interviews, teaching skills, specialist linguistic training, and film-making. The School of the Arts and Humanities runs a central programme covering a range of topics from PhD skills training, to language training and writing and editing skills. Students also have access to a Social Sciences research methods training programme. If you wish, you are likely to be given the opportunity of gaining experience in small group teaching for colleges. There may also be opportunities to gain some experience in language teaching in the Faculty.


Entry requirements

Applicants for this course should have achieved a UK Masters (Distinction). Ordinarily students should hold a distinction or equivalent in a Master's degree in Linguistics, in addition to a strong honours degree in Linguistics, with clear evidence of research potential. Degrees in disciplines other than Linguistics are accepted only if they contain a substantial linguistics component.


Fees and funding

Tuition fees

No fee information has been provided for this course

Additional fee information

No additional fees or cost information has been supplied for this course, please contact the provider directly.
Linguistics (Theoretical and Applied Linguistics) at University of Cambridge - UCAS