Course summary
How can we truly belong in a global community? On this innovative programme students will cross disciplines to explore what it means to create purposeful change within local and global communities. Students will have the flexibility to shape the course around their own interests and career goals, while developing their research skills and expertise in community engagement. We offer multiple routes through the programme, with options for completing the MASc full-time or part-time, as well as a Postgraduate Certificate and a Postgraduate Diploma, designed to provide professional development for those working in related fields or have an interest in the area and to offer a more flexible route through postgraduate studies. Course overview This taught MASc in Community, Engagement, and Belonging is offered by the Liberal Arts Department in partnership with the Warwick Institute of Engagement (More information available on our website/course page). This unique, transdisciplinary course is designed to help students develop as future intellectual leaders, bringing together sites of knowledge creation (such as universities, think tanks, and industry) and global communities. The core modules on this course focus on the value of building and enhancing partnerships with community organisations. They will help students to critically reflect on where, why, and how to bridge the gap between knowledge creation and communities, creating spaces for dialogue and innovation. Crucially, the core modules offer the methodological and theoretical grounding for in-depth research. This course also offers students the freedom to choose optional modules from across the University, enabling students to tailor the degree to suit their own intellectual passions, interests, and ambitions. In the Liberal Arts Department, we have extensive experience and resources in place to help students find modules from across the University that align with the issues of community engagement that matter to them most. The MASc course culminates in an intensive project focused on the creation of original, evidence-based, interdisciplinary, and embedded knowledge; students can choose either a Research Dissertation or a Community-Based Learning Dissertation. This flexibility empowers students to develop a project most aligned to their intellectual interests and/or career goals. The Research Dissertation allows students to use interdisciplinary approaches to produce original knowledge in a topic or case study related to Community, Engagement, and/or Belonging from any period or area. The Community-Based Learning Dissertation focuses on critical engagement with embedded knowledge in the form of a community project, undertaken with a community partner. If students choose this option, they will also be supported by our dedicated Employability and Placement Manager and will have the opportunity to apply for an experienced mentor from the Warwick Institute of Engagement. In both the Research Dissertation and the Community-Based Learning Dissertation, students will have a dedicated dissertation supervisor assigned to them in the Liberal Arts department who will mentor them and help their project reach its full potential. Graduates from this course will emerge as leaders in interdisciplinary community engagement. They will take their next steps with a deeper understanding and broader appreciation of the value of making a difference in local and regional communities. This information is applicable for 2025 entry. Given the interval between the publication of courses and enrolment, some of the information may change. It is important to check our website before you apply.
Modules
Core modules The core modules on this course will allow students to come to their own understanding of how we belong in our communities, how to conduct meaningful research around topics related to community engagement, and critically reflect on the duties and responsibilities that we all share both as creators of knowledge and members of overlapping communities. The civic focus of this degree will empower students to think in a rigorous, evidence-based, interdisciplinary manner to transform our complex world. Term One
- The Good Life: Flourishing and Belonging within Communities (Core module for MASc, PGDip, and PGCert students)
- Creating Knowledge for Change: Foundations of Transdisciplinary Approaches (Core module for MASc and PGDip students)
- Theory and Practice for Community Engagement (Core module for MASc, PGCert, and PGDip students)
- The Good Life: Flourishing and Belonging within Communities (Core module for MASc, PGCert, and PGDip students)
- Research Dissertation
- Community-Based Learning Dissertation
- Health and well-being across the life course
- Taboo Topics: unpicking the silences behind global challenges
- Popular Movements and Sustainable Change
- Sustainable Urbanisation: from Risk to Resilience
- Care-ful Sustainability: Place, Culture and Value
- Critical Perspectives on business and global sustainable development
- Topics in Philosophy and the Arts
- Creativity and Organisations
- Socially Engaged Performance: Interventions and Provocations
- Critical Theory Today
- Education and Society
- Leading Educational Change and Improvement
- Civil Society and Activism
- Law and the Global Economy
- Approaching Ancient Visual and Material Culture
Assessment method
Students on this course will be assessed by a variety of methods, linked to practical applications. All assessments in modules offered by the School for Cross-faculty Studies link to practical applications. In these modules, students will complete formative and summative assessments. Throughout their studies, students will have the opportunity to show subject expertise, while continuing to develop process skills.
Entry requirements
Minimum requirements 2:1 undergraduate degree (or equivalent). Find out more about our requirements on our website. We welcome students from different backgrounds and experiences, and particularly those with a strong interest in community engagement and studying across disciplines. In certain circumstances, we will consider applicants with a lower second-class honours degree, or a normal degree (and their equivalents). This is particularly the case for applicants with relevant professional experience which can be explicitly and directly related to our curriculum. English language requirements You can find out more about our English language requirements on our website. This course requires the following: - Band B - Overall IELTS (Academic, UKVI or Online) score of 7.0 and minimum component scores of two at 6.0/6.5 and the rest at 7.0 or above. International qualifications We welcome applications from students with other internationally recognised qualifications.
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
Sponsorship information
We offer a variety of postgraduate funding options for study at the University of Warwick, from postgraduate loans, university scholarships, fee awards, to academic department bursaries. It's important that you apply for your postgraduate course first before you apply for a University of Warwick scholarship. Please visit the University's scholarship webpages.
Provider information
University of Warwick
Coventry
CV4 7AL