English (with Integrated Foundation Year) at Goldsmiths, University of London - UCAS

Course summary

If you have been out of education or do not have the required A-level qualifications for degree-level study, this four-year course can help you realise your academic potential. Why study BA English (with Integrated Foundation Year) at Goldsmiths

  • Goldsmiths is dedicated to widening participation and supporting students from non-traditional backgrounds to transition to university-level study. If you do not have the required qualifications for degree-level study, our BA in English with Integrated Foundation Year offers an alternative entry route
  • The Foundation Year is closely aligned with our undergraduate English programmes, teaching you a foundational knowledge of the subject, and helping you develop the academic skills necessary to progress to the first year of the BA
  • You will select the undergraduate degree you wish to study at the point of application but can change your choice as you progress through the foundation pathway if your interests change
  • In your Foundation Year, you will learn about significant literary movements from distinct periods, including the English Renaissance, literature of World War I, post-war drama and poetry, feminist fiction, and themes of race and class in the late 20th Century
  • You will develop your ability to identify characteristics of historical periods and significant developments in literature and be able to explain the relationship of literary works to the relevant historical periods studied
  • You will hone vital skills in critical reading, analysis and written communication
  • Following the Foundation Year, you will go on to study one of our undergraduate English courses, which include the reading of de-colonised, feminist and multi-cultural writing, as well as classic works of the literary canon
  • Our BA English degree gives you the opportunity to develop the critical and verbal skills needed for confident, effective reading of literary texts and criticism.
  • Bold, flexible, and richly diverse, the BA in English offers you a world of literature and language. You will be taken on a thrilling intellectual and imaginative journey from the Caribbean, New York, and Victorian London, to the American South via 1980s Northern Ireland, South Korea, Zimbabwe, Belarus, India, and Algeria. Along the way, we encourage you to ask big, complex, and often challenging questions about how to read literature in all its cultural, artistic, and political contexts ranging from the analysis of bear-baiting in Early Modern drama, the role of the British Empire in the 18th and 19th century novel to the impact of the #metoo and Black Lives Matter movements on 21st-century literature, film, and culture.
  • You will travel across histories, cultures, and languages and be encouraged to engage in a huge variety of debates around, for example, gender and sexual identity, the Transatlantic slave trade, climate change, feminism, Caribbean writing, indigenous literature and philosophical ideas about what it means to be human across time.
  • With a focus on both creative and analytical thinking as well as on rigorous communication and research skills, your degree in English is full of choice, offering you the opportunity to design your own curriculum. You could specialise in the study of language and communication, or in ‘world literature’, or in American literature and culture. You’ll also have a chance to take up one of our Work Placements, two of which are with Poetry London, and take a Creative Writing module specifically designed for BA English students.

Modules

Year 0 Foundation Year Developing your academic skills Alongside direct preparation in the study of English Literature, you will take two modules with our Centre for Academic Language and Literacies (CALL). These modules will help you develop the broader academic and research skills required for undergraduate study. You will also learn how key social and political movements of the period have influenced the world we live in today through a cross-disciplinary module: Culture and Society in Post-war Britain. This module will cover topics such as 'Windrush and Migration', 'Irish Colonisation', 'Second-wave Feminism', 'Protest and Punk' and 'South-Asian Britain'. Reading and Writing Your World Building Your Research World Culture and Society in Postwar Britain English Literature From the Renaissance to the Late 20th Century Year 1 In your first year, you will take the following compulsory modules. Explorations in Literature Approaches to Text Introduction to Poetry The Short Story You will also choose two of the following option modules: Introduction to US Literature and Culture: America and its Discontents Understanding Language in Use Introduction to Comparative Literature Year 2 In your second year, you will study the following compulsory modules. Literature and Power in the Victorian Period Goldsmiths’ Social Change Module You will also choose three modules (totalling 75 credits) from a range characterised by wide literary, historical, and contextual scope, of which at least one must encompass pre-1800 literature. You will also have the opportunity to complete the Goldsmiths Elective which allows you to take a relevant module from another department across the College. Modules may vary from year to year, but recent modules have included the following. (Re)writing America: from the nineteenth century to the present day 18th-Century Literature Aesthetics Black British Literature Classical Epic and Contemporary Literature Contemporary Indigenous Literatures: Place, Politics and Identity Contemporary London Poetry Creating the Text Discourse and Society Modern American Fiction Moderns Old English Renaissance Worlds Sensibility and Romanticism: Revolutions in Writing and Society Shakespeare Sociolinguistics: Language use, Variation, and Identity Staging Women’s Voices: Feminism and Writing (Enlightenment to now) Work Placement (English) Year 3 In your final year, you'll complete a 30-credit dissertation, and choose modules to the value of 90 credits. Modules may vary from year to year, and recent examples have included the below. American Gothic Approaches to Language and the Media Caribbean Women Writers Contemporary Indigenous Literatures: Place, Politics and Identity Creating the Text Decadence Language and Gender Modern American Fiction Modernism and Drama (1880-1930) Moderns Poetry since 1945 Renaissance Worlds Sensibility and Romanticism: Revolutions in Writing and Society Shakespeare’s Sisters: Contemporary Women’s Writing 1960s to the present Studies in Literature and Film The Art of the Novel The Emergence of Modern America: American Literature 1890–1940 Word Power: How Words are Born, Live, and Die Work Placement (English) Writing Lives Dustbowl to Dreamfactory: American Cinema & Writing in the 1930s Writing, Culture and Society Please note that due to staff research commitments not all of these modules may be available every year.

Assessment method

You’ll be assessed by a variety of methods that broaden your academic skillset and depend on your module choices. These include coursework assignments such as essays, critical commentaries, presentations and personal reflections, group work and projects.


How to apply

Application codes

Course code:
Q301
Institution code:
G56
Campus name:
Main Site
Campus code:
-

Points of entry

The following entry points are available for this course:

  • Foundation

Entry requirements

Qualification requirements

Candidates who have studied level 3 qualifications within the last two years will be expected to have achieved the equivalent of two passes (E or better) at A2 level, BTEC or equivalent and have achieved a level 2 qualification in GCSE English at Grade 5 or above. For candidates who have not studied any level 3 qualifications in the last two years, there are no formal qualifications required for admission, but you will need to demonstrate that you can benefit from the programme by undertaking an additional admissions process. This may involve an interview or request for the submission of written information used to assess suitability to study. The programme is delivered in English, and whilst language support is available at the college, we would normally expect candidates for whom English is an additional language to have a competency level equivalent to an IELTS score of 6.0


English language requirements

If English isn’t your first language, you will need an IELTS score (or equivalent English language qualification) of 6.0 to study this programme.


Student Outcomes

Operated by the Office for Students

There is no data available for this course. For further information visit the Discover Uni website.

Fees and funding

Tuition fees

No fee information has been provided for this course

Additional fee information

To find out more about fees and funding, please check our undergraduate fees guidance or contact the Fees Office https://www.gold.ac.uk/ug/fees-funding/
English (with Integrated Foundation Year) at Goldsmiths, University of London - UCAS