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Choose Glasgow
Welcome
Choose Glasgow
Welcome to this guide to postgraduate study at the University of Glasgow. Whether you are planning to do a taught or research programme, one thing is clear youre focused on your future. And so are we.
Contents
About us A research powerhouse Get more out of Glasgow Going out in Glasgow Our campus in Dumfries Your Scotland Student services World-class collections Planning for your career Funding your studies International students Our colleges Arts Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences Science & Engineering Social Sciences Indexes Important information 24 74 112 144 188 192 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 Glasgow is a university which is steeped in history and tradition, immensely proud of its past but focused on an exciting future. Our staff are among the best in the world dedicated, passionate individuals renowned for their leading-edge research whose skill lies not only in the expertise of their subject, but in being able to convey this knowledge to their students. Whether you live locally or are thinking of coming here from afar, Glasgow offers an open and warm welcome. The people here are genuine and approachable, so youll find plenty of like-minded people to share your ideas and interests with. At Glasgow we attract talented students from home and overseas and offer the opportunities and experience to make the most of their abilities. As a postgraduate student here you will study and socialise with people from a wide variety of backgrounds and from across the globe building friendships and networks that can last a lifetime. And because we want you not only to benefit from a stimulating educational experience but also to have the confidence to realise your ambitions for the future we make every effort to ensure you can enjoy a whole range of opportunities above and beyond your postgraduate study. We are continually developing our workrelated learning opportunities and encouraging entrepreneurship: you can undertake voluntary work, become involved in student organisations and societies, and take advantage of a whole range of services which help you build and develop your own particular set of skills. It is no surprise that employers actively seek out our graduates. Choose Glasgow and you will be equipped with the knowledge, skills and experience to form the foundation of a successful career.
Visit Glasgow
www.glasgow.ac.uk/visit We offer many opportunities for you to visit us and find out about the University. Open Day: There will be an Open Day for prospective postgraduate students on Friday 9 November 2012. Plan your own visit: If you cannot attend the Open Day you are welcome to visit the University at a time that suits you, to gather information and see the sights of our beautiful campus. Campus tour video: If you are unable to visit our campus for yourself, you can view our Campus Tour video. Watch one of our Student Ambassadors guide a group of prospective students and parents around our main campus. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/campustourvideo.
Follow Glasgow
www.glasgow.ac.uk/interact
Read a variety of topics from our researchers and students Download our latest videos and podcasts
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Overview
About us
The University of Glasgow is the fourth-oldest university in the English-speaking world. Since opening our doors in 1451, weve dedicated our time to inspiring great minds, from the father of economics, Adam Smith, to outstanding 19thcentury physicist Lord Kelvin. Over the years weve created a learning environment that fosters wisdom and respect. So we understand that when youre thinking about where to study youll want to take your time and choose wisely.
Rankings Glasgow is ranked highly in both UK and international league tables. Top International Student Barometer 2011 14th Guardian University Guide 2013 15th Times Good University Guide 2013 17th Independent Complete University Guide 2013 59th QS World University Rankings 2011
We know that youll be looking for a university that provides a broad choice of subjects, excellent teaching standards and superb facilities. Youll also want to study somewhere with an international reputation, high graduate employment rates and a top-quality student lifestyle in a special location. These things are important and, because we respect the needs of our postgraduate students, youll find they all form part of the Glasgow experience. So if you choose to study with us, youll be part of a university ranked in the top 1% of the world; learn from pioneering academics whose research is internationally recognised; join a student population made up of over 23,000 people from more than 120 countries; find first-class facilities for sport, one of the best libraries in Europe and a new student services building where you can get advice on everything from careers to council tax; benefit from living in the UKs third-largest city and Scotlands largest with a renowned music scene, excellent shopping, a wealth of arts and cultural venues, and friendly nightlife, all on your doorstep. These are some of the reasons why the International Student Barometer ranks us top in the UK for overall student satisfaction.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk
Entry requirements
Applicants for the majority of postgraduate degrees should have obtained at least a 2.1 Honours degree (or equivalent) unless otherwise stated. In some cases work experience is also taken into account.
How to apply
Before starting your application we strongly recommend that you visit the University of Glasgows website and review any relevant information for prospective postgraduate students on the appropriate graduate school web pages.
General English language requirements IELTS 6.5 (with no subtest less than 6.0). For the College of Arts: IELTS 7.0 (with no subtest less than 7.0). iBT TOEFL 92 (with no subtest less than 20). Cambridge ESOL Certificate in Advanced English (CAE) B minimum or Certificate of Proficiency in English (CPE) C minimum. Pearson Test of English (academic) 60 (with no subtest less than 59). See www.glasgow.ac.uk/international/english languagerequirements for more information.
Our main piece of advice is, if you come, be prepared to fall in love with it: the buildings, the unions, the atmosphere and, most of all, the people. Virgin Guide to British Universities 2011
When to apply
Many research programmes begin in October each year and applications should be submitted before 31 July if possible. Deadlines have been introduced for applications to our postgraduate taught programmes. International applications (non-EU): Friday, 19 July 2013 UK and EU applications: Friday, 23 August 2013 Classes start on 16 September 2013 (provisional date) for most programmes and youll be expected to attend induction sessions the week before. Master of Veterinary Public Health International applications (non-EU): Thursday, 27 June 2013 UK and EU applications: Friday, 9 August 2013 Classes start on 2 September 2013 (provisional date). Some science and engineering programmes also have a January intake. International applications (non-EU): Friday, 29 November 2013 UK and EU applications: Friday, 13 December 2013
Apply online
The online application is the quickest and easiest way of applying to the University. The system allows you to fill out the standard application form online and submit this to the University immediately. www.glasgow.ac.uk/postgraduate/ howtoapplyforataughtdegree/applyonline www.glasgow.ac.uk/research/opportunities/ howtoapplyforaresearchdegree You can attach supporting documents including references, certificates and a transcript of previous studies. There are instructions throughout the online form to help you complete your application. Before submitting, you may save and return to your application as many times as you wish within 42 days. Essential documents Final or current degree transcripts Degree certificates Two references on headed paper (academic or professional) A copy of your passport (photopage) non-EU applicants only Any additional specific requirements such as research proposals or samples of written work, which may vary by graduate school. For details of these specific requirements please refer to the relevant graduate school website. Applicants whose first language (or the language of instruction for their first degree) is not English are required to include evidence of their English language ability.
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Research
A research powerhouse
The University of Glasgow has more than 2,000 active researchers, and an impressive 75% of academic staff contribute to subjects where the majority of research is rated world-leading or internationally excellent. Our total earnings for research and related services are 180m and were in the UKs top ten earners for research.
Our RAE results reflect the strategies pursued to build and support a world-leading research base, a team of internationally excellent researchers and a highquality postgraduate research environment. Professor Steve Beaumont,
All these figures add up to one thing making discoveries that matter is our number one priority.
Making connections
One thing weve learned is that the key to moving forward is working together. Weve been making connections with leading academic establishments around the world, so that you can reap the benefits. Our partnership institutions include: Universidad del Salvador, Argentina Universiti of Brunei Darussalam, Brunei University of British Columbia, Canada Pontificia Universidad Catlica de Chile, Chile Fudan University, Xian Jiaotong University, Nankai University, Tianjin University, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics and Sun Yat-Sen University, China Universidad de los Andes, Colombia University of Hong Kong and Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Indian Institute of Technology Ropar, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Pune, and University of Delhi, India University of Tokyo and Hitotsubashi University, Japan Korea University, Korea Al-Fateh University of Medical Sciences, Libya University of Malaya and Universiti of Putra Malaysia, Malaysia Tecnolgico de Monterrey, Mexico Hazara University COMSATS and Quaid-iAzam University, Pakistan St Petersburg State University, Russia King Saud University, Saudi Arabia National University of Singapore and Nanyang Technological University, Singapore King Mongkuts Institute of Technology, Thailand Makerere University, Uganda Columbia University, USA. We are keen to promote the development of international research relationships between academics. Where appropriate these relationships can be fostered through the training and development provided to our postgraduate students.
Strength in numbers
Glasgow is a member of the prestigious Russell Group of the top 24 research universities in the UK. The group aims to ensure that this elite fellowship continues to thrive and make a real difference to society through pioneering research and teaching. Glasgow is also a founder member of Universitas 21, an international group of universities setting worldwide standards for higher education, and a member of IRUN (International Research Universities Network), a global group of broadbased research universities.
Wastewater treatment is a power-sapping process, consuming about 5% of the UKs energy output each year. Synthetic biologist Dr Susan Rosser is working on a solution that will not only reduce this energy burden, but also help to bring clean water and electricity to all. www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/susanrosser
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/research
Glasgows greats The University of Glasgow has a history of producing high achievers. Here are just some of them. Seven Nobel Prize winners, including: Professor Robert Edwards, awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2010 for his work on fertilisation Sir William Ramsay (18521916), awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery of inert gases, which established a new group in the periodic table John Boyd Orr (18801971), awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his work on world nutrition with the United Nations.
Economic and political figures, including: Adam Smith (172390), world-renowned economist, philosopher and author, whose work still resonates globally today Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman (18361908), former Prime Minister of the UK Elizabeth Dorothea Lyness (c18741944), suffragette Donald Dewar (19372000), Scotlands architect of devolution. Scientists and medics, including: Lord Kelvin (18241907), founder of the absolute scale of temperature, the Kelvin scale, and regarded as the pre-eminent scientist of the 19th century Marion Gilchrist (18641952), the first female medical graduate in Scotland John Logie Baird (18881946), one of the pioneers of television Jocelyn Bell Burnell, astrophysicist involved in the discovery of radio pulsars. Scan the QR code or see www.glasgow.ac.uk/ adamsmith for information about economist Adam Smith and other Glasgow greats.
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www.seeglasgow.com
Shopping
Theres a reason why Glasgow is known as Scotlands city of style. To many people, its the UKs best centre for shopping outside of London. The biggest designer names are found in the Merchant City think Armani, Bose and Agent Provocateur. If this is all a bit beyond your budget, Glasgows style mile of pedestrian zones in Sauchiehall Street, Buchanan Street and Argyle Street is where youll find favourites like Topshop, Urban Outfitters and H&M.
Our campus in the city The main University campus is located in the West End of Glasgow, within easy reach of the city centre by public transport or on foot. Youll find yourself spoilt for choice with things to do and see around the University campus and the West End. Wander through the tranquil cloisters and quadrangles of the Universitys neo-gothic Gilbert Scott Building and then take in a panorama of the city from the ultimate viewing point at the Gilmorehill flagpole. Enjoy a music gig at the Queen Margaret Student Union, where big-name bands and breakthrough acts take to the stage all year round. Catch the latest film in one of the cosy leather seats at the Grosvenor cinema, then grab a drink and a bite to eat in one of the many bars and eateries on Ashton Lane. Hunt for hidden treasures in the boutiques and vintage shops dotted along the cobbled side streets lying off Byres Road. Take a stroll along the river through Kelvingrove Park or visit the Botanic Gardens internationally renowned for its impressive glasshouses and plant collections.
Sport
Whether playing the game or enthusiastically supporting, Glasgow wears its passion for sport on its sleeve. The city is due to host the Commonwealth Games in 2014, which means that huge investments in sporting facilities are being made. As a resident here, you can access sports amenities all over the city, including gyms, running tracks, swimming pools and wall climbing venues. Theres even an indoor snowboard and ski slope made from real snow at Braehead Snozone on the outskirts of the city.
Glasgow is one of those rare places that inspires lifelong loyalty in the people who are lucky enough to spend time there. At about the same time as youve learned to decipher the local accent, youll feel like youre in on a big secret. Because Glasgow is one of Britains urban gems. James Bainbridge, Lonely Planets Study Glasgow
Follow the parade at the West End Festival or celebrate all things Indian at the Glasgow Mela just two of the many festivals and events held every summer on the Universitys doorstep.
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City of Glasgow
Glasgow is the highestranking UK city for personal safety, according to the worldwide Mercer Quality of Living Survey 2011.
A city of music
As the UKs first UNESCO City of Music, Glasgow has a renowned gig scene that draws the most exciting talent. On average, Glasgow hosts around 130 music events every week, from indie and rock gigs to classical concerts and folk festivals, so youll always find something worth listening to. Popular large venues include the famed Barrowlands with its unique atmosphere, and the SECC, which attracts the biggest names and has twice hosted the MOBO Awards. A great place to spot rising stars is King Tuts, which according to NME is Quite possibly the finest small venue in the world. The city is a powerful magnet for musicians. Home-grown and adopted names who have found Glasgow to be a launch pad for their careers include: Biffy Clyro, Belle and Sebastian, Franz Ferdinand, composer Craig Armstrong and singer/songwriter Emeli Sand, who studied at the University. Its not all about the bands, however Scottish Opera, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra are all resident here too.
If pubs and clubs arent for you, theres an impressive mix of theatre, comedy and cinema options. Glasgow has two comedy clubs and theres plenty to see at one of the many theatres, whether youd like to discover performance art in the Arches theatre, or take in a musical at the Kings. New plays from home and abroad are on show at the Tron, the Tramway, and the Citizens Theatre and there are seven cinemas in the city, with the Cineworld multiplex containing 18 screens alone. Independent and art house films find a home at the GFT.
Eating out
Glasgows fantastic range of restaurants, cafs and eateries reflects the citys diverse population, so there are plenty of reasons to forget the microwave and head out for a great meal. Whether youre after an amazing Asian kitchen thats open until 2.30am, a scoop of the creamiest Italian ice cream, or a plate of haggis, neeps and tatties Scotlands national dish Glasgow wont disappoint. Those who like it hot will be pleased to hear that our curry houses are second to none (the city has been voted UK Kingfisher Curry Capital four times in the last eight years). Meanwhile, another Glasgow institution the tea room is seeing a resurgence in popularity. Originally, afternoon tea was based around quaint china teacups, scones and Rennie Mackintosh decor, but some venues are now giving the tradition a twist by serving up delicious cakes and cocktails in retro tea sets.
Nights to remember
Glasgow boasts more than 700 bars, pubs and nightclubs, meaning no two nights are the same. Only in this city could it be possible to begin an evening with a drink in a converted church (Cottiers), move on to mingling around Britains longest continuous bar (the Horseshoe), and end up dancing in a basement club (the Subclub), or aboard a river boat (the Renfrew Ferry).
A few minutes on the subway takes you into the city centre, which has everything you could possibly want from Scotlands greatest city Glasgow has it all. The citys musical reputation is internationally renowned, and its status as a UNESCO City of Music reflects this.
Stewart Gray, Music student
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/dumfries
IT facilities
You can choose from a range of IT suites and study areas, meaning you can get down to work wherever you feel comfortable. The campus offers wi-fi connectivity, interactive whiteboard technology, video conferencing and videolink lecture facilities. All registered students have access to dedicated network storage and a university email account. Our virtual learning environment means you can access course content at a time to suit you, and enables you to interact with your classmates and lecturers online, wherever you are.
The small groups, friendly staff, modern and comfortable library, and beautiful scenery outside the classroom windows made my learning process much more pleasant and productive. I felt part of a community and part of a big international family. Aigerim Erikqyzy, Kazakhstan, MLitt Tourism, Heritage & Development
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Scotland
Your Scotland
While you could easily spend all your free time enjoying the attractions and entertainment that the campus and city have to offer, dont forget theres a whole country out there just waiting to be explored.
The excellent and affordable transport links from Glasgow make visiting Scotlands treasures easy. From the many scenic lochs and mountains to the bustling cities, Scotland has history and culture in abundance. Craig Tyler Barratt, Chemistry graduate
Glasgow is your gateway to some of the most awe-inspiring scenery and major cultural attractions in the world. Whatever your mode of transport, you could be discovering Scotland in no time. From Glasgow, youre 25 minutes from the Clyde coast and its beaches, castles and ice cream parlours; 40 minutes from Loch Lomond, the heatherclad peaks of the Trossachs, and routes to the Highlands and the Cairngorms; within easy access of renowned events such as the Edinburgh International and Fringe Festivals and T in the Park; three hours drive from skiing and snowboarding slopes in the right conditions; within a few hours drive of some of the best hill-walking, climbing, mountain biking, sailing and golf courses in the UK.
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For information on travelling to Glasgow, see www.glasgow.ac.uk/about/maps For information on visiting Scotland, see www.visitscotland.com
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Student services
Student services
From the moment you set foot on campus, we have a range of services dedicated to helping and supporting you.
Services The University has created a one-stop shop for a wide range of student services right in the centre of our main campus. Whether you want to grab a bite to eat, see a doctor, obtain a new Student ID card or discuss employment opportunities, our staff in the Fraser Building will be able to help. Chaplaincies www.glasgow.ac.uk/chaplaincy Childcare www.glasgow.ac.uk/nursery Counselling & Psychological Services www.glasgow.ac.uk/counselling Student Disability Service www.glasgow.ac.uk/studentdisability Student Network www.glasgow.ac.uk/studentnetwork Students Representative Council www.glasgow.ac.uk/src Student Unions At Glasgow you have the choice of two University unions. Glasgow University Union www.guu.co.uk Queen Margaret Union www.qmu.org.uk Gilchrist Postgraduate Club Open to all staff and postgraduates of the University, the Gilchrist Postgraduate Club offers a great environment for staff and students to meet, socialise and share ideas. There is a cafe/bar on-site, which provides a selection of food and drink and a bookable seminar room which can be hired out for postgraduate events, such as seminars, workshops or presentations.
Accommodation
From halls of residence to student apartments, we can offer you a wide range of safe, comfortable and affordable accommodation to help you settle in. We have around 3,500 residential spaces, about a third of which are specifically for postgraduate students. Benefits include: fully trained pastoral staff living on site free halls-to-campus minibus service during semesters group insurance cover for possessions internet and telephone access in all rooms bed linen and access to laundry facilities. Where can I live? We have five student residences for postgraduate students which are situated between a twominute and 25-minute walk from our main campus. For more information about each of our residences see www.glasgow.ac.uk/ postgraduate/accommodation. How much does it cost? Fees range from around 3,860 (98.98 per week) for a single room in a self-catered residence, 4,685 (120.12 per week) for a single en suite room in a self-catered residence, to around 6,000 (154.42 per week) for a one-bedroom flat. For up-to-date prices for all our residences, see: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ postgraduate/accommodation/fees. For more information about the cost of living and other useful financial advice for students see page 20.
Families and couples We offer a small number of fully furnished selfcontained flats suitable for couples or families. If you have a disability There is a variety of accommodation available for students with disabilities. It is always best to discuss any special requirements you may have with us as soon as possible. You can contact us direct (tel: +44 (0)141 330 4743, email: accommodation@glasgow.ac.uk) or, if you prefer, you can get in touch with our team of Student Disability Advisers (tel: +44 (0)141 330 5497, email: studentdisability@glasgow.ac.uk). How to apply As soon as youve accepted your offer of study, you can apply for accommodation online at www.glasgow.ac.uk/accommodation/ postgraduatelateryear/onlineapplication. Accommodation guarantee Most new students, and all new international students, are guaranteed accommodation (subject to our admissions policy). Private accommodation If youd prefer to find private accommodation in the city, we can offer advice and also help you in your search. Register online to search our private accommodation database at www.glasgowpad.org. For further information about types of University accommodation, fees, application deadlines, our admissions policy and more, see www.glasgow. ac.uk/accommodation.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk
You can also get involved in our recreational sport programme of specialist courses, dropin sport sessions and our all new Glasgow Championship recreational sport leagues. We offer more than 50 exercise classes a week too, from circuits to Zumba. Sport for the great outdoors If you like some fresh air in your fitness regime then youre in the right place. Clubs such as the Hares and Hounds offer road, cross-country and hill training runs that cater for all standards, or you could tackle some of Scotlands fantastic mountain trails with the cycling club. You could even find yourself skydiving, surfing, snowboarding or potholing in Scotland and beyond. Support for talented athletes If youre training to be the best, we can help you balance academic life with your competition schedule. We offer a number of sports bursaries, as well as services ranging from specialist mentor support to sports medicine. Were constantly working to provide opportunities for athletes through our involvement with Glasgow Student Sports City. For more information see www.glasgow.ac.uk/sport/talentedathlete and www.glasgowstudentsportcity.co.uk or email euan.smith@glasgow.ac.uk.
What sport can I do? Aikido American football Athletics Badminton Basketball Boat (and rowing) Boxing Canoe Cheerleading Cricket Curling Cycling Fencing Football Gaelic football Golf Hares and Hounds Hockey Judo Karate Kendo Lacrosse Mountaineering Muay Thai boxing Netball Potholing Riding Rifle and sporting gun Rugby Sailing Shinty Shorinji Kempo Ski and snowboard Skydive Squash Sub aqua Surf Swimming and waterpolo Tennis Trampoline Triathlon Ultimate Frisbee Volleyball
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Our collections
World-class collections
Theres a wealth of facilities on offer at Glasgow. From our outstanding library one of the biggest academic libraries in Europe to our rich and diverse collections at The Hunterian, our world-class facilities are right on your doorstep and can be accessed by you as part of your postgraduate study.
Services University Library www.glasgow.ac.uk/library The Hunterian www.glasgow.ac.uk/hunterian Archive Services www.glasgow.ac.uk/archives
University Library
Open 18 hours a day and with online access 24/7, our library is here for you around the clock. Our long opening hours mean you can settle in, forget about the time and lose yourself in a world of words. To say our library is well stocked would be an understatement. With 2.5 million books and journals and over 30,000 electronic journals, youll find all the background material you need to complement your postgraduate studies. Our library has enough bright and modern study spaces to accommodate more than 2,500 students. Whether you need a desk to read in peace or a room to discuss your ideas, youll find plenty in supply throughout our librarys 12 wi-fi enabled floors. And did we mention the impressive city views from the top? A wide range of services are available including: Welcome Desk to help you get started Library OnDemand and How Do I? online videos an extensive range of online library resources available 24/7
group study rooms multiple copies of important books for essays and projects over 800 student PCs caf on Level 3 providing a relaxed learning and study space specialist libraries for students in chemistry, dentistry and veterinary medicine in addition to the main library librarians who can help you find the right sources of information and show you how to use our electronic resources. Special Collections In our librarys Special Collections youll find an extensive range of rare books, manuscripts and early photographs, covering most branches of the arts, sciences and medicine. Over the past 500 years we have accumulated more than 200,000 manuscript items and around 200,000 printed works, including over 1,000 printed before 1500. Among these youll find material about Scotlands history and culture, along with items reflecting many aspects of European scholarship over the past 700 years. These exceptional collections are internationally renowned and attract the interest of scholars from around the globe. Scottish Theatre Archive The Scottish Theatre Archive forms part of Special Collections. Its role is to help preserve Scotlands theatrical heritage by providing a safe and accessible home for archival material relating to Scottish theatre. It also acts as a major centre for enquiries, providing information from its own holdings or by directing researchers to other repositories. It attracts scholars, students, theatrical practitioners, historians and members of the public from all parts of the world. A recent addition is the archive of the National Theatre of Scotland, which complements the archives of the Citizens Theatre, Scottish Ballet, including material from its beginnings as the Western Theatre Ballet, the BBC Radio Scotland script collection, and the Jimmy Logan collection of music-hall material. Other collections include material relating to many Scottish theatres and companies, such as the Scottish National Players, Wilson Barrett Company, and the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk
The Hunterian
Founded in 1807 and encyclopaedic in its scope, The Hunterian is one of the leading University museums in the UK and one of Scotlands greatest cultural assets. The Hunterian works closely with our academic colleagues in colleges and schools across campus to offer a range of opportunities to postgraduate students. These include internships, placements and individual scholarships which enhance learning and develop a wide range of transferable skills. The opportunity exists to work with some of the leading scholars in the country in a range of fields relevant to our collections art, archaeology, palaeontology, geology, zoology, entomology, ethnography and numismatics. We can work with you to develop your research proposal, deliver your research project and ensure public impact for that research. The Hunterian collections are world-class. The art gallery is home to one of the most distinguished public art collections in Scotland, particularly famous for Whistler, Mackintosh and its internationally recognised holdings of Scottish art. You will also find some truly amazing and unique objects on display in the museum. If your research doesnt bring you into direct contact with our collections, we also offer a lively exhibition and events programme we look forward to welcoming you.
Archive Services
If youre looking for an insight into the history of the University and the city, Archive Services offers a unique heritage resource open to students, staff and members of the public. Among the collections are University records dating from our foundation in 1451 to the present day, and one of the biggest collections of business records in Europe. Whether youre looking for information about academic life in days gone by or the many industries that make up Glasgows history, our archives tell our story. With over 1,000 collections spanning more than seven centuries, Archive Services is your gateway to learning more about the academic and corporate heritage of Glasgow and the West of Scotland.
The University owns the personal estates of American artist J M Whistler and of architect and designer Charles Rennie Mackintosh.
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Careers
Career destinations
Postgraduate taught Our postgraduate students go on to a variety of careers in the private and public sectors as well as seeking further education. A survey of our 2011 graduates found that 86.4% were in employment or further study. PhD graduates In 2010, 90.7% of our PhD graduates were in employment or further study. We asked our graduates whether they could have secured their current employment without a PhD. Most found their PhD qualification was vital in securing employment (58.4%) or advantageous while applying for employment (22%). Employers who recruit our postgraduate students include: College of Arts Dyson Ltd London Metropolitan Archives Historic Scotland Victoria & Albert Museum Swedish Theological Institute College of Medicine, Veterinary & Life Sciences National Health Service Thomson Reuters Scottish Environment Protection Agency Cancer Research UK Royal Zoological Society of Scotland Scottish Prison Service
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/careers
College of Science & Engineering British Antarctic Survey HM Treasury IBM Procter & Gamble Amor Group Yahoo Scottish Power Atkins College of Social Sciences Oxfam Cicor Technologies Group Morgan Stanley Scottish Parliament Coca Cola United Nations Royal Bank of Scotland
by Vitae, a national organisation focused on championing the personal, professional and career development of doctoral researchers and research staff in higher education institutions and research institutes. It is recommended that researchers should take part in two weeks of transferable skills training a year, which covers skills that are non-subject-specific such as training in knowledge transfer or public engagement. Find out more on our researcher development website: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ students/researcherdevelopment.
After working in the electronics industry for a few years, including establishing my own technology consultancy, I moved on to my next career goal, which was to join an international consultancy. I applied to join Accenture and, after a successful first-round interview, sought out the Careers Services help on how to prepare for the assessment centre. They shared some insights and gave me a mock interview that focused on the skills that Accenture was seeking. This helped me prepare and I was able to work out exactly where my evidence was going to come from for areas such as decisiveness, creativity, communication and business awareness.
Engineering MSc graduate Doug Wylie has worked for Accenture as an analyst for the last couple of years
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Finance
I was awarded the University of Glasgow Postgraduate Excellence Scholarship for 3,000. I would definitely recommend other students to apply for the scholarship. The process of application is very easy, and the potential reward worth striving towards. From a financial point of view, the scholarship substantially reduces the amount to pay for the University fees. Besides, the scholarship award itself contributed to the increased self-confidence and motivation for further studies. Valeriya Kosheleva, Kazakhstan,
MSc International Corporate Finance & Banking
Its important that you arrange funding for your tuition fees and living costs before your studies begin. At Glasgow, we aim to provide our students with as much financial support and assistance as possible. That is why we continuously strive to expand our range of scholarships and bursaries for both home/EU and international students.
Below are the 201213 standard annual tuition fees for postgraduate study. Please note that fees for 201314 will differ and that these costs are illustrative only. Tuition fees 201213 Home (UK/EU) Full-time taught programmes in the Colleges of Arts, Social Sciences and Science & Engineering, and non-clinical programmes in nursing, medical, veterinary and life sciences 4,750 (Band 4) Full-time home (UK/EU) postgraduates research 3,828 International (Non UK/EU) Taught programmes in the Colleges of Arts and Social Sciences 12,250 (Band 2) Taught programmes in the College of Science & Engineering and non-clinical programmes in nursing, medical, veterinary and life sciences 15,750 (Band 5) MBA 20,500 (Band 7) MVMS programme 22,500 (Band 8) Medicine/Dentistry/Veterinary Medicine (clinical) 28,500 (Band 9)
Cost of living
If youre a single student wed recommend allowing around 11,500 per year to study in the UK, and for married couples a minimum of 15,000. For each child add 3,000 per year. The following is an approximate breakdown of costs per month for a single student in self-catering accommodation. Average cost per month Accommodation 450 Food 180 Clothes 60 Travel in Glasgow 40 Laundry/stationery etc 30 Telephone/Internet 40 Entertainment 100 900
Research programmes in the Colleges of Arts and Social Sciences 12,250 Research programmes in science, engineering, nursing and midwifery 15,750 Research programmes in medicine/dentistry/ veterinary medicine (non-clinical) 15,750 Research programmes in medicine/dentistry/ veterinary medicine (clinical) 28,500
Tuition fees
All students pay an annual tuition fee to the University which covers registration, supervision of research or study, and examination and recreational facilities. Some laboratory-based and clinical departments may require payment of an additional bench fee: your destination college or graduate school will be able to advise. See www.glasgow.ac.uk/scholarships/fees for further information.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/studentfinance
Opportunities to work
Part-time work during study When youre studying, you may wish to work part-time to help with your tuition fees and living costs. Part-time employment is a great way to gain some real-life work experience and make yourself more employable. The Careers Service advertises details of part-time work opportunities on their website at www.glasgow.ac.uk/careers. Graduate Teaching Assistantships Some schools offer Graduate Teaching Assistantships to postgraduate research students, which involve conducting tutorials and undertaking other teaching-related duties for first- and second-year undergraduate students. Many students find that this is an excellent way of gaining valuable work experience, as well as a means of supplementing their income. You should enquire at the relevant graduate school office for information on opportunities available.
Scholarships
We offer a wide range of scholarships to postgraduate students. You can find a full list of scholarships at www.glasgow.ac.uk/ scholarships. You should also check your graduate school website for subject-specific scholarships. All applications for scholarships to cover fees and/or maintenance should be made in conjunction with an online application for admission to the University. Some key scholarships available: Kelvin Smith PhD Scholarships for postgraduate research students to take part in new interdisciplinary research collaborations. Each scholarship runs for four years and provides a stipend at the research councils recommended rates as well as research and travel costs. Glasgow Alumni Scholarships 10% fee discount for alumni University Trust International Leadership Scholarship 52 scholarships ranging from 5,000 to 10,000 each University of Glasgow Country Scholarships 50 scholarships at 3,000 each Under the Scottish Governments Students Allowances Scheme (PSAS), tuition fee support for a number of our taught programmes is available. See www.saas.gov.uk for more information.
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Choose Glasgow
International Glasgow
International students
Each year we welcome around 3,000 international students from over 120 different countries, and over 2,000 students from across Europe, bringing our non-UK student population to nearly 24%. We also attract many leading academics from around the world. So no matter how far you travel to be here, youll find a rich cultural, social and educational community waiting for you when you arrive.
Contact International Office Tel: +44 (0)141 330 6062 Email: student.recruitment@glasgow.ac.uk
Glasgows reputation for being a welcoming and friendly place is as well known as the Universitys reputation for being a centre of academic excellence. This means that you can feel confident that living and studying here will be a memorable and satisfying experience. In fact, the University is ranked as first in the UK for international student satisfaction, according to the International Student Barometer 2011. Glasgow offers a range of services and specialist staff dedicated to your needs. Whatever stage youre at in your studies, youll always find someone on hand to provide you with help and advice. Members of our International Office team travel throughout the world to attend exhibitions, set up information sessions for prospective students and interview candidates. Theyll be more than happy to talk to you and answer any queries you might have. If youd like to find out where theyll be visiting and when, please see www.glasgow. ac.uk/international.
Supporting you
Our friendly team of International Student Advisers provides a dedicated advisory service for international students on non-academic matters such as immigration, employment, finance and any other concerns you may have before you arrive and throughout your studies. Email: internationalstudentsupport@admin. glasgow.ac.uk or see www.glasgow.ac.uk/ international/support. Before you leave home To help you prepare for your arrival at Glasgow, we have an International Student Handbook full of useful facts and information. See www.glasgow.ac.uk/international/support/ internationalstudenthandbook to download a copy. When you arrive Our International Student Advisers run an orientation programme to introduce you to student life. It includes information on welfare, immigration, accommodation, health, employment, finance and other non-academic matters. The programme includes a range of social events too, giving you the chance to meet new people and get to know Glasgow and Scotland. A year-round social programme We run a full programme of events and activities throughout the year for students and their families, so youll have plenty of opportunities to make new friends and share your own experiences and ideas.
Accommodation
We offer an excellent selection of student accommodation and guarantee a place for most full-time new entrant international students studying for a degree (subject to our admissions policy). See page 14 for further information or www.glasgow.ac.uk/accommodation.
Fees
All students pay an annual tuition fee to the University which covers registration, supervision of research or study, and examination and recreational facilities. Some laboratory-based and clinical departments may require payment of an additional bench fee: your destination graduate school will be able to advise.
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Choose Glasgow
www.glasgow.ac.uk/international
New programme discount The University will apply a discount to the international fees for new one-year full-time postgraduate taught Masters programmes in 201314. See www.glasgow.ac.uk/scholarships/ international/postgraduatetaught for further information. International scholarships The University is committed to helping students achieve their academic dreams and is continually investing money in scholarships and funding for our international students. You can find out more information on the scholarships we offer by visiting www.glasgow.ac.uk/scholarships.
Cost of living
If youre a single student wed recommend allowing around 11,500 per year to study in the UK, and for married couples a minimum of 15,000. For each child add 3,000 per year. See page 20 for a monthly breakdown of costs.
The International Offices services are great. Activities included first-time welcome from the airport and straight down to the International Office, organised seminars and comedy/freshers nights. This is good as it gives new students that sense of belonging. James Essien, MSc in Mechanical
Engineering graduate
Opportunities to work
As an international student (non-European Economic Area) you can work for up to 20 hours a week during semesters and full-time during vacations, provided it does not state otherwise in your UK visa.
Careers
Glasgow was the first university in Scotland to appoint a Careers Adviser to develop specialist information and advice for our international students. For more information on careers see www.glasgow.ac.uk/careers or see page 18.
Applying
For details on entry requirements and applying to Glasgow, see page 3.
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College of Arts
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College of Arts
College of Arts
Join a graduate school with a vast range of academic experience, strong links to cultural organisations, and unique on-campus resources, including The Hunterian, our Universitys musuem and art gallery collections, which include the Mackintosh House. www.glasgow.ac.uk/arts
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Graduate School
A creative community
The graduate school of the College of Arts offers an extremely diverse and dynamic range of postgraduate opportunities. We are researchers, policymakers, authors, linguists, archivists, curators, critics, philosophers, playwrights, theologians, historians, technicians, composers, translators, classicists, practitioners, musicians, archaeologists and art lovers.
Schools of Critical Studies (English Literature; English Language; Scottish Literature; Theology & Religious Studies) School of Culture & Creative Arts (Art History; Cultural Policy; Music; Theatre, Film & Television) School of Humanities (Archaeology; Celtic & Gaelic; Classics; History; Philosophy; Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute) School of Modern Languages & Cultures (Comparative Literature; French; German; Hispanic Studies; Italian; Slavonic Studies)
School
Research environment
Across every school and subject area our college is home to scholars conducting world-leading and agenda-setting research. According to the Research Assessment Exercise 2008, history of art at the University is ranked top in the UK, and seven other subjects are ranked in the top ten in the UK: cultural policy; Celtic & Gaelic; English language; English literature; Scottish literature; digital humanities; and theatre, film & television studies. In 201112 we were awarded the second-largest amount of funding from the Arts & Humanities Research Council. All of our students benefit from being based in one of the most exciting cultural hubs in the UK. We have strong links with the citys creative and cultural community, and many of our students undertake collaborative research, internships or work placements with industry professionals.
year-round portfolio of workshops consisting of a choice of more than 70 in total. All of our postgraduate research students take part in at least two transferable skills workshops a year and you are required to keep a researcher skills development log. Skills development extends beyond workshops and you will be able to take advantage of collaborative research training initiatives, conference organising and attendance, internships and careers events. In addition, our award-winning online journal eSharp offers the chance to participate in the creation of an international publication for postgraduate research in the arts, humanities, social sciences and education. Run entirely by postgraduate students, it encourages excellence in research through peer-reviewed publication and interdisciplinary exchange and enhances employability by providing hands-on experience of journal management and editing. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/esharp.
Contact
Claire Smith, Postgraduate Administrator Tel: +44 (0)141 330 6319 Email: gradschool.arts@glasgow.ac.uk
Learning environment
You will be taught by researchers of international distinction, participate in seminars led by academics, professionals and visiting speakers, and learn with students eager to share ideas. To ensure that you are equipped to become leaders in your chosen field we provide the highest-quality training and skills development opportunities. Our graduate school offers a
Career development
We provide you with training for your professional development and access to the necessary facilities. You will be able to benefit from knowledge exchange activities and tailored support from the Universitys Careers Service on all aspects of career planning, applications and interviewing.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/arts/graduateschool
Research programmes
Our research degrees are: MRes: Master of Research, a flexible programme offering a combination of taught and research components, dissertation length 17,00030,000 words, one year full-time, two years part-time MMus: Master of Music, a research degree providing a solid foundation for further study at PhD level, thesis length 15,00020,000 words, one year full-time, two years part-time MPhil: Master of Philosophy by Research, thesis length 30,00040,000 words, one year full-time, two years part-time MLitt: Master of Letters by Research, thesis length 40,00070,000 words, two years fulltime, three years part-time PhD: Doctor of Philosophy, thesis length 70,000100,000 words, three years full-time, five years part-time. Every year we have funded studentships for specific projects. For more information: www.glasgow.ac.uk/arts/funding.
Taught programmes
We offer around 60 taught postgraduate programmes (MLitt, MSc, MMus, MFA, MPhil). These are listed by subject on the following pages.
How do I apply?
The online application is the quickest and easiest way of applying to Glasgow. The system allows you to fill out the standard application form online and submit this to the University immediately: www.glasgow.ac.uk/postgraduate/ howtoapplyforataughtdegree. You can attach supporting documents including references, certificates and a transcript of previous studies. There are instructions throughout to help you complete your application. Before submitting, you may save and return to your application as many times as you wish within 42 days. You may also access your application again to upload additional documents such as your language test or final transcript. Some programmes require additional information or documents. Please ensure you check prior to making your application.
How do I apply?
The online application is the quickest and easiest way of applying to Glasgow. The system allows you to fill out the standard application form online and submit this to the University immediately: www.glasgow.ac.uk/research/opportunities. You can attach supporting documents including research proposal, references, certificates and a transcript of previous studies. There are instructions throughout the online form to help you complete your application. Before submitting, you may save and return to your application as many times as you wish within 42 days. You may also access your application again to upload additional documents such as your language test or final transcript.
When do I apply?
International applications (non-EU): Friday, 19 July 2013 UK & EU applications: Friday, 23 August 2013
We want to equip our researchers to be able to take their place on the world stage. We continuously develop new initiatives, such as the recent Hunterian Associates Programme which encourages students to match their research interests and skills with the Universitys museum and art gallery to bring some facet of the collections to public attention, through lectures, lunch-time talks, websites, blogs, videos, etc. I am constantly impressed by our students skills and ideas and my job is to find innovative ways to allow those to be shared more widely. Professor Dee Heddon, Dean of
Graduate Studies
Entry requirements
Normally a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject unless otherwise stated.
When do I apply?
Applications should be submitted before 31 July if possible, for study in October.
Glasgows greats Glasgow has a history of producing high achievers, including poet Edwin Morgan. Scan the QR code or see www.glasgow.ac.uk/ edwinmorgan for more information.
Entry requirements
Normally a 2.1 Honours degree (GPA 3.0 or above), or Masters in a relevant discipline. In special circumstances, other academic qualifications, or professional qualifications or experience, may be recognised as equivalent.
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School of Humanities
Archaeology
Archaeology at the University of Glasgow offers an exciting exploration of the material remains of past societies, linking fieldwork and laboratory analysis with theoretical reflection and sophisticated interpretation.
Contact Michelle Nicholl, Secretary Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5690 Email: michelle.nicholl@glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
We are the leading archaeology department in Scotland and ranked within the UKs top ten, according to the Guardian University Guide 2013. Our key strengths are: Scottish archaeology, particularly in the Mesolithic and Neolithic periods and the Celtic, Pictish and Viking areas Mediterranean archaeology, from Spain to Turkey, from Bronze Age mining to postcolonial studies historical archaeology, from the classical period to the 20th century the use of aerial photographic and satellite imagery for the understanding of landscape history through aerial archaeology battlefield and conflict archaeology. Material culture lies at the heart of our research, from the individual artefact to entire landscapes and from early prehistory to recent times. While fieldwork and scientific analyses of objects are fundamental to our research, we look beyond our excavations to understand not only how material culture is deposited and recovered but also how meanings are attributed and reshaped. We also engage in the presentation of archaeological remains in modern settings, and are involved in their management as cultural heritage and resources of the tourism industry. Our research groups We have a number of networks linking members of academic staff with specialists outwith the University, allowing them a framework for collaborative research. These include: Heritage Philosophy & Practice Creating Material Worlds: Theorising Identity in Archaeology Strathearn Environs & Royal Forteviot.
Learning environment
Our postgraduates enjoy a supportive, collaborative and friendly community. You will benefit from the involvement of guest speakers from the UK and abroad, who give lectures and run seminars. We involve staff from Glasgow Life, National Museums Scotland and other institutions within Scotland with our teaching, and you may be able to undertake a work placement to gain valuable work experience in a museum, archaeological unit or other cultural institution. Intellectually, its a very generous group, with lots of opportunities for you as either a taught or research postgraduate to get involved in existing projects or start new ones, whether in the field or the classroom, or through conferences and publications. A good example of this is our publication, Love Archaeology Magazine, where there are ample chances for authors, researchers, editors, photographers and creatives of all kinds.
Career prospects
Through our links with national bodies, recent students have gained employment in Historic Scotland, the Archaeology Data Service, National Museums Scotland, and the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland, as well as in the fields of academia and business.
One of Glasgows leading experts in battlefield and conflict archaeology, Dr Tony Pollard (pictured) has carried out archaeological and military history projects in the UK, mainland Europe, Africa and South America. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/battlefieldarchaeology.
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Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in archaeology, please contact Elaine Wilson, tel: +44 (0)141 330 5512 or email: elaine. wilson@glasgow.ac.uk.
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Mediterranean Archaeology
This Masters will engage you with the dynamic archaeology of Mediterranean, west Asian and European cultures of all periods, as well as key theoretical, interpretative and methodological issues. You will integrate evidence and approaches from a variety of disciplines and explore the close involvement between archaeology and contemporary society. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will take one core course and three optional courses. For the MLitt you will produce a dissertation on a specialist topic agreed with your supervisor. The core course establishes a framework for the study of Mediterranean archaeology by outlining various aspects of human settlement, society and economy in the Mediterranean, from prehistory to the early modern period. You will participate in a series of seminar discussions led by the teaching staff, which include readings, tutorials, practical sessions and your own presentations. The optional courses allow you to explore particular areas, and include such topics as: Mediterranean landscape archaeology; Aspects of production and exchange in the Aegean and Central Mediterranean Bronze Age; Rituals, feasts and festivals: power, community and consumption in the East Mediterranean and the Near East. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree, or an equivalent qualification in archaeology or another relevant subject (for example geography, geology, history or environmental science); or suitable practical experience.
I came to Glasgow to do a taught Masters degree. I stayed for the PhD because there are so many opportunities for development. I have taken a number of workshops offered by the graduate school and become active with eSharp, the online postgraduate journal. Erin McGuire, former PhD student
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Art History
The University of Glasgow is the UKs leading centre for the study of history of art. Our expertise covers all major European art historical periods from Antiquity, the Middle Ages and Renaissance, to Romanticism, Realism, Modernism, and contemporary art, and we have strengths in technical art history and textile conservation.
Contact Dr Ailsa Boyd, Postgraduate Administrator Tel: +44 (0)141 330 2892 Email: arthistory@glasgow.ac.uk Also see: www.christieseducation.com/london_grad programmes.html
Research environment
If you study with us, you will learn from worldleading researchers, enabling you to develop expert knowledge in specialist areas. An impressive 85% of our research is rated as worldleading or internationally excellent, according to the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise, which ranks history of art at Glasgow the highest of all universities in the UK. Research strengths: the decorative art and design of the 19th20th century textile conservation and technical art history Chinese art medieval and Renaissance studies. Research centre: Centre for Textile Conservation & Technical Art History. Our Institute of Art History draws together research in the subject from across the University, including postgraduate students, honorary and academic staff within the School of Culture & Creative Arts, and the Universitys own Hunterian Art Gallery. In addition, we have an associated institution based in London: Christies Education (CEDU). This is a subsidiary of Christies International, the auction house founded by James Christie in the 18th century. The University has run joint programmes with Christies since 1987 and the University accredits postgraduate programmes including: The Arts of China; The Arts of Europe; Art, Style & Design; and Modern and Contemporary Art. A new joint PhD programme enables supervision in both Glasgow and London.
a lecture series delivered by leading art and design historians, conservators and other visiting academics. Members can use the institute as a forum for debate, or to discuss forthcoming projects in an informal workshop setting. All of our students benefit from being based in one of the most inspirational and accessible cities for art and design in the UK. You can gain handson experience and vital practical skills as part of your degree programme within The Hunterian, our museum and art gallery based on campus. We also have a number of collaborative links with Glasgow Life, which is the body responsible for the citys public galleries and museums. This partnership provides unique research and placement opportunities within the citys outstanding collections.
Career prospects
Career opportunities include positions in curation, digitisation and research within museums, galleries and other cultural and heritage institutions. Students who opt for the MLitt or PgDip at our associate institution, Christies Education (CEDU), are trained for an MLitt in Art-World Practice, which includes an Auction House cataloguing examination and professional report writing skills. All our postgraduate degree programmes also provide an excellent platform for an academic career. Our staff are involved in many research projects with partner organisations, which create networking links and opportunities for work placements. As a postgraduate taught or postgraduate research student, you may be able to benefit from our major Arts and Humanities Research Council funded projects on Whistler and Charles Rennie Mackintosh, our EU collaborative research projects on online performing arts collections and contemporary museology, and our partnerships with the National Inventory of Continental and European Paintings and Public Catalogue Foundation.
The Universitys Centre for Textile Conservation & Technical Art History is an internationally significant research and education hub. Resources include workrooms for students, a wet lab, dye lab, chemistry lab and analytical lab. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/textile conservationtechnicalarthistory.
Learning environment
Glasgow offers a highly stimulating learning environment. Study is complemented by a lively programme of research seminars, which postgraduates contribute to on a regular basis. In addition, our Institute of Art History offers
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Contact us
For a list of current research opportunities in history of art, see: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ instituteofarthistory/pgresearchopportunities. If you have an enquiry about a research degree in history of art, please contact Jeanette Berrie, tel: +44 (0)141 330 3811 or email: jeanette. berrie@glasgow.ac.uk.
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School of Culture & Creative Arts Art History: taught programmes Art History: Art: Politics: Transgression: 20th Century Avant-Gardes
This Masters is concerned with outlining and critically evaluating the concept of the avant-garde both theoretically and in terms of its applicability to representative areas of 20th-century art. Dealing with art from the early 20th century to the present, you will investigate concepts such as historical avant-garde, neoavant-garde, and post-avant-garde, paying close attention to the theorists who have elaborated these ideas. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time Closely focused on the visual and historical specificities of the subject, the core teaching will have you examining the politically oppositional and transgressive impulses of the avant-garde. Core courses: Research methods in practice; Theories of the avant-garde; Readings in Duchamp: anti-art, blasphemy, sexuality; Art, embodiment, transgression; Dada in Switzerland and Germany. Optional courses: You may choose from: a Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute (HATII) course: 2D Digitisation (theory and practice); a course from the MLitt Modernities: Modernism, modernity and post-modernity run by English literature; a course from elsewhere in the College of Arts, subject to the approval of the convener, or from courses run by history of art: Art in the making: modern and avant-garde techniques; Independent study; Work placement. Entry requirements: Normally, at least a 2.1 Honours degree (or equivalent qualification) in history of art or a related academic subject. Core courses: Research methods in practice; Framing dress and textile histories; 19th-century dress and textiles; Making dress and textile histories; 18th-century dress. Optional courses: You may choose from the following options: a Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute (HATII) course: 2D Digitisation (theory and practice); a course from elsewhere in the College of Arts, subject to the approval of the programme convener, or from these courses run by history of art: Understanding textiles; Work placement; Hunterian placement; Independent study. Entry requirements: Normally, at least a 2.1 Honours degree (or equivalent qualification) in history of art or a related academic subject.
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College of Arts
Optional courses: You may choose from: a Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute (HATII) course: 2D Digitisation (theory and practice); a course from elsewhere in the College of Arts, subject to the approval of the programme convener, or from these courses run by history of art: Work placement; Independent study; Hunterian placement. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in history of art or a related subject is required.
Textile Conservation
Textile conservation is a multidisciplinary subject which combines academic knowledge with cultural awareness, aesthetic sensitivity and technical skill. This MPhil is both an academic programme and professional training; it will give you a framework of theoretical knowledge and a range of practical experience which will enable you to contribute to the understanding and preservation of culturally significant textile artefacts. Programme overview MPhil: 24 months full-time; 48 months part-time You will take core courses over two semesters in each year, with a work placement in the summer between the first and second years. You will write up your dissertation over the second summer. The core courses will develop an understanding of the practical skills used in textile conservation; related practical skills including dyeing and photography; the science underpinning textile deterioration and conservation treatments; preventive conservation techniques; the technological, cultural, historic and aesthetic contexts of textile artefacts; the place of conservation in the wider cultural sector. Core courses: Year 1: Research methods in practice; Principles and practice: core skills and ethics; Material cultures; Principles and practice: developing skills; Preventive conservation; Understanding textiles: technology; Placement. Year 2: Principles and practice: advanced skills; Conservation in practice; Deconstructing the artefact; Principles and practice: conservation projects; Professional practice; Project management; Dissertation. Entry requirements: An Honours degree, at 2.1 or above, or international equivalent. GCSE or Higher/international equivalent chemistry qualification. A pass in the International Academic Projects distance-learning course Chemistry for Conservators is an acceptable alternative. See www.academicprojects.co.uk. Good manual skills, demonstrated by examples, preferably of stitching, should be brought to interview.
Arts of Europe
This Masters in Arts of Europe aims to stimulate your critical awareness, engendering a creative and informed understanding of art-world practice. You will be introduced to museum and auction house systems for classifying objects and study different models of museum and gallery display. This programme is based at Christies Education, London. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; PgDip: 9 months fulltime Core courses: Core lecture series c3000 BCAD 1527, which underpins all components of the programme; UK and international study trips, included in the basic fee; Object-based study; Cataloguing to auction house and museum standards. MLitt components: Gallery & curatorial studies; Culture & ideology seminars; Methodology seminars; Thesis: your opportunity to create an exhibition on a small group of objects, independently researched and catalogued. PgDip components: Art market, gallery & museum studies; Research project: you will either make a proposal for an exhibition, choosing the objects to be displayed, or write about a single work of art, placing it in context through your own original research. Entry requirements: An undergraduate university degree, university transcripts, two letters of recommendation and a personal statement.
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School of Humanities
Classics
The study of classics has been central to the University of Glasgow since its foundation in 1451. Today, our research spans the Greek and Roman worlds, with particular focus on drama, fictional and historical narrative, rhetoric and politics, and the receptions of classical antiquity.
Contact Christelle Le Riguer, Research Administrator Tel: +44 (0)141 330 3538 Email: christelle.leriguer@glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
The University of Glasgow has a thriving research culture in the subject of classics, with resources that are among the best in the UK. In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise, 75% of our research was rated at international standard or above. Staff research interests cover the full range of the discipline, from Homer to Late Antiquity, from Republican politics to modern reception. We organise our research around four main themes in the study of ancient Greece and Rome: drama (comedy, tragedy, mime) historical and fictional narrative politics (with notable expertise in rhetoric) the receptions of classical antiquity. Cross-cutting issues include the interpretative challenges posed by fragmentary texts, in which our scholars have particularly wide experience comedy, historiography and oratory in particular. The subject area is home to a 1m ERC-funded research project on the fragments of Roman Republican oratory. Staff are also working with colleagues in history on an AHRC-funded project on Scottish Latin poetry, the Delitiae Poetarum Scotorum.
hands-on research events over the course of the academic year. To find out more about some of our recent events, see: www.glasgow.ac.uk/events/ classicsevents. There are a number of societies that serve to enrich the culture of classics at the University, linking staff with students, teachers and the wider classical community in the West of Scotland and beyond. These include: the Classical Association of Scotland the Scottish Hellenic Society the Alexandrian Society. In addition, the St Andrews, Glasgow and Edinburgh postgraduate association (STAGE) organises the annual Scottish Classics Postgraduate Conference. Glasgow postgraduates regularly participate in the programme of UK-wide postgraduate meetings in ancient history, literature and reception (AMPAH, AMPAL, AMPRAW).
Learning environment
Postgraduates play a full role in the research culture of our subject, with a regular programme of seminars, workshops and reading groups. During regular research seminars you can benefit from contributions by leading classicists from across the UK and beyond. In addition to the more formal sessions, you can also enjoy opportunities to learn and network by participating in our lively programme of informal,
Career prospects
The diversity of our approach means that if you choose to study with us, you will develop a broad range of intellectual and transferable skills that employers are looking for. A distinctive feature of our postgraduate programmes is the opportunity to begin or continue the study of Latin or Greek, which enables students who have not had a traditional classical education to acquire the linguistic skills you may need if you intend to progress to an academic career in higher research in classics. Over half of our Masters students proceed to a PhD. Glasgow PhD graduates currently hold university posts in the UK, rest of Europe, US and Africa. Other recent career destinations have included teaching, librarianship and the heritage sector.
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Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in classics, please contact Christelle Le Riguer, tel: +44 (0)141 330 3538 or email: christelle. leriguer@glasgow.ac.uk.
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College of Arts
Research environment
With 85% of our work classified either as worldleading or internationally excellent according to the most recent Research Assessment Exercise (RAE 2008), our Centre for Cultural Policy Research (CCPR) is one of the top-ranking research centres of its kind in the UK. We are internationally connected in the academic world and have excellent relationships with policymakers, cultural agencies and the media and communications industries. Our aim is to be a highly respected source of critical analysis, and we value our role as an independent voice. The CCPR operates with a broad understanding of cultural policy as an institutional space shaped by the conjunction of culture, politics and economics. Our current staff research agenda focuses on: creative economy policies media management and media economics media regulation and cultural policy in the UK and EU media and representations of business media, journalism and sport journalism.
In addition, you will have the opportunity to learn from presentations given by experienced industry figures. In recent years we have had speakers from the BBC, Channel 4 TV, the Financial Times, UK Communications regulator Ofcom, ACT Europe, MTV Europe, the Sunday Herald, the Press Complaints Commission and the British Film Institute. Honorary Professors on the degree programme include David Booth of MTV, Chris Llewellyn, President of FIPP (the worldwide magazine media association) and Ross Biggam, Director of ACT (the Association for Commercial Television Broadcasters in Europe). The CCPR runs programmes of events during term-time which typically include research seminars, visiting speakers, PhD workshops and guest lectures on our Masters programmes. Where relevant to your work, you will be able to attend such events and have the chance to exchange knowledge and ideas with others researching in cognate areas. To find out more about our recent events, see: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ccpr/newsandevents.
Learning environment
If you choose to study with us, you will be taught by a team of specialist experts from the CCPR, the Adam Smith Business School and the School of Law. The CCPR is led by Professor Philip Schlesinger, who was the founding Director of Stirling Media Research Institute, and our staff include Professor Raymond Boyle, who has an international reputation for research in the area of media and sport, and Professor Gillian Doyle, who was responsible for setting up the UKs first Masters programme in the area of media management and economics.
Career prospects
You will be prepared for a range of management careers across the media sector, including economics, business strategy, media policy, intellectual property rights and marketing. At the same time, our programmes offer an academically engaging and rewarding experience, allowing you to embark on policy advisory and consultancy roles or to pursue a career in academia.
Professor Raymond Boyle and Dr Lisa Kelly have recently completed a two-year study into the popularity of programmes such as The Apprentice and Dragons Den in order to discover what they have to say about being in business and how audiences engage with them. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/raymondboyle.
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An international viewpoint
When Kyle Andrews made the decision to come to Glasgow from Los Angeles to take a Masters in Media Management, he saw it as a stepping stone towards attaining a more senior role and improving his earning power in the media industry. I consider myself very lucky because the Media Management programme also included classes in the Adam Smith Business School, though we were encouraged to think outside normal business terms to specifically consider the media perspective, says Kyle. I found myself becoming more attracted to the business side of things and decided to stay on to do a second Masters in International Business & Entrepreneurship. For Kyle, the opportunity to gain an insight into so many different cultures stands out as a real high point and defining characteristic of his time at Glasgow. Quite apart from being hugely positive on a personal level, this diversity has added a new dimension to his studies. Glasgow is one of the top 100 universities in the world, so it brings together some of the best and brightest students that the world has to offer, says Kyle. I wrote all of my projects alongside my three closest friends here from Spain, Romania and Hong Kong constantly bouncing information off one another. I hadnt appreciated that media policy differs so vastly between the US and UK, let alone across other countries. For others considering crossing the Atlantic to study here, cost neednt be the barrier that some perceive it to be. What many American students dont realise is that we can take out FASFA student loans, just as we would back home, to cover the cost of housing, tuition and living here, explains Kyle. On top of that you can apply for scholarships. I find it extremely impressive that Ive done two Masters degrees here for less than the cost of attending a US school offering a similar quality of education.
Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in cultural policy, please contact Professor Raymond Boyle, tel: +44 (0)141 330 3812 or email: raymond.boyle@glasgow.ac.uk.
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Research environment
In the most recent independent review of research quality, the Research Assessment Exercise 2008, English language and literature at Glasgow were rated in the UKs top ten. In literary and cultural studies, we have a long-established research culture encompassing work in many areas. You can study all aspects of English and American literature from the early modern period onwards, and explore the links between literature and science, philosophy, technology and visual culture. Our interests may be broadly divided into four chronological fields: medieval studies (from the beginning to 1500); Renaissance studies (15001700); 18th-century, Romantic and Victorian studies (17001900); and modernism, contemporary literature and critical theory (1900). We also address crossperiod research themes, including colonial and postcolonial studies, American studies, Irish studies, medical humanities, translation, textual scholarship and editing, and creative writing. Our English language research engages with English and its cognate languages from medieval times to the present day. Glasgow has an international reputation for the historical study of English and medieval English textural cultures, linking the best of philological, literary-critical and linguistic traditions. Our academics are leading experts in the area of modern English language, using quantitative analysis of large online corpora as well as qualitative research in a variety of genres to identify and interpret language use across a wide range of contemporary spoken and written data. Research centres Centre for Robert Burns Studies Centre for Scottish & Celtic Studies Centre for Medical Humanities.
Learning environment
Our research and teaching is enriched by a varied programme of distinguished visiting speakers both scholars and creative writers. In addition, we host many major international conferences and run seminar series in language and literature. Our students can also benefit from taking part in a wide range of reading groups. A research and travel grant programme available through the College of Arts may enable you to take your work beyond Glasgow, presenting papers at national and international conferences.
Career prospects
Career opportunities for English language and literature postgraduates include teaching, publishing, journalism and lexicography. You may be able to take advantage of opportunities to establish or advance your career as a writer or editor, or to work in museums, schools and other related vocational areas. Other graduates have used their specialist knowledge to gain positions in the media or in business. Our programmes also provide an excellent platform for you to move on to an academic career.
In order to share their expertise and enhance their skills, postgraduates can engage with the Universitys museum and art gallery, The Hunterian, by applying to join the Hunterian Associates Programme. In 2012, a joint submission made by creative writing PhD student Celaen Chapman (pictured), and three others, has led to the launch of the Writers at The Hunterian project.
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Sounds of change
Dr Jane Stuart-Smith and a research team in the Universitys School of Critical Studies are investigating the evolution of the Glasgow accent over the course of the century using state-of-the-art acoustic imaging technology. Anyone having to deal with the spelling of English will have encountered traces of sound changes that have taken place in the past, explains Dr Stuart-Smith. We no longer pronounce k in knife, or gh in night, for example. Sound changes in progress may also be noticeable as variable pronunciations favoured by younger speakers: for example, the use of f for th in words like think. This fine-grained phonetic variability is a prerequisite for sound change. But despite being able to trace the outcome of changes over time in written historical records, and being able to observe variation in speech in detail at particular points in time, a fundamental aspect of sound change remains mysterious: how do patterns of fine phonetic variation over time contribute to sound change? The city of Glasgow has traditionally been an important centre for the study of sociolinguistics. Post-war urban regeneration led to social upheaval, which may also have created disturbances in linguistic patterning. The citys recent social history together with a distinctive dialect vocabulary make Glaswegian particularly suitable for investigating the interrelationships between fine phonetic variation and different aspects of language use. This latest research, Sounds of the City, is supported with a 235,000 grant from the Leverhulme Trust, and will study the evolution of speech in Glasgow over the course of the past century. The research team will reap the benefits of pioneering work carried out in the 1970s by Professor Ronald Macaulay, who recorded and catalogued numerous samples of Glaswegian speech, leaving behind a unique audio resource. Now, Dr Stuart-Smiths team can study phonetic change across the generations by applying new scientific research techniques to the old recordings. We will extend the methods of the real-time study of speech by building an electronic corpus of Glasgow dialect using a high-speed searchable database, and developing and applying the latest phonetic and statistical methods to analyse it, says Dr Stuart-Smith. Once the team has evidence of how the Glaswegian accent has changed, they will move on to looking at the part that linguistic and social factors may have played in this. Language change is known to result from the interplay of linguistic and social factors, Dr Stuart-Smith says. The actual linguistic context is important for whether a sound will change and how that might happen. At the same time, there are also many social pressures on language change, ranging from the kinds of social groups that people belong to, and whether speakers have the opportunity to mix with speakers of other dialects, to the kinds of social personae that people express and develop when they communicate with people every day. www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/janestuart-smith
Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in English language or literature, please contact Meg MacDonald, tel: +44 (0)141 330 7493 or email: critstudies-pgenquiries@glasgow.ac.uk.
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School of Critical Studies English Language & Literature: taught programmes Creative Writing (MLitt)
This Masters is for those talented and aspiring writers looking to develop the skills and creative habits required to have a career in writing and related fields such as editorial, bookselling and publishing. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time; MLitt (distance learning): 12 months full-time This programme is directed at those who are already engaged in writing. The aims of the programme are: to allow you to experiment with a range of voices, techniques and genres alongside a consideration of major creative and editorial engagements from the modern through the contemporary period; to develop a critical understanding of diverse creative, theoretic and critical texts; to provide a space in which an extended portfolio of creative and editorial work may be undertaken; to familiarise you with the writing context (audience, publishing in all its forms, the legal framework, modes of transmission); and, most importantly, to subject you to the discipline of regular writing by providing a stimulating workshop and tutorial environment in which writing skills can be acquired, discussed and honed. The distance learning programme is the same as the campus version, but with tutorials and workshops conducted online (or by telephone and email in the case of tutorials). You will have the opportunity to participate in sessions with campus-based students. Your portfolio, consisting of poetry, fiction, life-writing or script-writing, is at the heart of the summative assessment. Entry requirements: You will normally have a 2.1 Honours degree (or equivalent), though this is not a prerequisite. The primary basis for admission is the appraisal of a portfolio of your creative work. You submit a portfolio of original work (poetry, fiction, life-writing or other prose, drama, and in some instances a portfolio of work in or of translation). Letters of reference and other documentation are also considered. Your referees should include an academic and a creative referee where possible. Where this is not possible, you can provide referees from other areas who can vouch that you are who you say you are and that your work and achievements are your own. It is particularly helpful if these referees are familiar with your writing and can provide references on that basis. A maximum of 30 pages (one side only, double spaced throughout) per submission will be considered, and the portfolio can contain prose, verse, script, or a combination of these.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/englishlanguage or /englishliterature
You will have the opportunity to choose two subject areas for advanced-level study. Assessment includes a portfolio of essays. Core courses: Research skills and methods. English language: Phonetics, Sociolinguistics, Discourse analysis. TESOL: Classroom processes: Introduction to teaching and learning or; Language learning and applications to the classroom. Entry requirements: We normally expect applicants to have obtained a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above). Please include a 500-word statement on why you would like to take the MSc in English Language and English Linguistics (Applied).
Victorian Literature
This Masters degree in Victorian Literature covers a diverse range of disciplines and theoretical perspectives. You will explore the concept of the Victorian by critically examining a wide range of the periods writing as it engages with the literary, material and historical cultures of the time, as well as in the centuries afterwards. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time The programme involves taught sessions over two ten-week periods. In each teaching period you will study a core course and an optional topic course. During the final phase of the programme you will undertake supervised study of a specialised topic before submitting a dissertation. Teaching periods also include guest speakers from the UK, Europe and the United States. In recent years, Victorianist speakers have included Julian Wolfreys, Matthew Campbell, Kate Flint, Rebecca Stott, John Bowen, Jane Moody and Ann Heilmann. The programme is primarily concerned with the Victorian period as an age of industrialisation, reform, and recalibration in the wake of disrupted certainty. We examine a selection of writings published during and after the Victorian period (18301910) and consider how these might characterise the age its writing, its values, trends, cultures and reputation. Themes covered include: Perceptions of technology and time; Gender and sexuality; The crisis in religious faith; Notions of popular and high culture; The dynamics of urban space. Entry requirements: We normally expect applicants to have obtained a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in English literature or a relevant subject. We also require a sample of written work and a short statement in which you should outline your interest in the programme.
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Research environment
We are part of a dynamic subject area that conducts research into theatre, film, television and cultural policy at the University of Glasgow. According to the most recent independent assessment of research quality, the Research Assessment Exercise 2008, 85% of our research is classified as world-leading or internationally excellent. This ranks us as one of the top five subject groups in our field in the UK. In our research, we explore themes of: nation and post-nation textual analysis institutions, infrastructure and policy representation and identity. Our work is linked by a common commitment to research which pursues critical analyses and interpretations, and sites film and television production aesthetically, historically and socially. We pursue a wide range of funded projects, which currently includes an examination of children and amateur media in Scotland, and a project that is tracking the work of celebrated film director Ken Loach.
in the conference as well as to engage with guest speakers from academia and the media industries throughout the year. You can also participate in the work of the Centre for Screen Studies at Glasgow. This Centre provides you with a space to share your own work with academics and students from across the University who have an interest in film and television. We welcome visitors from all over Britain and beyond and our recent events have included expert speakers from Griffith University, Queensland, the University of Stirling and the University of Warwick.
Career prospects
Our graduates go on to a range of careers in the media and creative industries, such as roles in film education, festival management, festival programming, and arts administration, as well as research in television, academia, or the public sector. Others pursue opportunities in journalism, publishing, media research, global film distribution and exhibition.
Learning environment
If you study with us, you will become part of a lively and engaged learning culture. Glasgow is Scotlands media capital a home to BBC Scotland, Glasgow Film Festival and the base of a collection of independent film and television companies which means you can benefit from our links to industry. We also work closely with filmmaker Mark Cousins. Our University is home to the international journal Screen and hosts the annual Screen conference every summer, attracting leading names in film and television studies from across the world. You may have the opportunity to participate
For research project Tracking Loach, Glasgow academic Dr David Archibald (pictured below left) was granted privileged access to director Ken Loach and writer Paul Laverty (pictured below right) as they made the award-winning feature film The Angels Share in Scotland.
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Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in film & television studies, please contact Karen Lury, tel: +44 (0)141 330 5369 or email: karen. lury@glasgow.ac.uk.
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The current research culture is very much about partnership with organisations like Edinburgh International Festivals and Glasgow Film Theatre, and in our growing partnerships with the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland. For many students, both those looking to develop an academic career and those interested in other career options, those kinds of connections, and the internship opportunities they bring, are very important. Professor Adrienne Scullion, Dean of
Research
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/tfts Film & TV Studies: taught programmes Film & Television Studies
The MLitt in Film & Television Studies, taught in Scotlands media capital, offers the opportunity for the critical study of film and television. This well-established programme aims to provide an advanced understanding of the approaches and methodologies in film and television studies and to equip you with core research skills for advanced study in this field. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time The MLitt has three components: A core course, taught from September to March, which introduces the breadth of film and television studies as a discipline while developing core research skills. It is taught by all staff working within the MLitt in Film & Television Studies, giving you access to our wide range of expertise and approaches. Three optional courses, selected from a range of bespoke courses drawing on the research specialisms of the subject team. Recent options have included Critical theories of digital media; Documentary in film and television; History of critical writing on film and television; Multistrand narratives in the fiction film; Film and movement; Ethnicity and identity; Media economics; Media and cultural policy; Issues in audience management. You may choose one course from: Scotland in film and television; New German cinema; Asian cinemas; Australian film and television; American independent cinema, periods (Interwar cinemas; Hollywood in the 1990s), genres (Childrens television; Contemporary television drama), approaches (Studies in authorship; Feminist film theory) and themes (Television, memory and the archive; Screen audiences; Screen violence; Sound in film and television; Studies in authorship). A 15,000-word dissertation (MaySeptember) on an aspect of film and/or television of your choosing, under the supervision of a dedicated member of staff. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
Film Journalism
The Masters in Film Journalism covers the wide variety of writing about film which takes place in different contexts, ranging from the extended essay to film reviewing and interviewing. There is a strong emphasis on engaging with Scotlands vibrant film culture through involvement in activities such as the Glasgow Film Festival (February) and the Edinburgh International Film Festival (June). Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time Over the first two semesters you will take a core course and choose an optional course for each semester. The practical training in film writing takes place in workshops. These sessions will involve presentations by the lecturers or visiting practitioners, as well as group discussion and review around your practical writing tasks. Visiting lecturers include: Hannah McGill (former Artistic Director, Edinburgh International Film Festival); Alistair Harkness (Film Critic, The Scotsman); Janice Forsyth (BBC Radio Scotland); Phil Miller (Arts Reporter, The Herald). The third semester is devoted to individual research, which is supervised on an individual basis. The final piece of assessment will allow you to develop either a portfolio of journalistic writings (up to 12,000 words) or to pursue a topic about film writing in a 15,000-word dissertation. The core course provides an introduction to the theoretical study of film journalism, from both historical and contemporary perspectives. The course also offers a key practical component and an introduction to the wide variety of tasks carried out by film journalists. Optional courses: The following options have been offered recently: Screen bodies; Screen animation; History of critical writing on film and television; Music and the moving image; Screen adaptations; Aspects of European cinema. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
Through the Film Journalism programme I really learned what was expected of me as a working journalist in the arts. It gave me the confidence to work with my writing and to make it into a profession. Carmody Wilson, freelance critic
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School of Humanities
History
History has been taught at the University of Glasgow since 1897. Today we bring together world-leading expertise in a diverse range of topics including social and gender history, history of medicine, Scottish history, and American history and culture.
Contact Christelle Le Riguer, Research Administrator Tel: +44 (0)141 330 3538 Email: christelle.leriguer@glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
Research in the subject of history at Glasgow is among the best in the UK. In the last independent assessment of research (RAE 2008), 60% of our research was rated as worldleading or internationally excellent. We have advanced knowledge of specialisms including: social and gender history history of medicine medieval Europe war studies early modern culture, beliefs and ideas American studies. In addition, Scottish history at Glasgow is one of the most wide-ranging, coherent and wellresourced teams in the country. Our expertise spans the social, political and cultural history of the nation from the medieval period through to the 20th century. Collaborating with staff and students across related subjects including English literature, Scottish literature and Celtic studies enables us to undertake important interdisciplinary research. Our Global Security Network, for example, brings together a range of academics with an interest in security issues from across the University. It includes experts in history, politics, economics, business, law, sociology, archaeology, geography and information studies.
skills in critical and analytical thinking. We have long-standing student and staff exchanges with universities in the United States, Australia and Europe, and an active programme of research seminars, lectures and collaborations. In addition, we host specialised reading groups for postgraduates, and schedule workshops with leading scholars in conjunction with guest lectures.
Career prospects
We help our postgraduate students make the most of their research and prepare for professional careers by providing research training, discussion forums and careers advice. The skills and methods you will learn can lead to positions in the public and private sectors including positions in heritage, policy, journalism and teaching. Internships are available with The Hunterian, our University museum and art gallery, and there are also opportunities to work closely with other key institutions such as Glasgow Life and Glasgow Womens Library.
Learning environment
We place students at the heart of our mission, and believe in the importance of research-led teaching. This means that if you study with us, you can learn from scholars who are at the cutting edge of their subjects and develop useful
Our Global Security Network brings together a wide range of academics with an interest in security issues. It facilitates the exchange of ideas, acts as a catalyst for the formation of new research projects and coordinates events in the field. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/globalsecurity.
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You will take two core courses and choose two optional courses. The programme draws on a wide array of subject areas: literature; history; film and television studies; popular music; art history; religious studies; archaeology; and politics, to foster understanding of the overarching themes, as well as complexities, of American life. The culmination of the MLitt in American Studies is your dissertation. You will choose a topic based on the breadth of perspectives that you have explored and conduct original primary source research. You will be supported in your research and writing by an assigned supervisor with expertise in your specific field of interest. Core courses: Approaches to American studies; Topics and methods in American studies. Optional courses may include: American counterculture; American communities; American material culture; The politics of race in America; Modernity and technology; American society and culture in the 1920s and 1930s; The Vietnam War in American history and culture. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
History
The Masters in History provides you with thorough research training, an outstanding learning experience, and a wide set of transferable skills in the conception, design and execution of a research project. You will combine training in historical skills and methods with a wide range of specialist options in all periods of British, European and American history. Programme overview MLitt/MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time; 18 months part-time Our pathway structure allows you to tailor your degree to match an interest, either by working towards a Masters in History or by taking one of our specialist Masters in Early Modern, Medieval, Modern or Scottish History (continued over).
Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in history, please contact Christelle Le Riguer, tel: +44 (0)141 330 3538 or email: christelle. leriguer@glasgow.ac.uk.
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School of Humanities
Each programme is built around a hands-on research training course, specialised courses on historical and theoretical themes, and other courses developing your technical skills and other abilities like languages and palaeography. For your chosen programme, there will be a guided selection of courses that will provide you with specialised knowledge in that field. You will be taught through a series of seminars and workshops. Internationally recognised historians give guest lectures throughout the year. These courses are taught in history, economic and social history (in the College of Social Sciences), and by related subject areas in the School of Humanities (archaeology, Celtic, classics) and the College of Arts (such as English language and French). In the final part of the programme, you will select a specialised topic and conduct original primary source research for your dissertation. You are supported in your research and writing up by an assigned supervisor with expertise in your field of enquiry. Core courses: Research resources and skills for historians; Approaches to history. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. assigned supervisor with expertise in your field of enquiry. Core courses: Research resources and skills for historians; Approaches to history. Optional courses: Course options may include: Renaissance and anti-Renaissance in Italy and the Low Countries; Politics and literature in Jacobean Scotland; Print, public opinion and Enlightenment in 18th-century Europe; The history of medicine before 1850; Saints and sinners (early modern England); Reformation Europe in the age of religious wars. The courses taught each year vary depending upon staff availability. To widen your approach and develop an interdisciplinary perspective, you are also strongly encouraged to take one or two complementary courses in cognate subjects, such as: Early modern warfare; Climate and civilisation; Lessons from the greats; Decline and fall: organisational failure, ancient and modern; The authority of the state and duties of the citizen. Courses in Scottish literature, English literature, theology, history of art and other College of Arts subjects can also be studied, by agreement with the programme convener. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. Core courses: Research resources and skills for historians. Optional courses: Course options may include: Writing the Middle Ages; Chivalry and warfare in late Medieval Europe, c13001500; Constructing faith: systems of belief and religious networks in the Middle Ages; Critical evaluations of secondary sources and methods in Scottish medieval studies I and II; From antiquity to the Middle Ages; Introduction to medieval manuscript studies; Barbarians in the Mediterranean; Popular revolt in the late Middle Ages; The Crusades. To widen your approach and develop an interdisciplinary perspective, you are also strongly encouraged to take one or two complementary courses in cognate subjects, such as: Explorations in the Classical tradition; Inventing the Clash of Civilisations: East against West from Homer to Hadrian; Approaching the past: sources and methods in medieval Scottish and Celtic studies; Themes in later medieval Scottish archaeology; Early Christian monuments of Scotland; Heritage and cultural informatics. Courses in Scottish literature, English literature, theology, history of art and other College of Arts subjects can also be studied, by agreement with the programme convener. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
Medieval History
We have one of the greatest concentrations of world-leading medievalists in the UK, covering the entire span of the Middle Ages and a wide range of regions from Ireland to Byzantium. This Masters in Medieval History provides you with thorough research training and a wide set of transferable skills in the conception, design and execution of a research project. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time Our History Masters are built around a hands-on research training course, specialised courses on historical and theoretical themes, and other courses developing your technical skills and other abilities like languages and palaeography. If you choose to study Medieval History, there will be a guided selection of courses that will provide you with specialised knowledge in that field. You will be taught through a series of seminars and workshops. Internationally recognised historians give guest lectures throughout the year. In the final part of the programme, you will select a specialised topic and conduct original primary source research for your dissertation. You are supported in your research and writing up by an assigned supervisor with expertise in your field of enquiry.
Modern History
Modern History at Glasgow brings together a wide range of world-leading social and political historians, active in research on topics from the French Revolution to the War on Terror in Afghanistan. The Masters in Modern History provides you with thorough research training and a wide set of transferable skills in the conception, design and execution of a research project. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time Our History Masters are built around a hands-on research training course, specialised courses on historical and theoretical themes, and other courses developing your technical skills and other abilities like languages and palaeography. If you choose to study Modern History, there will be a guided selection of courses that will provide you with specialised knowledge in that field. You will be taught through a series of seminars and workshops. Internationally recognised historians give guest lectures throughout the year. In the final part of the programme, you will select a specialised topic and conduct original primary source research for your dissertation. You are supported in your research and writing up by an assigned supervisor with expertise in your field of enquiry.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/history
Core courses: Research resources and skills for historians. Optional courses: Course options may include; Secret intelligence in the 20th century; American material culture; Introduction to social theory for researchers; American counterculture; History of medicine, 18502000; The American way of war; Topics in historical computing; White supremacy; Social history and social theory; Issues, ideologies and institutions of modern Scotland; Gender, politics and power. The courses taught each year vary depending upon staff availability. To widen your approach and develop an interdisciplinary perspective, you are also strongly encouraged to take one or two complementary courses in cognate subjects, such as: The art of war; Democracy and governance: classical political thought; Political philosophy; 2D digitisation; Archives and records theory; Employers, elites and the state: capitalism in Britain. Courses in Scottish literature, English literature, theology, history of art and other College of Arts subjects can also be studied, by agreement with the programme convener. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. assigned supervisor with expertise in your field of enquiry. Core courses: Research resources and skills for historians. Optional courses: Course options may include: Politics and literature in Jacobean Scotland; Culture, politics and society in the Highland clearances; Interdisciplinary perspectives on Scottish culture; Specialist course in Medieval Scottish studies; Critical evaluation of sources and methods in Medieval Scotland; Revolutionary Scotland: literature, culture and politics 18301939; The Scottish Wars of Independence; Scottish popular culture. The courses taught each year vary depending upon staff availability. To widen your approach and develop an interdisciplinary perspective, you are also strongly encouraged to take one or two complementary courses in cognate subjects, such as Monuments in transition in Medieval Scotland; Records and evidence; Introduction to museology; Approaching the past; Sources for early Medieval Scottish Christianity. Courses in Scottish literature, English literature, theology, history of art and other College of Arts subjects can also be studied, by agreement with the programme convener. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. There are variations to the structure of the programme depending on your choice of an MSc or MLitt. For the MSc you need to choose two optional courses from the social sciences training courses: Quantitative methods; Qualitative methods; Introduction to social theory for researchers. Other optional courses are taught in history, economic and social history (in the College of Social Sciences), and by related subject areas in the School of Humanities (archaeology, Celtic, classics) and the College of Arts (such as English language and French). You will be taught through a series of seminars and workshops. Internationally recognised historians give guest lectures throughout the year. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
War Studies
An understanding of war, for good or ill, is of vital importance. This Masters programme presents a unique opportunity to study war in all its aspects, from past to present, from causes to consequences. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will spend a semester studying the degrees core course which covers both the major thinkers on warfare and the practice and conduct of war. Core topics may include: Clausewitz and European military thought; Deep battle theory and Soviet strategy; Europes small wars, 1800 to present; Mahan and Sea Power. In the second semester, you will take three optional courses which delve in great detail into a particular aspect of military or strategic history. Optional courses may include: Early modern warfare; Chivalry and medieval warfare; The American way of warfare; Secret intelligence in the 20th century; Insurgency and counter-insurgency, 1800 to present. You will complete the programme by writing a dissertation based on your own research. This requires you to engage in original research guided by an expert in the field. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
Scottish History
The Masters in Scottish History is taught by one of the most wide-ranging, coherent and well-resourced teams in the country, offering world-leading expertise in the social, political and cultural history of Scotland from the medieval period through to the 20th century. The programme has a particular geographical emphasis on Gaelic Scotland, Scotlands place in the British Isles and Europe, and on urban Scotland. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time Our History Masters are built around a hands-on research training course, specialised courses on historical and theoretical themes, and other courses developing your technical skills and other abilities like languages and palaeography. If you choose to study Scottish History, there will be a guided selection of courses that will provide you with specialised knowledge in that field. You will be taught through a series of seminars and workshops. Internationally recognised historians give guest lectures throughout the year. In the final part of the programme, you will select a specialised topic and conduct original primary source research for your dissertation. You are supported in your research and writing up by an
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School of Humanities
Information Studies
Through our Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute (HATII), our information studies researchers are exploring how information and communication technology can shape our knowledge and understanding in the arts, humanities and cultural heritage sectors.
Contact Rebekah Derrett, Postgraduate Programme Administrator Tel: +44 (0)141 330 7778 Email: rebekah.derrett@glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
The Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute (HATII) has a vibrant research culture with doctoral and masters students exploring a range of topics in the fields of digital humanities and information sciences. Areas in which we are internationally recognised for research excellence include: theoretical approaches to information archive science and records management knowledge and information management digital heritage. We have a number of important global links, accreditations and partnerships. HATII is a member of the prestigious iSchools Organisation, dedicated to advancing the information field in the 21st century. While each individual iSchool has its own strengths and specialisations, together we share a fundamental interest in the relationships between information, people and technology. Working across traditional subject boundaries, the recent emergence of the Glasgow Digital Humanities Network brings together the online digital resources generated by our researchers working with colleagues, collections and resources from across one or more subject areas at the University. To explore the network and our work in practice, see: www.digital-humanities.arts.gla.ac.uk.
visiting fellows and guest lecturers and weekly research seminars. Our postgraduate taught programmes are designed in line with the skills and knowledge required by employers within their professional fields. They also benefit from close working relationships with both the public and private sector. Work placements, practitioner seminars and guest speakers are a key part of the learning environment.
Career prospects
You may choose a career in museum curatorship and management, digital curation, digital archiving, and digital records management within a variety of sectors and organisations. Previous graduates have advanced or established careers in governmental agencies, corporations, law enforcement agencies, the legal profession, computer forensics professions and information security professions. Some are employed in a variety of digital analyst roles across organisations such as Morgan Stanley, Ernst and Young, and Dutch Police. Our Information Management & Preservation students undertake a two-week work placement in an archive, records management or digital repository. As graduates they are eligible to be accredited by both the Archives & Records Association and CILIP (Chartered Institute of Library & Information Professionals), providing valuable professional recognition in both the archive and library fields.
Learning environment
Within HATII there is frequent interaction between academic staff, researchers and postgraduate students, a regular programme of
Senior Lecturer in the Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute, Dr Ian Anderson is working to develop a mobile phone optimised interface for an innovative database that maps the practice of sculpture in Britain and Ireland between 1851 and 1951. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ mappingsculpture.
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Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in information studies, please contact Elaine Wilson, tel: +44 (0)141 330 5512 or email: elaine. wilson@glasgow.ac.uk.
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School of Humanities Information Studies: taught programmes Computer Forensics & E-discovery
Sophisticated computer crimes put a globally networked society at risk. The increasing impact of technological crime highlights the need for highly competent computer forensic analysts. The Master of Science (MSc) in Computer Forensics & E-Discovery confronts this problem through a blend of computer and legal expertise. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time, 24 months part-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time You will take a mix of taught courses, hands-on laboratory work and group projects. through practical assessment tasks. As a result, team and group work is integral to many aspects of the course. Core courses: Introduction to computer forensics; Legal and regulatory frameworks; Archives, records and information management; Management, curation and preservation of digital materials; Research methods and professional studies; Dissertation. Optional courses: Computer forensics processes and investigative techniques; Records and the transition to the digital. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
You wont just cover the current practices and processes we also encourage you to investigate new approaches and processes while questioning the validity and the dependability of the solutions you find. Semester 1 courses: Introduction to computer forensics and e-discovery; Legal and regulatory frameworks; Introduction to security; Systems and networks; Research methods and techniques; Research methods and professional studies seminars in computer forensics. Semester 2 courses: Computer forensics processes and investigative techniques; Managing and presenting digital evidence; Security and cryptography; Research methods and professional studies seminars in computer forensics. Semester 2 elective courses: Advanced research readings in computing science; Mobile phone forensics. Following the successful completion of examinations, you will spend the summer months working on a research project or dissertation that will enable you to engage with a complex computer forensics problem. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
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Modern Languages
Our School of Modern Languages & Cultures brings together experts in the research and teaching of French, German, Hispanic studies, Italian, Slavonic studies, comparative literature and translation studies. As well as offering considerable expertise in language, we are also scholars of the literature, culture, history, music and film of the countries in question.
Contact Carol Watts, Head of School Administration Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5521 Email: enquiries@smlc.arts.gla.ac.uk
Research environment
For many decades, our School of Modern Languages & Cultures has been a leading centre for research. We disseminate our knowledge through articles in peer-reviewed academic journals, through monographs and edited volumes, and through significant contributions to other media. Many of our members are internationally recognised, with notable strengths in medieval, early modern and cultural history, as well as in visual culture. In our research, we explore subjects of: comparative literature French German Hispanic studies Italian Slavonic studies translation studies. We also have a research centre: the Stirling Maxwell Centre for the study of text/image cultures.
Our subject specialities are supported by a research environment that offers the chance to interact and learn with a community of scholars through a lively seminar programme. As well as offering you the opportunity to host your own presentations, our seminar series also includes sessions with invited distinguished scholars from aross the UK and beyond.
Career prospects
As a graduate you will be prepared for a range of careers including translation and other areas requiring advanced language and communication skills such as journalism, marketing, public relations, technical writing and language teaching. Other careers opportunities include positions in policy, diplomacy and management within government, and within academia.
Learning environment
If you study with us, you will become part of a lively and engaged learning culture. According to the Guardian University Guide 2013, modern languages at the University of Glasgow is ranked 8th in the UK, with 94% teaching satisfaction. The school has around 40 members of academic staff, some of whom are native speakers, and is backed by native language teachers in all subject areas. We collaborate actively with the graduate school of the College of Arts, through which postgraduates regularly organise conferences and write, edit and publish a respected electronic journal, eSharp.
The Stirling Maxwell Centre fosters unrivalled scholarship in text/image interaction. Offering access to Sir William Stirling Maxwells collection of emblem and device literature, which ranges from the first edition of Alciatis Emblems (1531) to the 19th century, and from Italy, France, Germany and Austria to Spain, the Netherlands, Switzerland and Russia, the centre holds regular seminars. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/stirlingmaxwellcentre.
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Modern Languages: taught programmes European Studies: Cultures, Societies & Languages
The Masters in European Studies: Cultures, Societies & Languages provides an exciting multidisciplinary forum for advanced study in European cultures and languages. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time This programme will enhance your understanding of cultural, social and political issues, putting you in a strong position to pursue careers in government, European Council and Latin American institutions. With its emphasis on specialisation, the programme may also open up future academic and research opportunities for you to develop your area of interest. You will take a core course and a selection of optional courses. You will also pursue a specialist interest during the programme and produce a dissertation on this topic with the advice and guidance of your supervisor. There is also the option to study a language from a wide range offered by the School of Modern Languages and a range of other optional courses from schools across the University. The taught courses will contain a mixture of seminars, workshops and one-to-one consultation. Core course: Questions and readings, Europe and beyond. This course introduces you to the social and cultural theoretical context within which your studies will based. It explores central issues and themes in approach and methodology. Optional courses: European and Latin American cinema; Reading the New Europe; Text cultures: reading through interfaces; Visual cultures; European narratives of illness; Developments in Czech society since 1989; The cinema of Communist and Post-Communist Europe; The mass media of Communist and Post-Communist Europe. Entry requirements: You should normally have a good Honours degree (2.1 or better) or equivalent in a modern European language or cognate discipline.
Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in modern languages, please contact Carolyn Donaldson, tel: +44 (0)141 330 5335 or email: carolyn.donaldson@glasgow.ac.uk.
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Music
The University of Glasgow hosts Scotlands leading centre for music research. Based in the UKs first UNESCO City of Music, we offer opportunities to learn from awardwinning professional musicians and music scholars. You can take up work placements in Glasgows legendary music scene, as well as pursuing your musical interests through researching, performing, composing and exploring musical technology.
Research environment
According to the most recent independent assessment of research quality, the Research Assessment Exercise 2008, we are the leading music research unit in Scotland. If you study with us, you will join a dynamic academic team with a strong sense of community linked by ideas and practice. We pursue a number of research themes: popular music studies historical and cultural musicology performance and performance studies composition sonic arts & music technology. Our current research projects and networks include: researching live music in the UK the Musicians Union: a social history bass culture in Scottish musical traditions Scottish Music Review Never Come Ashore experimental music archive 25 Years of the Glasgow International Jazz Festival: urban regeneration, regional identity and programming policy. The University also hosts the Scottish Pop Academic Network (SPAN) in conjunction with the Department of Psychology at Glasgow Caledonian University. SPAN is an informal network of researchers with an interest in popular music, which aims to provide a platform for the dissemination of research and give postgraduates the chance to present their findings before academic audiences.
Learning environment
It would be hard to find a better city for studying music than Glasgow. We provide a rigorous and supportive learning environment complemented by unique partnerships and opportunities. We have close links with Glasgows dynamic independent music scene, offering the opportunity to gain work experience with companies such as the Arches, Chemikal Underground Records, DF Concerts and the Glasgow International Jazz Festival. We collaborate with the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland and provide elements of apprenticeship with professional ensembles such as the Dunedin Consort. The city is also is home to the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Scottish Opera and Royal Scottish National Orchestra (RSNO). Starting in 2012, the RSNO will be offering a series of workshops with a sinfonietta-sized ensemble, leading to possible performance opportunities for postgraduate composition students. This complements existing ensemble workshop opportunities with groups such as the Viridian Quartet and the student-led contemporary music ensemble. We also host a series of colloquia on behalf of the Royal Musical Association featuring national and international guest speakers.
Contact Sarah McNulty, School Secretary Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4093 Email: music-enquiries@glasgow.ac.uk
Career prospects
Our degree programmes open up opportunities to access or advance careers in the creative industries, whether working as a professional composer or musician, in the music industry for a record company, management company or promoter, or in the media industry. Some graduates have combined their degrees with other studies to pursue careers in areas such as law and education.
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Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in music please contact Jeanette Berrie, tel: +44 (0)141 330 3811 or email: jeanette.berrie@ glasgow.ac.uk.
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Historically Informed Performance Practice (in conjunction with the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland)
This Masters will provide you with opportunities to develop insight and experience in historical performance practice of music. The MMus, taught jointly with the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland (formerly RSAMD), combines vocal or instrumental study with performancerelated academic research and an element of apprenticeship with professional ensembles. Programme overview MMus: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time Two routes are available: one weighted towards performance, the other towards musicological enquiry. Core courses include: Two series of seminars in historically informed performance practice; Practical presentation; Practical portfolio; Dissertation; Assessed performance recital. You will have the opportunity to undertake workshops, rehearsals and potentially performances in collaboration with leading ensembles such as the Dunedin Consort and Concerto Caledonia. As a UNESCO City of Music, Glasgow offers enormous opportunities to become involved with music making at a professional level. There is ample opportunity for ensemble playing, leading to the development of both valuable musical team working and interpersonal skills. Entry requirements: Normally, at least a 2.1 Honours degree (or equivalent qualification) in music, plus an audition.
Musicology
This programme provides you with intensive exposure to the contemporary field of musicology and develops your skills through a mixture of classroom-based seminars and involvement in specialist research projects. Applicants should have experience of music analysis and writing about music. Programme overview PgDip: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time Core courses: Musicology; Two research seminars, including presentations to be written up as essays. If you are studying for the PgDip you will also complete a musicology dissertation. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. Applicants should also have experience of music analysis.
Popular Music
This Masters in Popular Music programme introduces and develops your critical understanding of the academic study of popular music at postgraduate level. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time Core courses: You will undertake courses on the music industries and popular music politics. These include: Popular music theory; Popular music history; The music industries; Popular music politics; Dissertation of up to 20,000 words. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
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Sonic Arts
This programme provides an opportunity to create your own sonic art works or sound design using contemporary technology, as well as gain an understanding of new technological approaches and aesthetics. Skills are developed through a dedicated project in the form of a portfolio of sonic artworks and accompanying critical commentary. Applicants should have some experience of composition and music technology. Programme overview PgDip: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will work with tutors on your sonic arts portfolio(s) and attend departmental research seminars and workshops. The PgDip consists of two sonic arts portfolios, each consisting of 15 minutes accompanied by a critical commentary of up to 2,000 words. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. Applicants should also have some experience of composition and music technology and will be expected to supply examples of any prior work.
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School of Humanities
Philosophy
Since the Universitys foundation in 1451, Philosophy at Glasgow has been advanced and taught by some of the subjects key thinkers throughout history, including Professor of Moral Philosophy Francis Hutcheson, Professor of Logic Adam Smith and Professor of Moral Philosophy Thomas Reid.
Research environment
Philosophy at Glasgow has a vibrant research culture and a tradition of excellence. Our research expertise extends across the subject areas of: metaphysics epistemology philosophy of mind philosophy of perception philosophy of language logic philosophy of mathematics ethics political philosophy aesthetics philosophy of religion the history of early modern philosophy the history of analytic philosophy. We host a research centre and a research forum: The Centre for the Study of Perceptual Experience facilitates analytical philosophical and empirical research into the nature of perceptual experience. Our researchers often work in an interdisciplinary manner, drawing on philosophy, psychology, neuroscience, psychiatry, and humancomputer interaction. The Forum for Philosophy & Religion supports innovative research by scholars who employ the tools and methods of analytical philosophy to study religious ideas. We are concerned not only with Western theistic religious traditions but also with the religious and philosophical traditions indigenous to India and the Far East.
Learning environment
We are committed to maintaining the highest standards of research excellence, and attach significant importance to maintaining an active postgraduate community. If you choose to study with us, you can enjoy a supportive environment for learning, with opportunities to spend part of your degree abroad. Subject area life centres around two regular events: the weekly senior seminar, where eminent philosophers from the UK and beyond present their research and receive critical feedback the weekly postgraduate seminar, where our graduate students present their work to their peers and to staff, and receive help with their research. In addition, numerous reading groups, workshops, conferences and research projects take place throughout the year. Staff and students present their research at workshops and conferences all over the world and publish monographs, edited collections, and papers in a wide range of the very best philosophy journals. Finally, every summer, staff and postgraduates go on the postgraduate reading party: recently staff and students had an enjoyable trip to the Highlands.
Contact Anne Southall, Postgraduate Programme Administrator Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5692 Email: anne.southhall@glasgow.ac.uk
Career prospects
Employability is about your skills, aptitudes, abilities, confidence and self-awareness. The University is committed to ensuring that all students are encouraged to develop such skills and provided with the opportunity to do so. Philosophy students wishing to pursue a career in academia are given personalised advice and opportunities in the following topics: research and publishing presenting papers at conferences teaching the format and content of curricula vitae.
Francis Hutcheson was Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University from 1730 until his death. His writings and teaching inspired Enlightenment thinking, and he was responsible for introducing the practice of lecturing in English rather than Latin to Scottish university education.
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Understanding perception
In the philosophy of mind, the big question that everyone would like to answer is what the relationship is between brain and mind. While scientists investigate what goes on in the brain, Professor Fiona Macpherson wants to investigate the nature of the mind. Her current research focus is a project titled Perception, Imagination and the Structure of Experience. This project is about considering how our perceptual experiences are influenced by our beliefs and desires, says Professor Macpherson. Some people think its obvious that this so-called cognitive penetration can occur; Ive argued that its quite difficult to show that this is what happens. If beliefs and desires do affect perceptual experience, the implications enter the sphere of moral philosophy. Our experience is an independent guide to the world, but if its already been affected by prior beliefs which might be fear, prejudice or bias experience is much more problematic than you would have thought, explains Professor Macpherson. You can be responsible for what you judge on the basis of your experience, but how can you be responsible for what your experience tells you is there? Professor Macpherson is Director of the Centre for the Study of Perceptual Experience at the University, which is part of an international network for sensory research, pulling together psychologists and neuroscientists from Toronto, Harvard, MIT, London and Glasgow to share ideas. When I was a postgraduate student I was advised to go abroad if I wanted to do well in philosophy, says Professor Macpherson. I thought that you should be able to study in Scotland and become a good philosopher and in fact you can. Glasgow even has a conversion programme, which is unique in the UK. Within a year we convert graduates from other disciplines into people ready to do a PhD in philosophy. www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/fionamacpherson
Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in philosophy, please contact Christelle Le Riguer, tel: +44 (0)141 330 3538 or email: christelle.leriguer@glasgow.ac.uk.
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School of Humanities
Research environment
Our leading expertise spans the subject areas of Scottish literature, Scottish history, archaeology, histort of art, music, theatre studies, and Celtic and Gaelic. Research centres: Centre for Medical Humanities Centre for Robert Burns Studies Centre for Scottish & Celtic Studies. Scottish and Celtic studies The Centre for Scottish & Celtic Studies brings academics together from across the University to research and teach the history, literature and culture of Scotland and the Celtic world. Members participate in ambitious research projects, including three major AHRC-funded endeavours. Our current projects include: Breaking of Britain Commemorations of saints in Scottish placenames History and development of philosophy in 17th-century Scotland Scots words and place names Scottish toponymy in transition Strathearn Environs & Royal Forteviot (Historic Scotland). Further information about Scottish & Celtic history and archeology Masters can be found on pages 30 and 51. Scottish literature We research Scottish literature in Scots and English from the medieval period until the 21st century. Today, 70% of our work is classed as world-leading or internationally excellent, according to the latest independent survey of research quality, RAE 2008. We have been involved with the research output of the Association for Scottish Literary Studies, the Scottish Text Society and a number of scholarly edition projects, including Walter Scott, James Hogg, Hugh MacDiarmid and the Oxford University Press Collected Works of Robert Burns. Celtic and Gaelic Rated in the UKs top ten for Celtic studies research, according to the 2008 Research
Assessment Exercise, we are also the first university in Scotland to have a dedicated Chair of Gaelic. Our primary interests are in: Scottish Gaelic and Irish language and literature medieval Celtic literatures and history.
Learning environment
Our strengths across Scottish and Celtic studies offer you the opportunity to engage in advanced study of Scotlands history, culture and languages, as well as Celtic studies more broadly. Working under the supervision of expert academic staff, you can opt for a programme with a flexible or a tailored curriculum. Students run their own weekly reading groups as well as contributing to the weekly research seminars run by the Centre for Scottish & Celtic Studies. We are home to the biggest Scottish literature graduate programme in the world and we work with many award-winning authors and poets. If you study with us, you can learn from scholars who are active in editing the work of major Scottish canonical writers as well as engaging in research and publication in all periods of Scottish literature.
Contact Heather Russell, Administrative Assistant Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4509 Email: heather.russell@glasgow.ac.uk
Career prospects
Previous students have secured jobs in museums and government heritage bodies; publishing and book marketing; primary and secondary teaching and teaching English as a foreign language abroad. Alternatively, you can pursue an academic career.
Professor Thomas Clancy holds the Universitys Chair of Celtic and is the Principal Investigator of an AHRC-funded project on Scottish place names, which aims to conduct and publish surveys in Perthshire and the Scottish Borders, as well as exchange knowledge with local communities through talks, walks and exhibitions. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ celticgaelicresearch/stit.
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Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in Scottish & Celtic studies, please contact Elaine Wilson, tel: +44 (0)141 330 5512 or email: elaine. wilson@glasgow.ac.uk. For Scottish literature, please contact Meg MacDonald, tel: +44 (0)141 330 7493 or email: critstudies-pgenquiries@glasgow.ac.uk.
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School of Humanities Scottish & Celtic studies: taught programmes Celtic Studies
The Masters in Celtic Studies is an interdisciplinary programme specialising in the medieval Celtic languages, literature, history and archaeology covering the whole span of the Middle Ages from the 6th to the 16th centuries. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will take two core courses, choose two optional courses and study a Celtic language. You will also produce a dissertation on a specialist topic agreed with your supervisor. Core courses: Approaching the past: critical evaluations of sources and methods in Celtic and Scottish medieval studies; Themes and debates in Celtic studies. You will also take introductory courses in one of the medieval Celtic languages. If appropriate, you may do advanced study in one of these languages. You may, if appropriate, take a course in Scottish Gaelic instead. Introduction to Early Gaelic (Old and Middle Irish); Introduction to Middle Welsh. Optional courses: Medieval Irish and Welsh literature; Christianity in early medieval Scotland; Pictish monuments and culture; Legal traditions of medieval Ireland and Wales; Arthur in medieval Welsh literature; Kingship in early medieval Ireland and Scotland. You may alternatively, with the approval of the programme organiser, take a taught course from a related Masters programme or take another language course. Normally the optional courses consist of either small group or one-to-one tutorial work on particular research topics with specialists in that field of enquiry. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
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Theatre Studies
Theatre Studies is designed to enable you to become proficient in the techniques of historical, sociological and theoretical analysis of the theatrical process, past and present. Based in a city famed for its theatres and touring companies, our lively and engaged research culture brings together staff and students with a wide range of interests in many aspects of drama, theatre and performance.
Research environment
We are committed to research that promotes intellectual edge and social purpose. The study of texts and contexts is at the heart of our work and we create a stimulating, supportive research community for scholars pursuing a wide range of topics, using a variety of methodologies. According to the most recent independent assessment of research quality, the Research Assessment Exercise 2008, 85% of our research is classified as world-leading or internationally excellent. This ranks us as one of the top five subject groups in our field in the UK. In our research, we explore themes of: nation and post-nation textual analysis institutions, infrastructure and policy representation and identity. The interests of our friendly and approachable staff range from Scottish and German theatre to Shakespeare, to intercultural performance, to devising and physical theatre.
Glasgow offers an unbeatable location for the study of theatre offering a stimulating environment with many theatres, touring companies, film venues and creative organisations. The city is home to a huge variety of theatres, producing shows that range from the experimental and risky to the traditional and repertory, from canonical and new writing to devised and physical performance. Venues include: Citizens Theatre, The Arches, Tramway, Theatre Royal, The Kings Theatre, Centre for Contemporary Arts and The Tron. Glasgow is also the base for a number of nationally significant theatre organisations, including National Theatre of Scotland, Playwrights Studio, Ankur Productions, Vanishing Point and Theatre Cryptic. The city hosts annual theatre and performance festivals, and is only 50-minutes by train from the Edinburgh Festivals over the month of August.
Career prospects
Previous graduates have pursued work in theatre practice, museums and/or teaching. Some have gone on to become commissioned playwrights, production dramaturges, theatre critics, literary advisers and theatre makers. Your experience may also prepare you to take up opportunities in the media, festival management and programming, and arts administration.
Learning environment
Our postgraduate programmes offer a wide range of teaching techniques, combining academic and industry knowledge. You will be taught by leading scholars, and will also be able to benefit from our strong external links with professional practitioners and arts organisations, including National Theatre of Scotland, Playwrights Studio Scotland and The Arches. This ensures that you are provided with the most relevant content and are kept up to date with the latest theatre trends. We conduct our teaching primarily in small seminar groups, which support you to develop critical and creative skills. In addition, we can offer flexibility within many of our degree programmes so that you are able to study areas of individual interest. Alongside masterclasses and workshops with external specialists, we regularly host research seminars with invited speakers introducing students and staff alike to key debates and influential practitioners.
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A supportive environment
PhD student Kieran Hurley is pursuing his academic studies in theatre while also nurturing a professional career as a performer and playwright. While Kieran believes its not always easy to manage the demands of an arts practice alongside the rigours of PhD research, he feels that, thanks to the support of his supervisors, he has been able to accommodate both, allowing his research and his arts practice to evolve alongside each other. Originally from Edinburgh, Kieran first came to Glasgow as an undergraduate student. It was while still completing his MA in Theatre Studies that Kieran began making theatre in diverse contexts. Although his research isnt practice-led, the work hes involved in through his arts practice supports and complements his PhD. A professional development appointment with San Francisco-based performance art company La Pocha Nostra, for example, also provided an opportunity for fieldwork which has become central to his research. My base for practising theatre is very much in Glasgow, Kieran says. When I made the decision to continue my academic work, it made a lot of sense for me to stay on in this city and in Theatre Studies at the University. Starting out on a PhD can be a daunting experience: I found working in a familiar environment where I already felt confident and had pre-existing relationships was very helpful. Funding for Kierans research is courtesy of a PhD studentship created in conjunction with the launch of a new academic journal: Theatre, Dance and Performance Training. Although the funding criteria stipulated that Kierans doctoral research had to relate to contemporary performance and training with an emphasis on pedagogical practices, he has had a fair amount of scope to explore his interests in activist theatre and performance practice within his research proposal. Kieran speaks very highly of the support he has received during his time as a postgraduate at the University. My experience of my supervisors has been overwhelmingly positive, he says. One of them happens to have supervised my undergraduate dissertation and the other is a member of staff who joined after I graduated. Both have been really encouraging and supportive throughout. The college has also provided lots of opportunities for teaching work, which has been really great as Id like to continue to teach in tandem with my arts practice. Through the graduate teaching assistant work, Ive led seminars in a group facilitator role, occasionally tutored in practical work and more recently have had the opportunity to give lectures too. What Ive got out of the teaching work has been a real highlight of my experience as a postgraduate student.
Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in theatre studies, please contact Dr Victoria Price, tel: +44 (0)141 330 4061 or email: victoria. price@glasgow.ac.uk.
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School of Culture & Creative Arts Theatre Studies: taught programmes Playwriting & Dramaturgy
The Masters in Playwriting & Dramaturgy gives you a practical and theoretical engagement with the many forms of writing and production for theatre. The programme is designed for those wishing to develop playwriting skills and knowledge of script development and support, opening the way to many theatre roles, including dramaturgy. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time Our programme is the only one in Scotland that combines playwriting with dramaturgy. You will undertake core practical playwriting courses and core dramaturgy courses before choosing to specialise in one pathway. A significant part of the programme is delivered by professional writers and dramaturges. This programme also includes the opportunity for playwrights to develop a major script, through workshops and staged readings with actors and directors. Core teaching is delivered in two semesters, followed by an independent desk- or practicebased project. Our core courses introduce you to the foundations of both playwriting as a craft, as well as dramaturgy as a historical and contemporary practice. In addition, core courses develop other skills useful to the role of the dramaturge and the practitioner, including critical reading, writing and reflection, independent research skills (such as archival and audience research), and presentation skills. These courses will also prepare you to pursue doctoral study in the future. Courses include: Playwriting; Dramaturgy: histories and practices; Reading and interpreting performance; Dramaturgical work placement; Research methods; Independent project. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. ensuring you engage with a wide variety of histories and practices attached to the study of theatre. The teaching will enable you to understand and be confident in the application of different methodological approaches to the study of theatre history, including archival practices, oral history and textual analysis. You will also gain an understanding of how historical practices can be applied and embedded beyond academia. You can choose an independent research project that suits your future objectives: permitting further applied practice or the opportunity to undertake an in-depth study on an area of your choice. Core courses: Research methods: approaches to history; Debating dramaturgy; Reading and interpreting performance; Theatre archive placement; Independent research project. Optional courses include: Issues in Victorian and Edwardian theatre; Elizabethan and Jacobean drama: staging the other; Women and drama in the English Renaissance period; Intercultural performance in the Black and Green Atlantic. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
Theatre History
This Masters programme introduces you to a variety of theatre histories and historical methodologies, ranging from classic drama to Elizabethan and Jacobean theatre, to performance in Victorian and Edwardian Britain and from dramatic text to theatrical apparatus. Looking at key developments in theatre historiography, you will consider issues such as the materiality of the stage; history and heritage; writing national theatre histories; as well as the theatrical cultures of the past. This programme is delivered in collaboration with the Scottish Theatre Archive and the Theatre and Performance Department of the Victoria & Albert Museum. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will be introduced to new approaches for examining and challenging different practices of theatre historiography; you will experiment with ways of analysing the past in order to gain new critical perspectives on theatre history; and you will also explore new histories of theatrical storytelling. A significant part of this programme is delivered by professional archivists and curators,
Theatre Practices
This Masters programme engages with a range of theatre and performance practices, explored in a critically informed capacity, ranging from dramaturgy to playwriting, to site-specific and locational practices, to autobiographical performance. You will develop skills and techniques to further your vocational career; theoretical knowledge which will enrich and enhance your creative work; as well as the ability to critically interrogate your performance practice. You will be taught by leading academics as well as external professional practitioners. This programme is delivered in collaboration with The Arches: a world-leading performing arts venue in Glasgow. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time The MLitt in Theatre Practices is designed to give you a practical and critical engagement with many forms of theatre and performance practice. You will take core courses and create a portfolio of optional courses according to your personal interests and perceived needs. You can also select some courses from across the College of Arts, enabling an interdisciplinary approach. The programme concludes with an independent research project. This provides you with a degree of flexibility in relation to the focus of your advanced study. It permits further applied practice or the opportunity to undertake an indepth written study on an area of your choice.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/tfts
Courses include: Research methods; Contemporary devising practices; Independent practice; Debating dramaturgy; Work placement; Independent research project. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
Theatre Studies
This Masters programme engages with a wide variety of histories and practices attached to the study of theatre. It is designed to enable you to become proficient in the techniques of historical, sociological and theoretical analysis of the theatrical process, past and present. A key strength of this programme is its flexibility, which enables you to create a portfolio of courses based on your individual needs and interests. You will be taught by leading academics as well as external professional practitioners. Programme overview MLitt: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time Study is mostly comprised of optional courses, enabling you to create your own Masters programme. The programme also allows you to work in an interdisciplinary capacity, selecting courses from across the College of Arts, according to personal interests. The programme convener will work with you to ensure a sensible portfolio of courses is constructed, according to your personal aims and objectives. Core teaching is delivered in two semesters, followed by an independent desk- or practicebased project. The independent research project provides an opportunity for you to identify an area of interest and to create a research project that allows in-depth critical exploration of this. Core courses: Research methods; Independent research project. Optional courses include: Autobiography and performance; Bodies in theatre and performance; Contemporary devising practices; Debating dramaturgy; Directing; Elizabethan and Jacobean drama; Intercultural performance; Issues in Victorian and Edwardian theatre; Modern German theatre; Performance theory and analysis; Playwriting; Space, place and performance; Work placement. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. By the end of this programme you will have developed knowledge of a range of issues pertinent to the study of theatre, including historical, contemporary, theoretical and practical. This programme will allow you to develop a wide range of subject knowledge combined with confidence in utilising different research methodologies.
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Research environment
There is a long-established tradition of research into theology and religious studies at the University. Today, researchers continue to build on Glasgows reputation for excellence in traditional fields such as systematic theology, ecclesiology, church history and biblical studies, while also leading the redefinition of the disciplines from inside and outside these fields. Our emphasis is global and our approaches are diverse: some researchers work as theologians, others as cultural theorists, philosophers, sociologists or historians. We have strong interdisciplinary research links with the other subjects in and beyond the Universitys College of Arts. Recent collaborations have involved English and Scottish literature, law, education and philosophy. While we are strongly committed to our local and national contexts, Glasgow is also an international hub for research. We have collaborative projects and research networks with a wide range of institutions, from Beijing to Copenhagen, Berlin to Michigan. Our main collective research topics are: religion and politics the construction of religion as a modern category religion and technology futures and mysticism religion and identity scripts, scriptures, and textual analysis. We also have a research centre for Medical Humanities.
Learning environment
If you choose to study with us, you can benefit from our multidisciplinary approach and supportive environment for learning. All of our subjects can be studied from within or without a personal faith base. Both staff and postgraduate students have been responsible for a range of externally funded cross disciplinary events at the University, and we run several series of seminars and events for postgraduates including: biblical studies seminar series literature, theology and the arts seminar series theology and religious studies seminar series.
Career prospects
As a graduate of theology and religious studies, you will be in a good position to develop a career in education or further academic work, regardless of the subject of your undergraduate degree. You could also undertake some of our programmes in preparation for a career in church ministry.
Contact Meg MacDonald, Research and Development Coordinator Tel: +44 (0)141 330 7493 Email: critstudies-pgenquiries@glasgow.ac.uk
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College of Arts
Theology & Religious Studies: taught programme Religion, Theology & Culture
The MLitt/MTh in Religion, Theology & Culture provides a comprehensive and cutting-edge exploration of classic and contemporary debates in theology and religious studies, incorporating the latest scholarship in the field. Programme overview MLitt/MTh: 12 months full-time; 24 months parttime The teaching component of the programme will combine core courses with a selection of optional courses that allow you to develop a specialisation in one of the following areas: Biblical studies; Theology; Islamic studies; Indian philosophy and religion; Literature, theology and the arts; Religion and critical theory. You will also produce a research dissertation on your area of particular interest. The courses offered on this programme combine breadth of coverage with in-depth study. Core courses: Religion, theology and modernity; Contemporary perspectives on religion and theology. A wide variety of optional courses are available to match your choice of specialisation. Entry requirements: Normally, at least a 2.1 Honours degree (or equivalent qualification) in an arts, humanities or social sciences degree or the equivalent. You should also submit a sample of academic writing. For more services: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ postgraduate/taught.
Contact us
If you have an enquiry about a research degree in theology please contact Meg MacDonald, tel: +44 (0)141 330 7493 or email: critstudies-pgenquiries@glasgow.ac.uk.
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Graduate School
A thriving community
We are one of the largest centres for research and professional training in life sciences, medicine, veterinary science, dentistry and nursing in the UK. The college graduate school is a thriving intellectual community, providing training and teaching for the clinicians, researchers and allied health professionals of tomorrow.
Research Institutes
Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health & Comparative Medicine Institute of Cancer Sciences Institute of Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences Institute of Health & Wellbeing (joint with the College of Social Sciences) Institute of Infection, Immunity & Inflammation Institute of Molecular, Cell & Systems Biology Institute of Neuroscience & Psychology (joint with the College of Science & Engineering)
Research environment
Internationally renowned for our research and teaching expertise, we can provide you with a high-quality, research-rich learning environment. Our collaborative approach means that we study processes at every level of their biological organisation, from genes to cells, organs, individuals, populations and ecosystems. With an annual research income exceeding 52m, our expert academics are undertaking some of the most significant research in the UK in their subject areas. According to the most recent Research Assessment Exercise, which was conducted in 2008, veterinary medicine at the University is ranked joint top in the UK. Three other subjects in the college are ranked in the UKs top ten cardiovascular medicine, infection and immunology, and dentistry and allied health professions.
Career development
Specialist equipment and safety training is provided by postdoctoral staff and experienced technicians. You will be encouraged to visit other labs within the University and beyond to gain knowledge in specialised techniques and equipment. If it is relevant to your studies, you may be able to access training in statistics, computer programming for biologists and geographic information systems. You will be encouraged to publish your work and attend conferences where appropriate, and you may have the opportunity to participate in competitions and courses such as Enterprisers, BBSRC Biotechnology YES, and the Universitys Big Idea.
Schools
School School
of Life Sciences of Medicine School of Veterinary Medicine Contact Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5800 Email: mvls-gradschool@glasgow.ac.uk
Learning environment
We offer a broad portfolio of professional and subject-orientated degree programmes, enabling you to develop your existing knowledge and skills, or translate them from a related discipline. If you join our community of around 485 academic staff and more than 1,200 postgraduate students, you will have access to state-of-the-art facilities and a graduate school that provides students with support including a research skills training programme designed to help you acquire a range of transferable skills for your future career.
Since 2001, we have invested more than 77 million in new capital infrastructure.
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Research programmes
There are three potential routes for you to choose a research degree. If you have any questions please contact us at: mvls-enquiries@glasgow.ac.uk.
Taught programmes
We offer around 50 taught postgraduate programmes. These are listed by subject on the following pages.
How do I apply?
The online application is the quickest and easiest way of applying to Glasgow. The system allows you to fill out the standard application form online and submit this to the University immediately: www.glasgow.ac.uk/postgraduate/ howtoapplyforataughtdegree. You can also attach supporting documents including references, certificates and a transcript of previous studies.
When do I apply?
International applications (non-EU): Friday, 19 July 2013 UK & EU applications: Friday, 23 August 2013
Student/supervisor-led application
If you have your own funding, for example from a ministry/employer or would want to seek funding through one of our supervisors, you can review some of our recent PhD projects on our website, which will give you an idea of some of the possibilities available to you. From there you can contact academic staff members to discuss a potential research project before applying. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/mvls/researchopportunities.
Entry requirements
Normally a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject unless otherwise stated.
Entry requirements
Normally a 2.1 Honours degree (GPA 3.0 or above), or Masters in a relevant discipline. In special circumstances, other academic qualifications, or professional qualifications or experience, may be recognised as equivalent.
Glasgows greats Glasgow has a history of producing high achievers, including Ian Donald who developed the use of ultrasound in obstetrics. Scan the QR code or see www.glasgow.ac.uk/ iandonald for more information.
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Research environment
If you study with us, you will join a community of around 40 postgraduate taught and 60 postgraduate research students. We prioritise four research themes: evolutionary analysis responses to environmental change animal health and food security infectious disease biology. In order to answer key questions about environmental change, emerging diseases, and animal and ecosystem health, we integrate empirical research at all biological levels with rigorous quantitative analysis, appropriate theoretical frameworks and predictive modelling. With an established reputation for strengths in ornithology and fish biology, we also study a diverse array of other organisms, including terrestrial and aquatic plants, nematodes, viruses, crustaceans and other invertebrates, amphibians, reptiles and mammals. Research centres the Boyd Orr Centre for Population & Ecosystem Health Marine Science Biosedimentology Unit Glasgow Sustainable Development Network Glasgow Centre for International Development Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre Scottish Centre for Production Animal Health & Food Safety. Research groups the Clyde River Foundation Froglife Glasgow Natural History Society.
research at Glasgow was ranked joint top in the UK in the most recent independent survey of research quality, for example. A unique strength of the University is the strong ties between veterinarians and ecologists. This offers unique opportunities for training that spans fundamental and applied research. You can also benefit from our institutes seminar and guest lecture series. Whenever appropriate, we may assist you to gain research project placements in zoos or research laboratories.
Our Director
Our Director is Professor Dan Haydon. An expert in quantitative modelling of ecological and epidemiological processes, Professor Haydon is a member of the Wellcome Centre for Molecular Parasitology, the British Ecological Society and the British Lichen Society. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and has served on the editorial boards of Biology Letters (Royal Society, London) and the Journal of Applied Ecology. Currently he is editor of Epidemics journal. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ people/danielhaydon.
Learning environment
You will be taught by research-active staff using the latest approaches. In some cases you will be taught by academics who are producing work that is world-leading. Veterinary medicine
Career prospects
You will gain core skills and knowledge across a wide range of subjects that will enhance your selection chances for competitive opportunities in further study and academia. In addition to academic options, career opportunities include roles in zoos, government agencies, officers of animal welfare, protection, or wildlife crime, veterinary nursing and aquaculture.
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Contact us
Eileen McGee, Head of Research Institute Administration Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4779 Email: eileen.mcgee@glasgow.ac.uk
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Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health & Comparative Medicine Biodiversity, Animal Health & Comparative Medicine: taught programmes Animal Welfare Science, Ethics & Law
Animal welfare science and ethics is an expanding topic of international concern. It aims to improve our knowledge and understanding of animals needs, which is required to provide a high standard of care to the whole range of animals kept in captivity. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time phylodynamics; Infectious disease ecology and the dynamics of emerging disease; Single-species population models; Multi-species models; Spatial processes; Introduction to Bayesian statistics. Entry requirements: At least a 2.2 Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. Professional experience may be taken into account. In your application, please submit a statement (up to 200 words) outlining why you want to study this programme in particular and what you hope to get out of it.
A holistic approach
Emerging infectious diseases are one of the major challenges facing countries worldwide today. Research at Glasgow emphasises both basic epidemiological research and the development of a fundamental understanding of the population-level factors that render poultry and livestock industries vulnerable to disease invasion. The work of Rowland Kao, Professor of Mathematical Population Biology, helps to advise government policy on the prevention and control of infectious diseases that are of vital interest to UK farming. Research in my group integrates the development of parsimonious mathematical models with large-scale datasets that include disease notification data, livestock movements, spatial/geographic data and molecular type data, he explains. Our aim is to better understand why infectious diseases such as foot-and-mouth disease, bovine tuberculosis, scrapie, BSE and avian influenza spread in poultry, and how best to control them. Always striving to understand the interdependence of animal and human populations, ecosystems and the environment, Professor Kao and his colleagues across the institute explore the consequences of this interdependence for disease pathogenesis and transmission, food security and the conservation of species and habitat. Given the threats posed by rapid environmental change and the increasing size of our planets human population, there has never been a more pressing need for the institutes multidisciplinary and holistic research approach. We are interested not just in using established analytical techniques, but also in developing new approaches, says Professor Kao. This is critical in these exciting times when our data on populations and pathogens are becoming increasingly complex, and the demands on quantitative epidemiology are ever-increasing. www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/rowlandkao
The programme provides a strong grounding in scientific writing and communication, statistical analysis, and experimental design. It is designed for flexibility, enabling you to customise a portfolio of courses suited to your interests. You can choose from a range of specialised options that encompass key skills in: Ethics, legislative policy and welfare science critical for promoting humane treatment of both captive and wild animals; Monitoring and assessing biodiversity critical for understanding the impacts of environmental change; Quantitative analyses of ecological and epidemiological data critical for animal health and conservation. Core courses: Key research skills: Scientific communication; Introduction to R; Advanced linear models; Experimental design and power analysis; Animal ethics; Animal welfare science; Legislation related to animal welfare; Independent research project. Optional courses: Enrichment of animals in captive environments; Care of captive animals; Biology of suffering; Assessment of physiological state; Freshwater sampling techniques; Marine sampling techniques; Invertebrate identification; Vertebrate identification; Molecular analyses for DNA barcoding and biodiversity measurement; Phyloinformatics; Conservation genetics and
The Scottish Centre for Ecology & the Natural Environment provides state-of-the-art laboratories, experimental streams and aquariums for research, helping towards an understanding of pollution, environmental change and loss of biodiversity. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/scene.
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Cancer Sciences
The Institute of Cancer Sciences carries out a programme of world-class science directed at understanding the molecular changes that cause cancer. We are working to translate scientific discoveries into new drugs or diagnostic and prognostic tools that benefit patients, taking new therapies through preclinical and clinical trials.
Contact
Dr Sylvia Morrison, Head of Research Institute Administration Tel: +44 (0)141 330 2690 Email: sylvia.morrison@glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
If you study with us, you will join a community of 96 postgraduate research students. The Institute of Cancer Sciences is part of a national centre of excellence in the fight against cancer. We are a major component of the Cancer Research UK West of Scotland Cancer Centre and a partner with the Beatson Institute for Cancer Research (BICR). Together, this forms the core of cancer research in Glasgow. In the most recent independent review of research quality, Research Assessment Exercise 2008, our subject area was rated in the UKs top five. There are 38 research groups housed in magnificent new research buildings. Research groups in the institute are organised into units: clinical research epigenetics experimental therapeutics Paul OGorman Leukaemia Research Centre Beatson Institute for Cancer Research.
research and cancer-related teaching is organised by the forum and it encourages cooperation and collaboration through special interest groups which focus on shared areas of research and therapy.
Learning environment
We regard the training and career development of students as essential in our mission to support cancer research of the highest standard. Our aim is to continue to attract enthusiastic scientists and clinicians just starting out on their careers to work with our established staff, to draw on their experience but also to spark new ideas in a stimulating research environment. The Beatson Institute for Cancer Research hosts a range of seminars and meetings, bringing international cancer researchers to Glasgow. The West of Scotland Cancer Forum coordinates the universities and associated institutes and hospitals in the Glasgow area, and provides a framework for their cooperation in cancerrelated research and teaching. A programme of seminars and meetings to foster multidisciplinary
Our Director
Our Director is Professor of Translational Cancer Research, Jeff Evans. Professor Evans is Group Leader (Translational Cancer Therapeutics Laboratory) at the Beatson Institute for Cancer Research, leader of the Cancer Research UK Glasgow Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre and honorary Consultant in Medical Oncology at the Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre. An expert in the development of novel anti-cancer agents, particularly in pancreatic cancer, his other research interests include the development of novel therapies for gastrooesophageal and hepato-biliary-pancreatic cancers and melanoma. See: www.glasgow. ac.uk/people/jeffevans.
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Contact us
Professor Nicol Keith, Postgraduate Research Convener Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4811 Email: nicol.keith@glasgow.ac.uk Dr Jackie Beesley, Scientific Administrator, the Beatson Institute for Cancer Research Tel: +44 (0)141 330 8722 Email: j.beesley@beatson.gla.ac.uk
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Research environment
If you study with us, you will join a community of 60 postgraduate taught and 65 postgraduate research students. The University has a world-renowned reputation for expertise in cardiovascular research and education. In the most recent independent review of research quality (RAE 2008), cardiovascular medicine at Glasgow was rated in the UKs top ten. We have five research themes: vascular pathophysiology and therapy heart research diabetes, renal, endocrine and metabolic medicine genetics, genomics and systems medicine clinical trials and implementation. Working in basic, translational and clinical research, our strength is in elucidating mechanisms of cardiovascular disease, identifying biomarkers of disease and developing and designing novel therapeutic strategies that will lead to clinical trials. Our multidisciplinary approach to research through cross-thematic interactions currently focuses on: vascular and cardiac biology and signalling stroke pathophysiology and medicine systems biology and medicine stem cell biology and therapy clinical trials. We are fostering and maximising interactions with other research institutes and colleges within the University, as well as with NHS colleagues. Exciting links have already been established with the NHS, Golden Jubilee National Hospital and the Universitys Robertson Centre for Biostatistics. In addition, we have research groups interested in sports and exercise science. This includes research into performance athletes, exercise physiology and exercise in the management of cardiovascular and related diseases.
Career prospects
Training through our institute will provide you with career opportunities in academia, clinical translational cardiovascular research, public health bodies or commercial industrial research in the field of cardiovascular medicine. You may be able to build a career in healthcare, the pharmaceutical industry, rehabilitation, clinical exercise, health promotion, or sports science support. Many of our sport and exercise graduates are employed in senior sports science positions with national sporting bodies and professional sports clubs.
Our Director
Our Director, Professor Rhian Touyz, previous Canada Research Chair in Hypertension, has received numerous honours including Young Investigator Awards from the American and Canadian Societies of Hypertension, the Dahl Award from the American Heart Association (AHA) and Berne Award from the American Physiological Society. She is the Chair of the High Blood Pressure Research Council, AHA, Editor-in-Chief of Clinical Science and Deputy Editor of Hypertension. Her research relates to vascular mechanisms of hypertension. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/rhiantouyz.
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Contact us
Dorothy Ronney, tel: +44 (0)141 211 2513, email: dorothy.ronney@glasgow.ac.uk.
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Institute of Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences: taught programmes Cardiovascular Sciences
This Masters in Cardiovascular Sciences allows you to gain the ability to integrate an understanding of the epidemiology of cardiovascular diseases, as well as the molecular and cellular pathways (ie, risk factor pathways) involved in the development of cardiovascular disease and how this can lead to a variety of acute and chronic clinical complications. Programme overview MSc (Med Sci): 12 months full-time In addition to the taught courses you will take part in student-led critical review sessions where you will provide a critical appraisal of a scientific research paper taken from current literature. You will also take part in an introductory session on how to review a scientific paper, designed to give you experience of reading, summarising and presenting the findings of a scientific publication in a critical manner. Core courses: Research methods; Pharmacogenomics and molecular medicine; Topics in therapeutics; Clinical aspects of cardiovascular disease; Established and novel techniques in cardiovascular research. In addition you will undertake a dissertation/ project. Entry requirements: The programme is open to medical and bioscience graduates and for graduates with a 2.1 Honours degree. Medical and pharmacy graduates must have a recognised degree and are usually expected to have had at least three years postgraduate clinical experience. Pharmacy and bioscience graduates will be expected to have an Honours degree, at least second-class (or equivalent). You are required to provide two references and full degree transcript plus a personal statement indicating why you wish to study this programme at the University of Glasgow. postgraduate professional experience. Medical and pharmacy graduates are normally required to have at least three years postgraduate clinical experience. You are required to provide two references and full degree transcript plus a personal statement indicating why you wish to study this programme at the University of Glasgow.
Clinical Pharmacology
This Masters programme in Clinical Pharmacology offers focused training which integrates basic and clinical sciences, and equips students with the essential skills required to function effectively as a clinical pharmacologist in the 21st century. As a student in the programme you will acquire core skills, enabling an appreciation of how to apply clinical pharmacological, regulatory and ethical principles to the optimisation of therapeutic practice and clinical research. Crucially, in addition to a firm grasp of the principles of molecular pharmacology, you will also gain foundational knowledge in the emerging science of pharmacogenomics and personalised medicine. Programme overview MSc (Med Sci): 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and take part in lab, project and team work. Core courses: Principles of pharmacology; Medical statistics; Drug disposition; Pharmacogenomics and molecular medicine; Topics in therapeutics; Pharmaceutical medicine. In addition you will undertake a dissertation or project. Entry requirements: The programme is open to medical, pharmacy and bioscience graduates. You should have an Honours degree or equivalent in your subject. In exceptional circumstances, other science graduates or bioscience graduates with an Ordinary degree may be eligible, on demonstration of appropriate
The British Heart Foundation Glasgow Cardiovascular Research Centre opened in 2006. Offering stateof-the-art facilities, it brings together the Universitys internationally recognised cardiovascular research groups in a multidisciplinary research environment. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/bhfgcrc.
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Option courses X: Physical activity and health: public health, policy and behaviour changes; Sports injuries: scientific basis of prevention and rehabilitation. Option courses Y: Physical activity and health: biological mechanisms; Motor learning and skill acquisition. Option courses Z: Cellular and molecular exercise physiology; The world class athlete: nature, nurture and maximising performance. Entry requirements: At least a 2.2 degree in the sport and exercise sciences or in another relevant biological science. Alternative qualifications in medical or health-related areas will also be considered.
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Translational Medicine
This Masters in Translational Medicine is the first year of a British Heart Foundation fouryear PhD studentship: it is not offered as an individual programme of study. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time of a 48-month full-time PhD The programme is part of a four-year PhD with the first year being an MRes. The MRes is made up of three individual 12-week research placements after an intense two-week induction. Each project will be based on different themes with three different supervisors. Years 2 to 4 make up the PhD portion of the programme. Induction: You will be required to attend an in-depth introductory programme, which will provide training in research ethics, statistics, project design, literature review and laboratory safety techniques. Placements: The induction is followed by three individual research placements. These are at the core of this programme, providing three separate projects to allow you to define your areas of interest for your PhD studies. Each placement is a 12-week project and this will be with three different principal supervisors. You will be encouraged to choose placements beyond your undergraduate subject experience to maximise your exposure to new techniques and science. Supervisors are drawn from a wide range of academic disciplines, such as medicine, biomedical and life sciences, mathematics, electronics and electrical engineering, and veterinary medicine. Entry requirements: You should have at least a second-class Honours degree (2.1 Honours if applying for a studentship) in biological science, immunology, neuroscience, physiology, pharmacology or cognate courses with significant biomedical content. Students from other disciplines, such as mathematics, computing and public health, are also encouraged to apply.
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Research environment
If you study with us, you will join a community of more than 120 postgraduate taught students and 170 postgraduate research students. Health & Wellbeing is a cross-college institute, which means that it combines innovative research activity found in the College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences with leading expertise found in the College of Social Sciences. Our researchers cover a wide range of disciplines including: statistics; epidemiology; psychiatry; clinical psychology; general practice; public health; sociology; anthropology; geography; history; economics; and other clinical, social and population health sciences. Bringing together this range of knowledge enables us to conduct world-leading research and teaching focused on key themes of: environment and health perceptions and experiences of health and wellbeing inequalities in health and wellbeing the use of new technologies to enhance health and wellbeing. We conduct trials of health service and community-based interventions, and use natural experiments to assess the impact of social, environmental and policy changes. We can also capitalise on longitudinal studies and the use of routine NHS or other administrative data. The city of Glasgow offers a unique and rich environment for the study of health, and as well as excellent links within the west of Scotland, we have many global connections, particularly with researchers in Africa, the USA, Canada, Europe, Australia and South America.
Research groups that contribute to the institute include: General Practice & Primary Care Health Economics & Health Technology Assessment Mental Health & Wellbeing Public Health Robertson Centre for Biostatistics MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit Glasgow Centre for Population Health MRC/CSO Institute of Hearing Research, Glasgow.
Learning environment
Postgraduate students in our institute join an interdisciplinary grouping of more than 200 staff and benefit from frequent and regular seminar programmes and thematic workshops. Many of our programmes offer you the opportunity to gain advanced knowledge from the countrys leading experts and practitioners. All of our lectures are given by subject specialists, including clinical academics at the University, as well as many other specialists from around the UK and occasionally internationally. We have collaborative partnerships in place with a range of organisations and where appropriate, you may have opportunities to complete placements and projects with them.
Our Director
Our Director is Professor Dame Sally Macintyre. A Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and the Academy of Medical Sciences, Professor Macintyre is also the Honorary Director of the Medical Research Council/Chief Scientist Office Social & Public Health Sciences Unit. She was appointed DBE for services to Science in 2011. Professor Macintyre has published widely on the patterning of health by gender, socioeconomic status and place of residence. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/sallymacintyre.
Career prospects
Our graduates find positions as academics, healthcare professionals, healthcare policy advisers, within pharmaceutical and medical device companies and in public healthcare systems, the voluntary and third sectors. Career opportunities include clinical academia, lecturers, university teachers, health development managers, public health advisers, health programme specialists, epidemiologists and other research positions.
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Contact us
If you are interested in PhD opportunities within public health, contact Margaret Ashton: Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4037 Email: margaret.ashton@glasgow.ac.uk. If you are interested in PhD opportunities within general practice and primary care, contact Professor Kate ODonnell: Tel: +44 (0)141 330 8300 Email: kate.odonnell@glasgow.ac.uk. If you are interested in PhD opportunities within mental health and wellbeing, contact Lynsay Coulter: Tel: +44 (0)141 211 3920 Email: lynsay.coulter@glasgow.ac.uk.
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Institute of Health & Wellbeing Health & Wellbeing: taught programmes Applied Neuropsychology
This Masters programme in Applied Neuropsychology is designed for those who have qualified in clinical psychology overseas. Programme overview MSc (Med Sci): 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time; 18 months part-time The majority of students on this programme come to Glasgow for a full year of study. This will provide you with the opportunity to carry out a research project which will usually be based in one of our research groups. All our lectures are given by subject specialists, including clinical academics at the University as well as many other specialists from around the UK and occasionally internationally. You will take a total of eight courses, arranged into blocks of teaching. Each teaching block lasts two weeks and covers two courses. Courses: Context and perspectives in clinical neuropsychology; Professional issues and research methods; Neuroscience; Epilepsy, seizure and sleep disorders; Acquired brain injury and disorders of memory, attention and executive functioning; Degenerative conditions; Stroke and disorders of perception, language, praxis and calculation; Paediatric neurology and neuropsychology. MSc students will also complete a research project. Entry requirements: This programme is open to applicants who have trained in clinical psychology outside of the UK, do not have a BPS Statement of Equivalence in Clinical Psychology and are not registered with the UK Health Professions Council. UK-qualified clinical psychologists should apply for the MSc/PgDip in Clinical Neuropsychology. You are required to provide two references and a full degree transcript with your application. well as many other specialists from around the UK and occasionally internationally. You will take a total of eight courses, arranged into blocks of teaching. Each teaching block lasts two weeks and covers two courses. Courses: Context and perspectives in clinical neuropsychology; Professional issues and research methods; Neuroscience; Epilepsy, seizure and sleep disorders; Acquired brain injury and disorders of memory, attention and executive functioning; Degenerative conditions; Stroke and disorders of perception, language, praxis and calculation; Paediatric neurology and neuropsychology. MSc students will also complete a research project. Entry requirements: This programme is open to applicants with a qualification in Clinical Psychology which confers eligibility for registration with the UK Health Professions Council as a Clinical Psychologist. It is also open to applicants who have trained outside the UK and hold a British Psychological Society (BPS) Statement of Equivalence in Clinical Psychology. Places are limited and you are advised to apply as early as possible. Applicants who have trained in clinical psychology outside the UK who do not hold a BPS Statement of Equivalence in Clinical Psychology would normally apply for the MSc Applied Neuropsychology programme. You are required to provide two references, a Doctorate Certificate and an HPC Registration Number. Year 3: Advanced practice 1; Advanced practice 2; Psychology and the law; Research practice 2: major research project; Advanced professional practice 2. Entry requirements: You must have the British Psychological Society Graduate Basis for Chartering (GBC) and provide proof of this. This usually takes the form of a single or joint 2.1 or above Honours degree in Psychology; however, candidates who have gained GBC by other means will be considered. Additional practical clinical or research experience of working with children or adults with mental health problems or learning disabilities is an advantage. We do not consider applications from final-year undergraduates.
Clinical Psychology
This Doctorate in Clinical Psychology is collaboratively funded through NHS Education for Scotland and the University of Glasgow. You will be employed by a local NHS (Scotland) Health Board for the duration of the programme. Programme overview DClinPsy: 36 months full-time The programme follows a modularised structure, which integrates academic teaching, clinical practice education and research training. This process underpins the commitment of the programme team to maximising the synergy between the clinical, academic and research components of training and reflects explicitly our commitment to an integrative educational process. The programme consists of 16 compulsory courses. Year 1: Foundations of clinical psychology; Foundations of clinical practice 1; Foundations of clinical practice 2; Foundation knowledge, understanding and skills; Service-based evaluation project 1. Year 2: Child/family/adolescent theory and practice; Learning disability theory and practice; Research methods; Research practice; Advanced professional practice 1; Service-based evaluation project 2.
Clinical Neuropsychology
This Masters programme in Clinical Neuropsychology is designed for those who are eligible for registration in the UKs Health Professions Council as a clinical psychologist. Programme overview MSc (Med Sci): 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time; 18 months part-time The majority of students on this programme are clinical psychologists working in the NHS and most complete their programme working parttime over two years, although a small number complete all the teaching blocks in one year. All our lectures are given by subject specialists, including clinical academics at the University as
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Core courses: Introduction to mental health and disability; The global burden of mental health difficulties; Cultural, social and biological determinants of mental health; Research methods (qualitative, quantitative and health economics); Mental health promotion across the life-span; Improving access to mental health care in the global context; Mental health and disability: international law and policy; Dissertation. Entry requirements: At least a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent in a relevant subject (psychology, medicine, nursing, occupational therapy, law, public health or public policy). A registered healthcare professional qualification will also be acceptable. A background study, work or volunteer activities in a mental healthrelated field is desirable but not essential. Entry requirements: You should have a degree in a healthcare discipline or equivalent qualification although in exceptional circumstances other qualifications or experience may be considered. Applications are welcome from qualified personnel in medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, nursing and allied health professionals as well as managers and those working or with an interest in primary care. You are required to provide two references, a full degree transcript, a CV (rsum) and a personal statement stating why you wish to study this programme at the University of Glasgow and how you intend to apply the personal skills developed on the programme in your professional life.
Primary Care
This Masters in Primary Care will equip you with the skills required to make a difference to primary health care in the 21st century. You can follow a flexible curriculum and will be taught by some of the leading primary care researchers and practitioners in the country. Programme overview MPC: 12 months full-time; 2460 months part-time; PgDip: 12 months full-time; 2436 months parttime; PgCert: 24 months part-time The programme has three compulsory courses and three optional courses. A research project takes place over a maximum of 12 months from receipt of a favourable ethics application. Most courses run over 11 weeks (September to November, or January to March) with weekly sessions lasting approximately 2.5 hours. Teaching generally takes place on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Core courses: Introduction to primary care; Populations to individuals: statistics, epidemiology and critical appraisal for primary care; Research methods; Research project. The following are all acceptable as projects: Empirical data collection, involving either quantitative or qualitative methods; Secondary analyses of routine data or datasets collected as part of a larger project; Literature review using Cochrane-type systematic review approaches, thematic analyses and integrative approaches (please note, this is more extensive and rigorous than the literature review that forms part of any project submission); Case study; Audit. Optional courses: Achieving clinical effectiveness; Cardiovascular disease management in primary care; Management of long-term conditions; Social justice.
Public Health
This Masters in Public Health (MPH) reflects the multidisciplinary nature of public health and follows a flexible and innovative curriculum. You will study under the supervision of some of the countrys leading experts in public health. Programme overview MPH: 12 months full-time; 24 or 36 months parttime; PgDip: 9 months full-time; 21 or 33 months part-time; PgCert: 5 months full-time; 10 months part-time You will attend interactive lectures, seminars and individual tutorials and take part in lab, project and team work. Core courses: Principles of public health; Introduction to statistical methods; Introduction to epidemiology; Research methods. Optional courses (three courses chosen): Communicable diseases; Economic evaluation; Environmental health; Further epidemiology and statistics; Globalisation and public health; Health economics; Health promotion: principles and practice; Managing healthcare organisations; Oral health (this course is offered every second year); Psychosocial approaches to public health; Qualitative research methods. If you are studying for the MPH, you will also undertake a research project of 15,00020,000 words. Entry requirements: You should normally have a 2.1 Honours degree but in exceptional circumstances, consideration will be given to those with a relevant professional qualification who have experience in the field of public health. You are required to provide two references, a full degree transcript, a CV (rsum) and a personal statement indicating why you wish to study this programme at the University of Glasgow.
Difficult decisions
People think that economists are only interested in money, but Professor in Health Economics, Andy Briggs, is interested in the health impact of healthcare interventions. Generally, health can be measured in a two-dimensional way: length of life, which is very straightforward to measure, and quality of life, which is much less so, explains Professor Briggs. Our methodologies and quality of life tools can help policymakers to better decide where money on health interventions is spent. Professor Briggss research relies on interdisciplinary working with clinicians, statisticians, epidemiologists and qualitative researchers. Being based in Glasgow means that the team can benefit from access to Scotlands sophisticated linked datasets, including information contained in the Scottish Morbidity Record, which is invaluable for work on statistical assessment of health technology. A good example is the research currently under way on the Scotland-wide diabetes dataset, which uniquely links clinical information to the Scottish Morbidity Record. Professor Briggss team also supports a variety of work within the Institute of Health & Wellbeing, including an economic analysis of the Keep Well health improvement project, which aims to reduce inequalities in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in the most deprived urban wards of Glasgow. Research is often demand-led. Were asked by industry, charities and policymakers to measure the cost-effectiveness of particular interventions, whether its a drug or the provision of a service, says Professor Briggs. Alongside this work, there are plenty of opportunities for postgraduate researchers to explore methodological and applied issues relating to health technology asssessment, with college scholarships available. www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/andrewbriggs
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Research environment
If you study with us, you will join a community of 26 postgraduate taught and 150 postgraduate research students. Our institute brings together world-leading basic, applied, clinical and translational researchers to study infection with a focus on the viral, parasitic and bacterial pathogens of both humans and animals, and immunology and inflammation with a focus on chronic inflammatory diseases. Despite the continual development of new therapies, antibiotics and vaccines, chronic inflammatory and infectious diseases still pose persistent health threats. We aim to: understand the basic science of the immune systems and how the immune system can in turn affect disease outcome understand the biology of parasites, viruses and bacteria and the interactions with their hosts, that in turn leads to high levels of infectious diseases worldwide develop therapies (drugs and vaccines) targeted on these processes explore new treatments and strategies in clinical and translational medicine. Research centres MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research Wellcome Trust Centre for Molecular Parasitology Scottish Infection Research Network ARUK Centre for Experimental Arthritis Research.
Our expertise is supported by state-of-the-art basic science technology, integrated seamlessly with translational clinical trial facilities. We also have numerous research links with diseaseendemic countries, in particular in Africa.
Career prospects
Our excellent facilities underpin a bench to bedside approach that will equip you with training complementary to a range of career options, and you can tailor your study pathway to the precise aspects of infection and immunology that suit your objectives. Through their research interests in drug development, vaccines and diagnostics, many of our project supervisors have strong links with industry. There is an open day to highlight career opportunities in industry related to our research.
Our Director
Our Director is Professor Iain McInnes, Muirhead Chair of Medicine and Consultant Rheumatologist based in Glasgow Royal Infirmary. Professor McInnes has an established leadership role in translational medicine, as Chair of the Arthritis Research UK New Agents Committee, Vice Chair of the MRC Panel for Training and Fellowships, UKCRN Specialty Groups Scottish Lead for Inflammation Medicine and internationally, within the European League Against Rheumatism. His research interests focus on mechanisms of inflammatory synovitis in rheumatoid and psoriatic arthritis. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ people/iainmcinnes.
Learning environment
You will be taught by scientists and clinical investigators of global repute who possess the broad expertise necessary to assist you in achieving your goals. Our academics include geneticists, molecular and cell biologists, biochemists, immunologists, bacteriologists, virologists, parasitologists, pathologists and clinical investigators.
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Contact us
Margaret Agnew, Postgraduate Administrative Assistant Tel: +44 (0)141 330 7384 Email: margaret.agnew@glasgow.ac.uk
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Ive met several people that spent some time during their education abroad and the opinion was unanimous: you get to know a new place, a new lab, different ways of working, and different people, which all together are of high value for your development as a researcher. I knew I wanted to study parasitology and I wanted to have an experience abroad. I finally spotted the Wellcome Trust Centre for Molecular Parasitology and the work performed in Dr Richard McCullochs lab on the sleeping sickness parasite, Trypanosoma brucei. I really like Glasgow and feel very comfortable here.
Originally from Portugal, Catarina Marques is a first-year PhD student at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Molecular Parasitology.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/iii Infection, Immunity & Inflammation: taught programmes Infection & Immunobiology
This Masters integrates training in the core specialisms of infection and immunobiology research. The flexible format allows you to gain the MRes Infection & Immumobiology, or obtain an MRes in one of five specialisms that can be accessed through this programme. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time; PgDip: 8 months fulltime; PgCert: 3 months full-time During the first semester you will attend lectures and seminars. There is also a practical course comprising lab work and tutorials. Following this, you will undertake two 17-week research placements during the programme. These involve individual research projects that require oral and poster presentations as well as project reports. Choosing a specialism: Your choice of placements dictates the type of degree you will receive. If you combine two projects from two different specialisms, you are awarded the MRes in Infection & Immunobiology. The alternative is to complete both projects from one research area. In this instance you will receive your MRes in one of these individual research areas. The specialisms on offer within the Institute of Infection, Immunity & Inflammation are: Comparative Medicine: This specialism provides a broad knowledge of topics relevant to comparative medicine, with a focus on infection and immunobiology and quantitative and technical methodologies. Research projects will potentially extend that knowledge into specific areas of infectious disease, quantitative epidemiology, statistics and mathematical modelling, as well as pathology. Immunobiology: This specialism, based within the Centre of Immunobiology, ranges from basic cellular immunology through to more focused clinical studies and drug discovery. As a part of a clinical network, we map our basic research interests directly onto a range of human pathological inflammatory disorders. Medical Microbiology: This specialism provides theoretical background knowledge and practical skills training in the application of modern molecular techniques to the study of microbial pathogenesis. The focus is on selected pathogens that cause infections in humans as well as domesticated animals. Molecular Parasitology: This specialism provides theoretical background knowledge and practical skills training in the subjects of biochemistry, genetics, cell biology and molecular biology of parasites of humans and animals. Virology: The specialism is dedicated to the study of human and animal viral diseases and conducting multidisciplinary research on viruses and viral diseases of humans and animals, utilising the knowledge gained for the improvement of human and animal health. Entry requirements: At least a 2.2 Honours degree or equivalent in a relevant subject area.
Understanding parasites
At Glasgows Wellcome Trust Centre for Molecular Parasitology, scientists collaborate to investigate the malaria parasite, humanand livestock-infective trypanosomes, and the leishmanias that can afflict humans. We look at the intrinsic molecular and cell biology of the parasite itself and increasingly, we look at the relationship between the parasite and its host and the parasite and its vector in an attempt to understand the complexities of those interactions, explains Professor Andy Waters, Wellcome Trust Principal Research Fellow and the centres Director. We hope that our findings might be exploited to develop drugs, vaccines or other methods of preventing parasite success. The centre brings together seven principal investigators and a community of researchers. It is one of only eight UK centres of excellence funded by the Wellcome Trust and the only one focused on parasitology. We are greater than the sum of our individual parts, says Professor Waters. We have collaborations both within and outside of the centre, and partnerships that extend into Africa, where we have ongoing relationships and actively funded grants from the Wellcome Trust and other agencies. Current projects include research by Wellcome Trust Senior Fellow Dr Markus Meissner to develop a series of novel tools to investigate the molecular biology of toxoplasma parasites. The Wellcome Trust has also awarded funding to link African laboratories with Glasgow in order to assemble different populations of trypanosome parasites from different regions for comparison. The aim is to pinpoint areas of the genome that are undergoing significant evolution and therefore most likely to be at the cutting edge of the parasites attack on humans or animals. Wellcome Trust Senior Fellow Dr Annette MacLeod from Glasgow is working on this project, which is led by Tanzanian scientist Dr Enoch Matovu. www.glasgow.ac.uk/iii/wtcmp
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Research environment
If you study with us, you will join a community of 34 postgraduate taught and 71 postgraduate research students. Our multidisciplinary research varies from protein trafficking to plant circadian rhythms and from the structure of membrane proteins to cell engineering. This wide scope involves collaborations within the College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences, and with mathematicians, computer scientists and engineers across and beyond the University. We continue to attract funding from the Medical Research Council, the Biotechnology & Biological Sciences Research Council, Wellcome and other agencies, as well as major funding from industry. Glasgow is at the forefront of research in systems and synthetic biology in the UK.
Our Director
Our Director, Professor Richard Cogdell, holds the Universitys Hooker Chair of Botany and has more than 30 years research experience in bacterial photosynthesis. He was elected FRS in 2007 and FRSA in 2008. He is a member of the editorial board for Royal Society Interface, Biochemica et Biophysica Acta and of the Grant Advisory Board for the Royal Society of Edinburgh Cell and Molecular Biology Sectional Committee. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/ richardcogdell.
Learning environment
The institute has created an interactive atmosphere where the guiding principle is to conduct basic and applied research at the highest level. We provide excellent graduate training for both Masters and PhD students it is an exciting place to be a young researcher. There are opportunities to take part in research projects in laboratories that have excellent facilities and work with scientists who are leaders in their field. The institute also runs a vibrant seminar series. See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ biology/seminarseries.
Career prospects
Our degree programmes can prepare you for a career in academia, science management, commerce, and in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries. We run an industrial symposium, where representatives from the European Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical industry can discuss their companies and answer your questions on working in the industrial sector. Depending on the projects you undertake, you may acquire skills in specialist areas such as transcriptome analysis, plant and cell imaging, proteomics or biochemistry. You may also have the opportunity to participate in a dedicated career workshop on progression planning.
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Contact us
Linda Atkinson, Teaching Administrator Tel: +44 (0)141 330 8472 Email: linda.atkinson@glasgow.ac.uk If you are interested in studying for a research degree in proteomic technologies, contact: Angela Woolton, Doctoral Training Centre Administrator Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5428 Email: angela.woolton@glasgow.ac.uk.
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Being an international student, it was a difficult task to get adjusted to a completely new environment, but the friendly and cooperative environment at Glasgow made it so easy. During my studies, I got various chances to present my research at both national and international conferences. My supervisor supported me all the way and training courses run by the graduate school not only provided me with an opportunity to build my personal skills, but will also help me in establishing my career.
Asif Qureshi is a PhD student studying under the supervision of Dr Joanna Wilson in the Institute of Molecular, Cell & Systems Biology.
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Plant Science
This Masters programme gives you advanced knowledge and practical skills focused on the cellular and molecular basis of plant growth and development. It provides excellent research training for those intending to undertake a PhD. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time; up to 36 months parttime; PgDip: 9 months full-time This programme consists of two 20-week research projects and two taught advanced courses, normally in plant molecular biology and plant biotechnology. The main part of the degree is the two extensive research projects, which are based in the laboratories of Plant Science Group staff. Projects will be selected through discussion with individual staff members and will be focused on their areas of research. The projects are chosen to reflect students interests and the skills they wish to acquire and are of sufficient duration to enable real scientific progress to be made. Entry requirements: A second-class Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. Professional experience may be taken into account. Applicants should have taken courses in plant biology with molecular biology, cell biology, genetics and/or biochemistry.
PhD student Maria Papanatsiou attends to her plants in the Bower Building, a high-quality research and teaching facility offering growth rooms and atrium space.
Crop Biotechnology
This Masters programme in Crop Biotechnology will examine the important global issue of food security and the need to develop sustainable agriculture in a changing climate. It is focused on understanding molecular and genetic aspects of plant growth and development, and responses to external factors that impact on crop production, and how this information can be used in biotechnological approaches for crop improvement. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time The programme consists of lectures and tutorials and you will undertake practical laboratory training, exercises that develop transferable skills, a short business skills module, a dissertation and a project. Core courses: Crop biotechnology fundamentals; Crop biotechnology research skills; Crop biotechnology dissertation; Crop biotechnology applications; Research project in crop biotechnology. Entry requirements: A second-class Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. Professional experience may be taken into account. Applicants should have taken courses in plant biology with molecular biology, cell biology, genetics and/or biochemistry.
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Research environment
If you study with us, you will join a community of 26 postgraduate taught and 56 research students. Neuroscience & Psychology is a crosscollege institute, which means that it combines innovative research activity found in the College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences with leading expertise found in the College of Science & Engineering. In striving to advance the understanding of behaviour and the nervous system, our academics undertake innovative research that is in some cases world-leading: in the latest independent assessment of research quality, the RAE 2008, psychology at the University of Glasgow was rated in the UKs top ten for research. We link molecular discoveries to cells, to animal and human models, and translate these to the clinic. To achieve this, we have integrated neuroscience and psychology research within four centres of research excellence. These are: Neuroscience & Clinical Psychology Stroke & Brain Imaging Interdisciplinary Study of Social Interactions Cognitive Neuroimaging (CCNi). Stroke research is one area that benefits from strong collaborations between neuroscientists, psychologists and stroke clinicians. The Centre for Stroke & Brain Imaging runs a comprehensive translational research programme from the laboratory bench to the patients bedside, and back, with particular emphasis on acute stroke imaging, improvements in acute stroke care and longer- term rehabilitation strategies. For example, recent translational research focusing on novel, stem cell based regenerative therapy, brings together expertise in experimental animal models of stroke, advanced brain imaging methods, clinical trial design and methodology, and stroke care and rehabilitation.
The interests of our research centres overlap and complement each other. Our expertise therefore tracks from molecules to cells, to organs, to organisms and then through to the clinic and human behaviour, disease and treatment. This approach allows us to take advantage of contemporary research funding opportunities that are systems-oriented with a focus on interdisciplinary and translational programmes. We receive major funding from UK research councils (ESRC, BBSRC, EPSRC, MRC) and charities (the Wellcome Trust), with a translational excellence that attracts funding from industry. We also attract substantial EU and NIH funding to invest in our world-class research activities.
Learning environment
You will benefit from being taught by experts in the field from the UK and across the world. The use of subject specialists means our programme content always reflects the most recent research findings. The institute also runs a vibrant seminar series: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ neurosciencepsychology/seminars.
Our Director
Our Director, Professor Philippe Schyns, is an expert in the information processing mechanisms of face, object and scene categorisation in the brain. A Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Professor Schyns is currently Action Editor for Psychological Science, Editor of Frontiers in Perception Science, and Director of the Universitys Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging (CCNi). See: www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/philippeschyns.
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Contact us
Johanna Green, Postgraduate Administrator Tel: +44 (0)141 330 6173 Email: johanna.green@glasgow.ac.uk
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I would recommend Glasgow to other prospective students because of the quality of the teaching. Many staff are recognised not just throughout the UK but also internationally and their knowledge and assistance have helped guide me. My studies have provided me with a wide range of laboratory techniques and also with in-depth training on how to write scientific papers and presentations, both of which are essential skills required to pursue a career in science.
Philippa Fowler, MRes Brain Sciences: From Molecules to Mind
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/neurosciencepsychology Neuroscience & Psychology: taught programme Brain Sciences: From Molecules to Mind
Discovering how the brain functions normally and how it is affected by disease and injury presents major challenges for biological and medical research in the 21st century. This innovative new Masters programme in Brain Sciences: From Molecules to Mind provides opportunities for combining research training in brain imaging, psychology and neuroscience. If you are an international student intending to do a PhD in the UK, the programme serves as an excellent introduction to UK research approaches. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and undertake project work. Core courses: Molecules to mind: introducing you to neuroanatomy, neuronal signalling, and the brain imaging techniques of fMRI, MEG, EEG and TMS, with emphasis on the use of brain imaging to explore problems in the areas of attention, vision, cognition and language; and exploring novel techniques to analyse the complex brain signals measured by the techniques; Statistics: providing a detailed understanding of the use of descriptive statistics, ANOVA, and linear regression in brain science research, with a particular emphasis on robust methods. Optional courses: You will select two courses from a wide range of advanced courses covering topics in neuroscience and psychology including: advanced neuroanatomy, brain development, neuropsychology, brain diseases, neurotransmitters and drugs, neuronal circuits and memory, vision, attention, working memory, brain oscillations, ageing, plasticity, fMRI. You will also have the opportunity to learn the Matlab programming language, a powerful tool for data analysis. Research projects: This gives you the experience of performing two cutting-edge research projects in brain science laboratories of international standing, including writing up the results appropriately for peer-reviewed publication, and giving an oral presentation of your results. Entry requirements: At least a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent in neuroscience, physiology or a related discipline. For more information see: www.glasgow.ac.uk/ postgraduate/taught.
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Postgraduate research
One of the colleges key strengths lies in our multidisciplinary approach research is facilitated and encouraged between research institutes and schools, and also between colleges. Many of our state-of-the-art research buildings accommodate multidisciplinary teams from across multiple research institutes and schools, and many staff within schools have formal associations with research institutes. Many of our researchers have highly developed links with international and commercial partners and, in certain cases, opportunities exist to perform part of your postgraduate studies in another country or in the facilities of a company.
providing access to specialised equipment and facilities. Postgraduate research in anatomy is largely centred upon the outstanding staff and resources available within the school. Investment has also been made recently in sports and exercise science; graduates in this area occupy influential positions in centres of sporting excellence in the UK and beyond. Research strength, excellent facilities for postgraduate training and a lively location with a distinctive Scottish ambience ensure an outstanding experience for our students.
School of Medicine
The School of Medicine is renowned for pioneering research and superb facilities for postgraduate research in medicine, dentistry and nursing. We have one of the largest and most prestigious medical schools in Europe with over 170 research students carrying out research projects in both University and hospital locations. The school offers a wide range of research subject areas including: anaesthesia, cardiology, child health, clinical physics, dentistry, forensic medicine, gynaecology/obstetrics, haematology, human nutrition, medical education, medical genetics, medical sociology, nursing and midwifery, psychology and surgery.
Our schools
Research in the Schools of Medicine, Life Sciences and Veterinary Medicine is closely aligned to the research institute themes, and therefore many opportunities for postgraduate research in these areas are coordinated by the research institutes. These may be co-supervised by staff based in different schools and research institutes who possess distinct skills and backgrounds to provide the highest-quality training and the opportunity for students to utilise and integrate a wide range of experimental approaches into their research programme. Whether based in a research institute or a school, postgraduate students within the college will interact with researchers of international standing, and highly active seminar programmes bring distinguished scientists from all corners of the globe to Glasgow.
Medicine
Dr Alastair Gracie, Postgraduate Research Convenor Tel: +44 (0)141 330 8130 Email: alastair.gracie@glasgow.ac.uk
Veterinary Medicine Professor Sandy Love, Postgraduate Research Convenor Tel: +44(0)141 330 5999 Email: sandy.love@glasgow.ac.uk
As a postgraduate student within the college, you will benefit from our broad base of research knowledge, multidisciplinary strengths, international partnerships and state-of-the-art facilities.
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Biomedical Sciences
This Masters programme in Biomedical Sciences offers research training for students intending to proceed to PhD. It is largely based on individual research projects rather than coursework, and allows you to specialise in a particular area of study. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time; PgDip: 8 months fulltime Specialisms: Anatomy; Biotechnology; Cell engineering; Integrative mammalian biology; Medical biochemistry and molecular biology; Molecular genetics; Neuroscience; Proteomics. Research projects: You will undertake two 20-week research projects (one project only for the PgDip), as well as some advanced theoretical study. Projects are offered by a wide range of staff at the University as well as other local institutes, and some departments of the University of Strathclyde. Entry requirements: A second-class Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. Professional experience may be taken into account.
In addition, your choice of two research projects can offer additional specialisation or the chance to learn new skills. The projects can be based at the University or elsewhere. Please note that the MRes degree programme offers you the chance to choose from a wider range of courses than the taught MSc programme in Sport & Exercise Science. The MRes programme has two research projects and the MSc has one project. Please contact the course organisers for more information if you are uncertain which programme suits you better. Entry requirements: A second-class Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. Professional experience may be taken into account.
Exercise Science
This Masters programme in Exercise Science focuses on the effects of exercise, diet and lifestyle on human physiology and includes the whole span of physiology from cellularmolecular to population surveys. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time; PgDip: 8 months full-time; 18 months part-time You will study two taught courses chosen from a wide selection (only one course may be taken from within each group). You will also undertake one 20-week project (for the PgDip) or two projects (for the MRes). Semester 1: Muscle and exercise; Performance enhancement techniques; Sports injuries; Physical activity and public health; Exercise in medical conditions; Exercise in cardiac disease. Semester 2: Physiological adaptations to chronic exercise; Cardiovascular science; Bioethics; Factors affecting physical performance; Physical activity, fitness and metabolic health; Cell physiology of exercise. This degree programme offers the flexibility for you to specialise or to extend your range of knowledge. For example, if you are interested in elite performance in sport you might choose performance enhancement techniques, and physiological adaptations to chronic exercise. Alternatively, if you are interested in health promotion you may prefer physical activity and public health, and physical activity, fitness and metabolic health.
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Child Health
This programme in Child Health reflects the need for the NHS to deliver basic academic training in paediatrics to all trainees in Scotland, and to formally cover the level 1 Framework of Competencies for Training in Paediatrics outlined by the accrediting body, Royal College of Paediatrics & Child Health (RCPCH). Programme overview PgCert: 1224 months part-time PgDip: 12 months full-time This programme is a mix of online and face-toface teaching in a 50:50 ratio. Twenty 6-hour days of face-to-face teaching are supplemented by a similar amount of online lectures, formative exercises and compulsory reading. This allows a collegiate atmosphere to develop with less disruption to clinical experience. This certificate course is expected to take a total of 600 notional hours to complete. The content is split into five compulsory sections: Public health, mental health and child protection; Growth, nutrition, metabolic, gastroenterology, diabetes and endocrine; Development, neurology and senses; Respiratory and cardiovascular; Infectious disease, immunology,
Clinical Nutrition
This Masters programme provides health professionals with specialist knowledge and training in clinical nutrition and is designed for doctors, nurses and pharmacists. Programme overview MSc (Med Sci): 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will be taught through lectures, seminars and tutorials and you will have the opportunity to take part in lab and project work. The core components of the MSc in Clinical Nutrition programme are: Food and nutrient requirements and nutrition through the lifecycle; Digestion and absorption and nutritional metabolism; Dietary and nutritional assessment; Public health nutrition and eating behaviour; Clinical nutrition specialisation; Clinical case studies dissertation. Entry requirements: You must be a clinical health professional and therefore have a degree in medicine, nursing or pharmacy from an institution recognised by the University Court. If you apply for Clinical Nutrition but are ineligible you will be considered for Human Nutrition with specialisation in Clinical Nutrition (please see page 108 for Human Nutrition information). You are required to provide two references, a full degree transcript and a personal statement with your application.
Cardiovascular Practice
This novel multi-professional Masters in Cardiovascular Practice is offered collaboratively from a consortium of three universities Glasgow, Coventry and Glasgow Caledonian and is supported by the British Heart Foundation. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time If you are registering to complete the MSc at the University of Glasgow you must successfully complete the following: Core courses: Research methods and statistics; Research dissertation; One generic course from a list of seven available.
Clinical Physics
This Masters programme in Clinical Physics provides a thorough grounding in theoretical and practical aspects of clinical physics, giving you the opportunity to follow a successful career in the field, either in the UK or overseas (with reciprocity agreements covering EU member states). Programme overview MSc (Med Sci): 24 months part-time You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials, undertake a portfolio of practical work, and take part in project work and a research project. Core courses: Radiation physics; Anatomy and physiology; Clinical trials; Statistics and
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experimental techniques; Medical imaging physics; Professional software development; Scientific management; Medical imaging clinical; Radiotherapy; Clinical measurement; Professional practice placements; Research dissertation. Entry requirements: You should hold at least a 2.1 Honours degree in physics or a physical science (eg applied physics or electronic engineering) from an institution recognised by the University and wish to enter the medical physics profession. You are required to provide two references and a full degree transcript with your application. International applicants are advised to apply for the Clinical Radiation Physics programme, as overseas students would not normally be eligible for membership of the Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine. You will be taught through lectures, seminars and tutorials as well as taking part in practicals, including hands-on experience of using advanced analytical programs. Courses: Evidence-based medicine and research: which teaches core skills in critical review, communications, medical ethics, statistics and data handling, research methods and the principles of evidenced-based medicine, good clinical practice and clinical governance. Subspecialty: Critical care and medical informatics, which aims to consolidate clinical and basic science knowledge within the area of critical care medicine by way of tutorials, observation and discussion during ward rounds. The observation in clinical areas will enable you to gain a deeper understanding of the type and amount of data that is routinely recorded in the critical care environment. Teaching in medical informatics by clinical physicists will help you to understand the best way to collect, store and utilise different types of data to derive maximum benefit. It will also allow you to critically appraise the advantages and disadvantages of various approaches to analysing data and to appreciate the medico-legal and ethical issues involved in utilising medical data. Dissertation project: the research project or audit is a means of getting you to engage, in detail, with one topic or issue relevant to critical care medicine. Entry requirements: This programme is only open to medical graduates. You are expected to have at least three years postgraduate and at least six months experience of critical care medicine and possess basic computing skills. Ideally students would possess a postgraduate qualification such as the FRCA, MRCP , MRCS, MCEM or equivalent. Awarding institutions must be recognised by the University Court. presentations, evaluation) both stimulate your development of versatile skills and provide comprehensive references for your prospective employers. You will take three core courses: Evidence-based medicine and research: This course provides core skills in critical review, communications, medical ethics, statistics and data handling, research methods and the principles of evidence-based medicine, good clinical practice and clinical governance to equip you for your own medical practice and to prepare you for the following specialist courses. The principles of health professions education: This course will provide you with a critical understanding of knowledge of the evidence in the literature about teaching, learning, assessment, curriculum design, development and implementation with respect to healthprofessions education. You will develop skills in analysis and reflective practice in that the evidence in the literature will be considered in the context of your own professional situation. You will be introduced to models and examples of health-professions education in institutions, with a view to recognising, analysing and describing the educational principles that they serve, with respect to teaching, learning, assessment and curriculum matters. Evidence-based medicine and education dissertation: You will carry out a project that will be evaluated with a dissertation. This dissertation will either be on a medical, scientific or education topic. It may involve an experimental or audit study and will be full-time from May. The project is a means of getting you to engage in detail with a topic or issue relevant to your specialist medical science or education, to carry out an investigation into that topic or issue and to present an extended critical and evidencebased written argument including discussion of relevance to medical science. Entry requirements: You should have a medical degree and at least two years postgraduate experience in medicine.
Forensic Toxicology
This Masters programme will provide you with a strong foundation in the full range of skills required by a forensic toxicologist. It is of particular interest if you are keen to pursue or further a career in the field of forensic toxicology, including laboratory managers, court-reporting scientists and academics. Programme overview MSc (MedSci): 12 months full-time Courses: Principles of forensic toxicology; Laboratory techniques in forensic toxicology; Advanced instrumentation; Case review and interpretation; Research and laboratory management; Project.
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Entry requirements: You should have an Honours degree in chemistry, biochemistry, forensic science or other suitable chemical science. Applicants with appropriate skills and experience in the field of forensic toxicology will also be considered. You are required to provide two references and full degree transcript plus a personal statement indicating why you wish to study this programme at the University of Glasgow. Entry requirements: You must have a relevant professional degree, a first degree or equivalent and two years experience post-qualification. You are required to provide two references and a full degree transcript with your application.
Human Nutrition
Nutritional science is a subject of growing importance in many aspects of healthcare, lifestyle and industry. This Masters programme offers you the option to study one of four specialisations: public health nutrition, clinical nutrition, obesity and weight management or sports and exercise nutrition. Programme overview MSc (Med Sci): 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time; 18 months part-time The core teaching provides an excellent grounding in nutrition given in the form of lectures, practical sessions, debates, teamwork tasks, self-directed learning, seminars and tutorials. Much of the core teaching takes place two days per week; however, this is an intensive full-time programme and you will be expected to engage with self-directed learning on the other days of the week. Core courses: Food and nutrient requirements and nutrition through the lifecycle; Digestion, absorption and nutritional metabolism; Dietary and nutritional assessment; Public health and eating behaviour. Specialisation courses, one from the following: Public health nutrition; Clinical nutrition; Obesity and weight management; Sports and exercise nutrition. You will also undertake a research project in the summer semester based on your specialisation area. Entry requirements: An Honours degree in a suitable science subject, or an ordinary degree in a highly relevant subject such as nutrition or dietetics from an institution recognised by the University Court. You are required to provide two references, a full degree transcript and a personal statement with your application.
Health-Professions Education
These Doctoral and Masters programmes are appropriate for healthcare professionals who teach, assess, manage or administer undergraduate or postgraduate students and wish to extend their evidence-based knowledge and practice. The programme is for healthcare professionals who have an interest in medical, clinical or dental education. Programme overview DHPE: four years full-time; up to six years parttime; MSc (MedSci): 12 months full-time; 36 months part-time (local and distance learning) The programme is made up of the following courses: Principles of health-professions education; Research, management and the individual; Dissertation (10,00015,000 words); Thesis (50,000 words). Entry requirements: You should be a healthcare professional with a degree in a healthcare discipline and should have access to a health professions teaching environment. You are required to provide two references and a full degree transcript with your application.
Health Care
This Masters in Health Care is designed for the growing number of graduate nurses wishing to work in clinical leadership or extended roles in clinical practice as nurse practitioners or consultant nurses. Programme overview MSc (Med Sci): 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time; 18 months part-time; PgCert: 5 months full-time; 10 months part-time This programme is made up of three components: a core course, taught over a 20-week teaching period from September to February; optional courses taught in three tenweek blocks; and a dissertation. Core course: Research methods and statistics: this consolidates and extends your knowledge of research methods and provides you with sufficient information to write a research proposal. This course is a prerequisite for the research-based dissertation or work-based audit and service evaluation. Optional courses: Undertaking the following 20-credit courses optional courses can lead to a named award in: Cancer care; Palliative care; Cardiac care; Critical care; Stroke care; Lymphoedema; Health care chaplaincy. Cancer/palliative care: Assessing and managing symptoms; Advanced communication skills. Cancer care: Scientific basis of cancer. Cardiac care: Managing cardiovascular risk; Managing cardiac care; Principles of acute cardiac management. Critical care: Contemporary issues & systematic approaches; Developing clinical practice. Stroke care: Clinical issues in stroke care. Lymphoedema options: Managing complex lymphoedema; Lymphoedema: specialist practitioner. Healthcare chaplaincy: Providing spiritual and religious care in health care; Professional practice in spiritual and religious care in health care. Generic options: Advanced health care practice; Education for professional practice; Ethics for professional practice; Management for change in health care.
Healthcare Chaplaincy
This programme is the culmination of work to develop healthcare chaplaincy as a profession. It is available to all healthcare chaplains and graduates considering healthcare chaplaincy as a profession. Programme overview PgCert: 12 months part-time The programme is designed as a part-time programme of study days and distance learning to enable working chaplains to study and gain a professional qualification. Core courses: Providing spiritual and religious care in healthcare; Professional practice in spiritual and religious care; Advanced healthcare practice. Entry requirements: The programme is available to all healthcare chaplains and graduates considering healthcare chaplaincy as a profession and becoming UK Board Registered Chaplains. You should be working in post as a chaplain or have arranged a chaplaincy placement for the duration of the programme. You are required to provide two references and a full degree transcript with your application.
Medical Genetics
This Masters programme, established in 1984, is delivered by dedicated teaching and clinical staff of the University as well as by clinicians and clinical scientists of the NHS (hospitalbased) West of Scotland Regional Genetics Service. It is designed to give you a working knowledge of the principles and practice of medical genetics, allowing you to evaluate, choose and interpret appropriate genetic investigations for individuals, families and populations with genetic disease. Programme overview MSc (Med Sci): 12 months full-time; (24 months part-time by special arrangement) Teaching and learning methods: A variety of methods are used, including problem-based
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learning, case-based learning, lectures, tutorials and laboratories. These are supplemented by a wide range of course-specific electronic resources for additional learning and selfassessment. As a result, you will develop a wide range of skills relevant to careers in research, diagnostics or clinical genetics; these skills include teamworking, data interpretation and experimental design. You will utilise the primary scientific literature as an information resource, although textbooks such as our own Essential Medical Genetics will also be useful. Courses: Molecular genetics; Cytogenetics; Biochemical genetics; Clinical skills; Case investigations; Integrated case studies; Research skills. You will also carry out an independent piece of research on a relevant topic, either a laboratorybased or library/clinical data-based investigation and write this up as a dissertation. Entry requirements: You should have a degree in medicine or dentistry or equivalent qualification, or a degree with Honours or equivalent in a biological science. You are required to provide two references and a full degree transcript with your application.
Paediatric Science
This Masters is the only programme of its kind in the UK. It is aimed specifically at clinicians tasked with developing new services within their chosen subspecialty. The programme provides a unique exposure to international standard tertiary paediatric subspecialties including respiratory medicine, paediatric rheumatology, paediatric surgery (day surgery), paediatric gastroenterology and endocrinology. Programme overview MSc (ClinSci): 12 months full-time There are three components to the programme. Core course: Evidence-based medicine and research, which provides core skills in critical review, communications, medical ethics, statistics and data handling, research methods and the principles of evidence-based medicine, good clinical practice and clinical governance in order to equip you for your own medical practice and to prepare you for specialist courses. It will provide knowledge important in performing and understanding research. Subspecialty: Paediatric science and audit, which provides you with a rigorous scientific basis for evidence-based practice in a child health specialism outside the UK in order to prepare you to lead and develop services on return to your country of origin. Paediatric project and research: The research project and in-depth review are a means of getting you to engage in detail with one topic or issue relevant to your specialist medical subject, and then to carry out original research into that topic or issue, and to present an extended written argument. It requires you to draw on your knowledge of key concepts and theories gained from other parts of the programme, together with your in-depth knowledge of research methods and analytical techniques in order to present a coherent Masters-level project. Where appropriate, the research project may be an evidence-based service and business plan for your subspecialty in your home country. Entry requirements: You should have a medical or other recognised health professional degree and at least three years relevant experience in your health profession. You are required to provide two references, a full degree transcript and transcript key, a CV or rsum and a brief statement of which specialism you prefer to study. Options include gastroenterology, PICU, neonatal, respiratory medicine, rheumatology, paediatric oncology, paediatric surgery, endocrinology, paediatric pharmacy. This is to ensure we have clinical staff to supervise your individual study.
Molecular Medicine
This Masters programme in Molecular Medicine offers you the opportunity to work alongside some of the foremost cancer researchers in state-of-the-art research laboratories. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time You will take six compulsory courses, two of which are 20-week research placements. The programme begins with a three-week course: an introduction to molecular research, which incorporates an intensive laboratory-based component and introduces you to bench research prior to starting your placements in the research labs. Core courses: Introduction to molecular research; Research placement 1 and 2; Tutorial series 1 and 2; Research proposal. Entry requirements: You should have a 2.1 Honours degree in molecular biology or a related biomedical science; or a degree in medicine. Alternative qualifications will be considered on individual merit. In all cases, your first degree must have sufficient background in molecular biology, and you must have sufficient practical laboratory experience. You are required to provide two references and full degree transcript plus a personal statement indicating why you wish to study this programme at the University of Glasgow.
For me, taking part in the Molecular Medicine MRes programme was an invaluable experience. I was interested in a career in scientific research but unsure if a PhD was for me. I was also lacking confidence in my practical abilities in the lab. However, almost immediately after starting this programme I felt myself becoming increasingly confident in both the lab environment and my own practical ability. The opportunity to complete two projects in different labs is, in my opinion, one of the greatest strengths of this programme as it allows students to gain experience of another working environment and many more experimental techniques than would be possible in a singleproject Masters. Carolyn Low, MRes Molecular Medicine
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Sports Nutrition
This programme, one of only a few short programmes offered in sports nutrition, will extend your knowledge and skills in sports nutrition, basic sports science or nutritional and dietary assessment. Programme overview PgCert: 4 months full-time (mid-January to midMay); or part-time equivalent Core course: Sports and exercise nutrition. Optional courses (one chosen): Introduction to sports and exercise science for nutritionists; Dietary and nutritional assessment. Entry requirements: You must have an undergraduate or postgraduate degree in nutrition, dietetics or related subject with a substantial component in nutrition from an institution recognised by the University Court. You are required to provide two references, a full degree transcript and a personal statement with your application.
Surgical Oncology
Surgical oncology is a recognised specialty in surgery in the UK. This Masters programme, unique in the UK, supplements the standard medical curriculum and basic surgical training and provides an attractive and exciting learning opportunity for overseas medical graduates. Programme overview MSc (ClinSci): 12 months full-time Core course: Evidence-based medicine and research. Specialist course: Surgical oncology, which will develop your in-depth knowledge of the molecular mechanisms underlying cancer development, progression and treatment; develop your in-depth knowledge of the surgical oncology literature relevant to current clinical practice; and develop your clinical skills with respect to critical assessment and treatment planning in surgical oncology. Project/dissertation: You will engage in detail with one topic or issue relevant to your specialist medical subject, to carry out an investigation into that topic and to present an extended written argument. You will be required to draw on your knowledge of key concepts and theories gained from other parts of the programme, together with your knowledge of research methods and analytical techniques, in order to present a coherent, Masters-level dissertation. Entry requirements: You should have a degree in medicine and approximately three years clinical experience. You are required to provide two references, a full degree transcript, a CV (rsum) and a personal statement stating why you wish to study this programme at the University of Glasgow.
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Fixed prosthodontics: Intracoronal restorations; Indirect restorations to restore/replace teeth. Research course: You will be encouraged to carry out a concise research project using existing facilities alongside our research themes. Entry requirements: You should have a universally recognised dental qualification. All courses are compulsory. Year one: Core course; Basic orthodontic science; Aetiology of malocclusion; Orthodontic assessment. Year two: Classification of malocclusion; Orthodontic technique; Risks of orthodontic treatment. Year three: Multidisciplinary care; Research practice. Entry requirements: You should have a universally recognised dental qualification with two years postgraduation (clinical) experience. It is desirable for international students to have obtained MFDS from one of the Royal Colleges.
Orthodontics
This taught Doctorate provides training for graduates in orthodontics. It produces good clinicians but also good scientists, promoting high-quality clinical, academic and research standards within a supportive environment. Programme overview DClinDent: 36 months The programme is full-time (46 weeks per year) over three years. About half of the time is spent on clinical placement with the rest divided between academic coursework, research work and personal study.
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Graduate School
Research environment
Our postgraduate students are able to draw on the research strengths of our academics. With an annual research income exceeding 30 million, our college is home to more than 500 research staff and 600 PhD students. According to the most recent Research Assessment Exercise, four subject areas in the college are ranked in the UKs top ten computing science, electrical engineering, physics and psychology. We have expertise in the core disciplines of chemistry, computing science, engineering, geography and earth sciences, mathematics and statistics, physics and astronomy, and psychology. Our expertise in interdisciplinary areas includes research into digital economy, energy, healthcare technology, sensors and intelligent imaging, sustainable high value manufacturing, and underpinning capabilities.
Career development
We support your research skills and professional development through a range of training initiatives, resources and courses. For research students, our training programme offers the necessary skills to further your career, including courses such as scientific writing, presentational skills, project management, entrepreneurship and communicating science to the public. Professional bodies, such as the Chartered Institute for Information Technology (BCS), British Psychological Society (BPS), Royal Statistical Society (RSS) and London Mathematical Society (LMS), organise various events and courses, some of which are aimed at postgraduate students. You may also be able to take advantage of opportunities to network with potential future employers, or train to become a graduate teaching assistant.
of Chemistry School of Computing Science School of Engineering School of Geographical & Earth Sciences School of Mathematics & Statistics School of Physics & Astronomy School of Psychology
Research institute of Neuroscience & Psychology (joint with the College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences) Contact Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4269 Email: scieng-gradschool@glasgow.ac.uk
Institute
Learning environment
Our degree programmes allow you to develop your existing knowledge and skills base or translate these from a related discipline to one in science and engineering. As a student in our college, you will benefit from support for all aspects of your study experience from application, admission, registration and induction to training, progression and examination. We tailor our provision to your individual needs and will assign you an adviser of studies who will be available for consultation throughout your time at Glasgow.
With over 30 years experience in the field, Glasgow has long been at the centre of developments in the nanosciences. The construction of the purpose-built James Watt Nanofabrication Centre means that Glasgow can now boast some world-leading research and production facilities in the heart of the city.
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Research programmes
We offer the following research degrees: PhD (Doctor of Philosophy): three to four years full-time or six years part-time study; EngD (Engineering Doctorate): four or five years full-time study with an emphasis on research in an industrial context; MSc (Master of Science) by Research: one or two years full-time or two or three years parttime study, depending on prior qualifications.
Taught programmes
We offer around 60 taught postgraduate programmes. These are listed by subject on the following pages.
How do I apply?
The online application is the quickest and easiest way of applying to Glasgow. The system allows you to fill out the standard application form online and submit this to the University immediately: www.glasgow.ac.uk/postgraduate/ howtoapplyforataughtdegree. You can also attach supporting documents including references, certificates and a transcript of previous studies. There are instructions throughout the online form to help you complete your application. You may save and return to your application as many times as you wish before submitting it. You may also access your application again to upload additional documents such as your language test or final transcript. Some programmes require additional information or documents. Please ensure you check prior to making your application.
How do I apply?
The online application is the quickest and easiest way of applying to Glasgow. The system allows you to fill out the standard application form online and submit this to the University immediately: www.glasgow.ac.uk/research/opportunities. You can also attach supporting documents including research proposal, references, certificates and a transcript of previous studies. There are instructions throughout the online form to help you complete your application. Before submitting, you may save and return to your application as many times as you wish within 42 days. You may also access your application again to upload additional documents such as your language test or final transcript.
I feel privileged by the resources and opportunities we have available to us; they afford us an environment where we can conduct extremely high-quality research.
Scott Love, PhD student
When do I apply?
International applications (non-EU): Friday, 19 July 2013 UK and EU applications: Friday, 23 August 2013
When do I apply?
Many research programmes begin in October each year and applications should be submitted before 31 July if possible, for study in October.
Entry requirements
Normally a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject unless otherwise stated.
Entry requirements
Normally a 2.1 Honours degree (GPA 3.0 or above) (or Masters) in a relevant discipline. In special circumstances, other academic qualifications, or professional qualifications or experience, may be recognised as equivalent.
Glasgows greats Glasgow has a history of producing high achievers, including the founder of organic crystallography Monteath Robertson. Scan the QR code or see www.glasgow.ac.uk/ monteathrobertson for more information.
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School of Chemistry
Chemistry
The School of Chemistry has a long history of excellence in research, and offers a superb environment with world-leading research groups and facilities.
Contact Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4708 Email: pg-enquiries@chem.glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
The schools research covers all aspects of chemistry, as well as the interfaces with biology, materials science, medicine and physics. Our research contributes to solutions to the major challenges such as healthcare technologies, manufacturing of the future and providing energy in a changing world. We are experts at designing new catalysts for the chemical and pharmaceutical industries while using advanced molecular technologies to create self-fabricating materials. The latest laser technology is used to find novel ways of controlling matter and study materials used in energy storage while our researchers are hard at work creating new molecular devices to harvest the light of the sun, support the hydrogen economy, and protect our environment. In our labs, we dream up and synthesise new molecules that are used as programmable drugs and medical imaging labels while attempting to make life from inorganic matter. Our research groupings are: Catalysis and synthesis Chemical biology, molecular medicine, synthetic biology Complex chemical systems Dynamics and structure (physical chemistry) Nanoscience and materials chemistry.
Learning environment
We work in close collaboration with industry and other research organisations in the UK and abroad to provide a truly dynamic learning environment. Industrial scientists many from pharmaceutical companies give regular presentations. Leading companies input on course content and conduct lectures, teaching and seminars. You will have opportunities to meet people from the industry at the open events and site visits we arrange. We are a member of WestCHEM, which links the chemistry research schools of the Universities of Glasgow and Strathclyde to create a dynamic research and learning environment. The WestCHEM Graduate School has around 240 Chemistry PhD students. Around 100 of these are based at Glasgow, engaged in a wide range of chemistry research. WestCHEM is also part of ScotCHEM, a major new collaborative venture between the major schools of chemistry in Scottish universities. Through our collaboration with WestCHEM, ScotCHEM, and a range of outstanding international universities, we are able to attract the best students and postdoctoral researchers to work on internationally leading research and offer a lively, challenging and rewarding learning experience.
Career prospects
The schools research produces fundamental new scientific insights while contributing directly to the UK economy and producing excellent chemical scientists who find employment in industry and academia. Career opportunities include the chemical or pharmaceutical industry, from bench work and instrumentation to regulatory affairs, health and safety, and intellectual property/patents. Careers in research are available within a variety of sectors.
We are able to attract the best students and postdoctoral researchers to work on internationally leading research and offer a lively, challenging and rewarding learning experience.
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Chemistry
The Masters in Chemistry will extend your depth and breadth of knowledge in all branches of chemistry, suitable for a professional chemist capable of conducting research. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time You will attend lectures and tutorials during two semesters. You will undertake a summer research project which will provide practical application and consolidation of earlier work and enhance your ability to do independent work and present results effectively. Core courses: Inorganic, organic and physical chemistry; Frontiers of chemistry; Chemistry problems. Special topics in inorganic, organic and physical chemistry. Entry requirements: Normally at least a 2.1 Honours degree in chemistry (or equivalent).
Research interests
Inorganic chemistry The inorganic chemistry section is engaged in extensive research programmes in main group inorganic synthetic chemistry, selfassembly processes, heterogeneous catalysis, organometallic chemistry, solid-state and materials chemistry, inorganic-organic hybrid materials and molecular magnetism. Organic chemistry This section is focused on research in the following areas: New synthetic methodology development Chemical biology: synthesis of probe molecules and therapeutic agents Supramolecular chemistry and the synthesis of molecular devices Synthesis of bioactive natural products. Physical chemistry Research in this section covers a wide range of interests and the techniques used include magnetic resonance, laser spectroscopy, diffraction, electronic and vibrational spectroscopy, and computer-based calculation and modelling. We have strong, internationally competitive research programmes in the following areas: Solid-state NMR spectroscopy; Terahertz spectroscopy and ultrafast dynamics; Raman optical activity; Photochemistry; Heterogeneous catalysis; Biomineralisation; Protein structure and function; Surface spectroscopy and nanoscience; Computational and quantum chemistry. We offer supervision across most areas of chemistry. To find out more about potential supervisors, view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/schools/chemistry/staffacademic. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying.
Contact us
Professor Graeme Cooke, Head of the Chemistry Graduate School Email: pg-enquiries@chem.glasgow.ac.uk Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5500 www.glasgow.ac.uk/chemistry/postgraduate researchopportunities Applications for admission to the WestCHEM Graduate School in the School of Chemistry should be made via the College Graduate School website at www.glasgow.ac.uk/colleges/ scienceengineering/graduateschool.
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Computing Science
The 2008 Research Assessment Exercise rates the School of Computing Science as one of the top ten schools for research in the UK.
Contact Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4256 Email: info@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
The school is one of the foremost in the UK and provides an invigorating and friendly working environment. It is large enough to sustain a rich diversity of interests, but small enough for everyone to know everyone else. Our ethos is that of a team working together to deliver highquality research and teaching. The school has 30 academic staff, 70 research students, 30 research assistants and six research fellows. It hosts 24 EPSRC-funded research projects, six EC-funded projects, seven industrially funded projects, and several research fellowships. Grants and fellowships currently total more than 6 million. Our vibrant research culture strongly encourages cross disciplinary collaboration with each research group running its own seminar series as well as contributing to a weekly research forum.
the practical aspects of your subjects related profession and the philosophical considerations of research in your particular field. We have strong links with industry and you will have opportunities to meet speakers from a range of businesses and organisations. Talks are held every week in the school by internal and invited speakers on a variety of subject areas. Events such as workshops and conferences are organised and held on campus. Employers also regularly visit to make recruitment presentations, and often seek to recruit our graduates. According to the International Student Barometer 2011 over 90% of our international students were satisfied with their learning experience within the School of Computing Science.
Career prospects
Our degree programmes provide breadth, depth and personal development to create skilled, confident and successful professionals who are well regarded in the world of work. On graduating, you will be qualified to take up key posts in industry and academia. Our graduates are highly employable and can look forward to rewarding careers designing and building the digital technologies that underpin the global economy and, indeed, every aspect of human activity from healthcare through music to making the natural environment sustainable. Career opportunities include responsible positions requiring computing science research skills, not only in the IT sector but also in many other sectors such as education, engineering, health services, financial services, government, manufacturing, retail and transport.
Learning environment
Computing science and software engineering are young and exciting disciplines which are rapidly evolving. They include, among other things, theoretical studies of algorithms, experimental investigations in areas ranging from human computer interaction to network performance, and practical engineering challenges in designing and implementing efficient, reliable software to meet specifications. Our postgraduate students benefit from joining a research-led environment, which offers the best possible support and supervision, as well as the chance to apply independent research skills and knowledge in project work. Practitioners and experts in the field are on hand to advise on
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Research interests
Computer vision and graphics 3D data extraction, modelling and imaging, data compression, rendering algorithms, 2D animation, distributed image processing, medical/biological image processing. Embedded, networked and distributed systems Next Generation Internet, network measurement, control and management, analytical modelling, network resilience, quality of service, networked multimedia, distributed algorithms, hardware acceleration, functional programming, wireless sensor networks, home networks. Formal analysis, theory and algorithms Model-checking, algorithms for matching problems, process algebras, modelling complex and reactive systems, programming language semantics, constraint programming, computational biology, quantum computation, theorem proving and deductive reasoning. Humancomputer interaction Accident analysis, design and evaluation of interfaces to mobile devices, multi-modal interaction, gesture recognition, sound in interfaces, applications of haptic and mobile technology, social and ubiquitous computing. Information retrieval Web search, large-scale IR systems, evaluation and usability, social media retrieval, multimedia retrieval, collaborative search and recommendation, adaptive search systems. Software engineering and information security Software tools and methods, computing and education, usable security and authentication, cryptography and steganography, digital forensics, dependable sociotechnical systems, programming languages, software engineering for space-based and safety-critical systems. Inference, dynamics and interaction Machine learning and modern inference techniques, dynamic systems, control theory, interaction design, systems biology, cognitive neuroscience, multimedia content analysis, social signal processing. We offer supervision across most areas of computing science. To find out more about potential supervisors, view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/schools/computing/staff. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying.
Making connections
Professor of Communications Systems Joe Sventek is exploring humancomputer interaction and intelligent router design to revolutionise the world of home networking. Over 300 million people worldwide have home broadband connections to the Internet. Many households use wired and wireless networking to allow multiple computers to share the broadband connection and to enable media sharing, gaming and other applications. However, current home networking technology remains largely user-unfriendly. Professor Sventek and his team are working on a prototype to tackle the issue: We wanted to redesign the home network so that it just comes out of the box and works, and empowers homeowners to control their networks in a way they understand. Were building a wireless router that contains all of the intelligence in our system; it is essentially logging every bit of traffic thats going through the system, but makes it available in a way thats really easy to access. If a customer wants to see, for example, how much traffic there was on the web or on iPlayer, we can do that kind of aggregation over periods of time. We can also provide real-time views of the top end-users of the home network, allowing the customer to assert control. So, for instance, if Junior is doing BitTorrent downloads when hes not supposed to, Dad can see that. The system includes a touch-screen display with three panels, which the homeowner can use to allocate IP address leases to devices in the home networks range. The middle panel indicates very limited network access based on a renewable, 30-second lease. An icon of a newly connected device remains here until the homeowner decides to drag it either to the right-hand panel, allowing a longer lease for trusted devices, or to the left-hand panel, where it is blocked permanently from accessing the network. Initial testing in several UK households has resulted in very positive feedback, and Professor Sventek is keen to involve PhD students in the next stages of the systems development. The team are already investigating options for one or more spinout companies to manufacture the product, third-party troubleshooting and support, and scaling the system for local networks in larger environments, such as schools and small and medium-sized enterprises. www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/josephsventek
Contact us
Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5322 Email: helen@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk www.glasgow.ac.uk/computing/research/ postgraduate
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Optional courses (six courses chosen): Advanced networking and communications; Advanced operating systems; Algorithmics; Artificial intelligence; Computer architecture; Constraint programming; Digital image processing; Distributed algorithms and systems; Functional programming; Human-centred security; Human computer interaction; Humancomputer interaction design and evaluation; Information retrieval; IT architecture; Internet technology; Machine learning; Mobile humancomputer interaction; Modelling reactive systems; Multimedia systems and applications; Research readings in information security; Safety critical systems; Enterprise computing; Software project management; Security and cryptography. Entry requirements: A minimum of a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA 3.2/4 or equivalent) with computing as a major subject.
Core courses: General readings in computing science; Professional skills and issues; Development project proposal; Development project; Component-based software engineering; Requirements engineering; Programming; Information systems and databases; Systems and networks. Optional courses (four courses chosen): Advanced programming; Algorithms and data structures; Digitisation; Document encoding; Internet technology; Multimedia systems; Security and cryptography; Software project management. Humancomputer interaction design and evaluation. Project: MSc students additionally undertake a substantial application project, based on a problem statement developed during the earlier project proposal course. Entry requirements: A degree in a subject other than computing science: either a cognate subject such as mathematics, physics or engineering (minimum 2.2 Honours degree or equivalent, eg GPA 3.0/4) or a degree in a non-cognate subject (minimum 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent, eg GPA 3.2/4).
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Distributed algorithms and systems; Enterprise computing; Functional programming; Humancentred security; Humancomputer interaction; Information retrieval; IT architecture; Machine learning; Mobile humancomputer interaction; Modelling reactive systems; Multimedia systems and applications; Research readings in information security; Safety critical systems; Security and cryptography. Entry requirements: A minimum of a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA 3.2/4 or equivalent) with computing as a major subject.
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School of Engineering
Engineering
We have been delivering world-class engineering education and research for more than 150 years and are the oldest School of Engineering in the UK.
Contact Tel: +44 (0)141 330 2032 Email: enquiries@eng.glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
The School of Engineering has a research income of 12 million each year, providing unique facilities that support over 200 staff and research students. In the most recent independent review of research quality (RAE 2008), electrical and electronic engineering at Glasgow was rated in the UKs top ten. The school provides a superb research environment with world-leading research groups and facilities. Our work covers a broad range of engineering subjects, as well as the interfaces with biology, chemistry, computer science, medicine and physics. Working at the cutting edge of technology, our research supports industrial innovation, helps preserve the environment and assists in the advancement of medical and biological science. Our research is organised into the following research divisions: Aerospace sciences Biomedical engineering Infrastructure and environment Electronics and nanoscale engineering Systems, power and energy. The school is an active partner in the Glasgow Research Partnership in Engineering (GRPE), which is a major programme of investment in collaborative research involving the Scottish Funding Council and the four universities in the West of Scotland.
By continuing to invest in internationally excellent research and by providing an outstanding learning environment for talented students from all backgrounds, our aim is to retain our status as one of the select number of institutions which are regarded as being the best in the world. As part of GRPE, inter-institutional research is being promoted by our joint graduate school. Postgraduate students and research staff benefit from access to leading researchers across a full range of disciplines, combined with the opportunity to use equipment and infrastructure in a more efficient and productive manner. This promotes the interdisciplinary and inter-institutional culture that is vital for a vibrant research environment. Our postgraduate students benefit from the schools impressive links with industry. Over 250 international companies have undertaken commercial or collaborative work with the James Watt Nanofabrication Centre in the last five years and over 90 different universities from around the globe presently have collaborations with Glasgow in nanoscience and nanotechnology. We are also a preferred course provider for BAE Systems, one of only three in the UK.
Career prospects
Exciting job opportunities are available to our postgraduate students in Scotland, the UK and beyond after graduation. There is a strong demand for graduates in all fields of engineering, and careers options include renewable energy, automotive electronics, engineering design, software development, civil and environmental engineering consultation, aerospace systems, desalination technology and thermal science, structural engineering, and more.
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Research interests
Electronics and nanoscale engineering Nanofabrication advanced nanofabrication; multi-scale heterogeneous integration Microsystems technology integrated sensors; terahertz technologies and systems; embedded nanotechnology Advanced electronic devices and materials molecular beam epitaxy; emerging electronic components, circuits and systems Optoelectronics photonic materials, devices and integrated optics; photovoltaics Device modelling nano-CMOS device and circuit fluctuation simulation; Monte Carlo simulation of electronic devices VLSI Microwave integrated circuit design. Systems, power and energy Dynamics and systems High-power ultrasonics: surgical and manufacturing use Energy energy scavenging, renewables, power systems/transmission Machines and drives Materials and structures Power electronics. Biomedical engineering Cell and tissue engineering Microfluidics and lab-on-a-chip Rehabilitation and assistive engineering Rehabilitation technology Systems biology. Infrastructure and environment Water quality and sustainable water resources for developing countries Multiscale simulation of materials and structures Fluvial and coastal engineering Environmental engineering Testing and modelling of unsaturated soils. Aerospace sciences Space flight and dynamics Low speed aerodynamics Experimental wind-tunnel facilities Sports performance Computational fluid dynamics Wind and turbulence around large structures. To find out more about potential supervisors, view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/ schools/engineering/staff. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying.
Contact us
Tel: +44 (0)141 330 7478/7479 Email: scieng-gradschool@glasgow.ac.uk www.glasgow.ac.uk/engineering/ phdopportunities
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Engineering: taught programmes
Entry requirements for Engineering programmes are normally a 2.2 Honours degree or equivalent in a relevant subject. Core courses: Contemporary issues in human resource management; Managing creativity and innovation; Managing innovative change; Marketing management; Operations management; Project management. Semester 2: You will study engineering courses, which aim to enhance your group working and project management capability at the same time as improving your depth of knowledge in chosen aerospace engineering subjects. Core courses: Integrated systems design project; Aerospace engineering project management Optional courses (a choice of three): Flight mechanics 3; Propulsion and turbomachinery 3; Elements of law for engineers; Aircraft structural analysis and design 3; Aircraft vibration and aeroelasticity 4; High-speed aerodynamics 4; Turbomachinery 4; Computational fluid dynamics 4; Industrial aerodynamics 4. Project or dissertation: You will undertake individual project or dissertation work in the summer period (MayAugust). This will give you an opportunity to apply and consolidate the course material and enhance your ability to do independent work, as well as present results in the most appropriate format. Project and dissertation options are closely linked to staff research interests. September entry students have a choice of management dissertation topics in addition to aerospace engineering projects, and January entry students have a choice of aerospace engineering projects.
Aeronautical Engineering
The Masters in Aeronautical Engineering focuses on advanced engineering subjects required for understanding modern design of both fixed and rotary wing aircraft. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time
You will attend taught courses and take part in laboratory-based assignments and field visits. You will be further assessed in the coursework, report writing and oral presentations. The summer period is dedicated to project work, with either academic or industrial placements providing the context for your project. Semester 1 courses (six chosen): Viscous shear flows; Composites airframe structures; Aircraft flight dynamics; Aircraft operations and systems 5; Aerospace control 1; Space flight dynamics 5; Aerospace design project 4. Semester 2 courses (six chosen): Introduction to computational fluid dynamics; Methods for turbomachinery design; Introduction to aeroelasticity; Introduction to wind engineering; Flight testing 4 (places are subject to availability and a possible separate fee); Autonomous vehicle guidance systems; Aerospace control 2; Advanced concepts; Space applications; Research techniques; Field visits. Additionally you will undertake work over the summer: individual project and MSc dissertation.
Aerospace Systems
Aerospace systems are the future of the aerospace industry and constitute the major component of all modern aircraft. They are the essential onboard systems that ensure the safe and accurate operation of all aerospace vehicles, from civil passenger planes to sophisticated unmanned aerial vehicles. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time You will attend taught courses and undertake an individual project and dissertation during the summer. Semester 1 core courses: Aerospace control 1; Aircraft handling qualities and control; Aircraft operations and systems; Navigation systems; Simulation of aerospace systems. Semester 2 advanced courses: Aerospace control 2; Autonomous vehicle guidance systems; Radar and electro-optic systems; Fault detection, isolation and reconfiguration; Real time control hardware implementation. Project: Individual project; Aerospace systems team design project.
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Civil Engineering
This Masters in Civil Engineering will provide you with the opportunity to deepen your knowledge in specific technical areas; to engage with others in tackling the design of multi-disciplinary construction projects and to gain further insight into management issues. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time, 24 months part-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time, 18 months part-time The programme consists of five core courses, drawn principally from the three main branches of civil engineering, plus a choice of up to five optional courses. MSc students also write a dissertation, based on their individual project. Core course: Applied engineering mechanics; Structural concrete; Geotechnical design project; Multidisciplinary design project: Severn Barrage; Project management. Optional courses: Structural analysis; Structural design; Structural dynamics and earthquake engineering; Material nonlinearity; Geotechnical engineering; Geotechnical project: Carsington dam; Ground water and tunnelling; Water engineering; Environmental biotechnology; Water resources development project; Operations management; Contemporary issues in HR; Managing change; Principles of GIS; Catchment management; Hydrology; Engineering earth science; Renewable energy. This programme is subject to approval.
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Electronics Design
This Masters in Electronics Design covers specialised elements of the design of electronic circuits and systems, along with additional optional courses on the wider context of electronic systems in applications. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time In addition to taught work and practical assignments, you will also complete a joint research project in one of our state-of-the-art laboratories. The courses normally on offer (depending on demand and staff availability) are: Compulsory courses: Analogue CMOS circuit design; Microwave and millimetre wave circuit design; VLSI design and CAD; Digital Signal processing 1. Optional courses (two chosen): Computer communications 1; Electrical energy systems; Micro and nano-technology; Modelling and control of dynamic systems; Optical communications; Computer communications 2.
Optional courses: Control; Lasers; Mechanics of solids and structures; Desalination technology; Materials and mechanics; Dynamics and control; Automotive technology. Project: The project subjects will be closely allied with staff research interests.
Mechanical Engineering
This Masters programme provides advanced experience of the central role that design takes in both innovation and the integration of mechanical engineering. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and take part in lab, project and team work and study trips in the UK. Core courses: Innovative engineering design; Integrated engineering design.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/engineering Mechatronics
The Masters in Mechatronics is a fusion of mechanical, electrical, electronic and control engineering. Modern industry depends for its success in global markets on its ability to integrate these subjects into both the manufacturing process and innovative products and systems. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time The MSc comprises two taught semesters, each comprising compulsory and optional courses, and a major project which may be industrial. You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and take part in lab, project and team work. Core courses normally offered include: Control; Data signal processing 1; Integrated system design; Robotics 4. Optional courses: Lasers; Innovative engineering design; Advanced manufacture. Advanced control systems; Lasers M5; Computer communications 2.
Sustainable Energy
The MSc in Sustainable Energy is an interdisciplinary programme that will equip you for employment within the international energy sector. This programme addresses all the key aspects of sustainable energy, from the most advanced technologies through to ethical and economic considerations. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time You will take a combination of core and optional courses, and a project which you will select from a list of standard projects or you can suggest a project of your own choosing. The core courses normally on offer include: Theory and principles of sustainability; Integrated systems design project M; Environmental ethics and behavioural change; Electrical energy systems. The optional courses normally on offer include: Project planning, appraisal and implementation M; Methods for turbomachinery design M; Impacts of climate change; Energy conversion systems; Introduction to wind energy; Renewable energy; Energy and the environment.
Telecommunication Electronics
This Masters in Telecommunication Electronics covers a wide range of telecommunications used by industry and in everyday life, including Internet, optical, wired and wireless communications. You will gain an understanding of the design and application of electronics relevant to modern communication networks. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will attend taught courses and undertake practical assignments and a research project. Core courses: Computer communications 1; Computer communications 2; Digital signal processing 1; Optical communications; Digital communications. Optional courses (one selected) Microwave and millimetre wave circuit design; Micro- and nanotechnology; Digital signal processing 2.
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Research environment
The vibrancy of our research environment derives much from our large body of postgraduate students. Earth Systems Research Group Our interdisciplinary research group aims to develop an integrated understanding of the evolution of the Earths surface and near-surface environments. Most research is built around the following themes: Earth-life processes Surface processes Shallow crustal processes Extra-terrestrial and mantle processes Earth observation and technology Human Geography Research Group The group conducts innovative research on the entangled geographies of power, institutions, knowledge and practice, moving readily from the conceptual to the substantive to the engaged. Research is broadly organised into four separate themes: Environment, knowledge and development Political-economy, justice and solidarity Difference, otherness and subalternity Creativity, experiment and expression
industry at open events. Projects may be carried out in conjunction with industry. We achieve outstanding results in the National Student Survey, with one or other of our subjects achieving exceptional 100% overall satisfaction in recent years.
Career prospects
Our collaboration with the Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre (SUERC) gives us access to cutting-edge equipment and specialist expertise, which means you can gain a range of transferable skills valuable for your career. Career opportunities exist in the private and public sectors and graduates have found roles in their area of expertise in both sectors such as environmental consultancies, local authorities, utility companies, non-governmental organisations (such as Oxfam, Barnardos, Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA), Scottish Natural Heritage) and teaching.
Learning environment
We take an integrated approach to the study of geography and Earth science at Glasgow, bringing together internationally leading expertise in physical and human geography, Earth science and geomatics. Our postgraduate students benefit from many fieldwork opportunities, ranging from short day excursions close to Glasgow to longer residential field trips, which may involve overseas travel. The school has close links with industry. We arrange many guest speakers and there are also informal opportunities to meet people from
For many students the experiences gained during fieldwork provide some of the most enduring memories of their time at Glasgow. Field research is very much enjoyed by staff and students alike.
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Research projects
Here are just some of our recent research projects that have offered PhD studentship opportunities: Earth systems research Reconstructing ocean acidification and its impacts at high resolution Evaluating stream habitat using a 2D hydraulic model The role of the environment in the evolution of biomineralisation Novel mineralogical and geochemical signatures of terrestrial impact craters Earth observations for rapid response to large earthquakes The emplacement and deformation of rheomorphic ignimbrites Human geography research The effectiveness of societal mobilisation approaches within international development Geographies of learning disability Indigenous environmental knowledge systems Poverty, agency and class in the urban economy Bio-geographies Art, culture and regeneration The political geographies of Scottish devolution Climate change and trans-local solidarities Feminist and postcolonial geopolitics We offer supervision across most areas of geographical and Earth sciences. To find out more about potential supervisors, view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/schools/ges/ staff. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying.
Contact us
Mrs Jean McPartland School Postgraduate Support Tel: +44 (0)141 3308285 Email: jean.mcpartland@glasgow.ac.uk www.glasgow.ac.uk/ges/research/postgraduate
I have access to some of the best analytical facilities and laboratories in the country.
Bruce Robertson, PhD Geographical & Earth Sciences
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surveying; Internet and mobile GIS; Applied GIS; Geospatial data infrastructures and LIS; Population and statistical mapping. Entry requirements: Honours degree or equivalent in geomatics or similar subject. Those with lower qualifications having significant experience in industry will be considered on an individual basis. You will also take two courses in qualitative and quantitative methods in the social sciences, and undertake an independent piece of research on a topic chosen by you. Entry requirements: Normally a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. Optional courses: Remote sensing of the environment; Freshwater sampling techniques; Freshwater ecology; Hydrology; Coastal management; Phyloinformatics. Non-credited optional courses (which will incur additional costs): Scientific diving; Boat handling; Marine mammals. Entry requirements: Normally a second-class Honours degree or equivalent in an appropriate subject. Applicants with industrial experience may be admitted to the PgDip in the first instance.
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Research environment
Statistics We have a very active and diverse range of statistics research activity, which encompasses the full range of modern statistics. In the 2008 RAE results Glasgow gained the highest percentage of 4* activity (the highest grade) amongst statistics groups in Scotland. We work closely with the Inference Group in Computing Science, which focuses its research on the development of appropriate statistical and computational methodology for diverse applications. Mathematics The research interests of the school cover several areas of pure mathematics and applied mathematics. These areas are not mutually exclusive and there are considerable benefits from interactions between the different areas that enhance the research environment. Both pure and applied mathematics are highly rated internationally for their research and most members of the school have ongoing collaborations with mathematicians overseas and elsewhere in the UK, and many international mathematicians spend periods in Glasgow working with members of the school. Our lively and mutually supportive research environment has led to the award of coveted prizes and competitive fellowships for several of our younger staff.
There is a lively seminar programme with members of the school being involved in a number of networks including the North British Functional Analysis Seminar, the North British Differential Equations Seminar and the LMS Network on Classical and Quantum Integrability. The school also welcomes many guest speakers from the UK and overseas. We hold a regular postgraduate seminar, where our PhD students can develop their presentational skills, and regular conferences and workshops. Students can also attend our hugely popular week-long training course each year, which provides practically motivated training in key statistical analysis and modelling skills. Sponsorship is available for EPSRC and NERC funded PhD students. If you study with us you can benefit from our excellent teaching standards and supportive learning environment an impressive 97% of our final-year undergraduate students rate themselves as satisfied with their overall experience, according to the 2011 National Student Survey, rating us top in Scotland and second in the UK.
Career prospects
You will be equipped with the skills needed to begin a career as a professional statistician or mathematician. Our graduates have an excellent track record of gaining employment in many sectors including banking and finance, medical research, the pharmaceutical industry and government statistical services.
Learning environment
Our postgraduate students join a community of academic experts across a wide range of pure and applied mathematics and statistics and develop a mature understanding of fundamental theories and analytical skills applicable to many situations.
Erida Gjini is a PhD student with a background in mathematical sciences who is producing stochastic models of the variations in the generic composition of the African trypanosome parasite that causes sleeping sickness.
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Research interests
The main areas of research are broadly described within the headings below. Applied mathematics Fluid dynamics and magnetohydrodynamics Integrable systems and mathematical physics Mathematical biology Solid mechanics Pure mathematics Algebra Analysis Geometry and topology Statistics Biostatistics and statistical genetics Environmental statistics Statistical methodology Statistical modelling Scholarship of learning and teaching in statistics Our programmes can be studied full-time or part-time. It is possible to study a PhD in Mathematics or Statistics combined with another subject, for example Mathematics and Music, Mathematics and Medicine, Mathematics and Economics. This may require two or more supervisors. During the first year of your PhD you are required to attend and will be assessed on selected taught courses. For further information on these courses please refer to the Scottish Mathematical Sciences Training Centre (www.smstc.ac.uk). We offer supervision across most areas of mathematics and statistics. To find out more about potential supervisors, view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/schools/ mathematicsstatistics/staff. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying.
Contact us
If you have any questions about the application process or would like some advice, please do not hesitate to contact us. Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5176/5024 Email: maths-stats-pgenquiries @glasgow.ac.uk www.glasgow.ac.uk/mathematicsstatistics/ research/postgraduate
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Advanced Statistics
This Masters in Advanced Statistics will provide you with knowledge and experience of the principles, theory and practical skills of statistics. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time You will choose six courses each semester, depending on your prior knowledge of statistics and subject to the approval of the programme leader. You will also undertake a project leading to a dissertation. Courses are chosen from an extensive list, including: Introduction to R; Multivariate methods; Biostatistics; Sampling and databases; Computational inference (from 2012); Bayesian statistics (from 2012); Stochastic processes; Introduction to population studies; Statistical data mining; Principles of probability and statistics; Design of statistical investigations; Generalised linear models; Time series; Data analysis; Professional skills; Environmental statistics; Advanced Bayesian methods (from 2012); Statistical genetics; Spatial statistics; Metaanalysis. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent with a substantial statistics component (equivalent to a Combined Honours degree in statistics and another subject at the University of Glasgow).
Data insights
Statistics is a field that offers students the chance to combine rigorous scientific methodology with important real-world applications. Professor of Statistics Adrian Bowman has a long-standing interest in spatiotemporal data, which is of relevance to numerous different applications. Spatiotemporal data routinely occurs in environmental settings, for example, where monitors located in different regions gather data over time. The same data structure can occur in brain imaging where, in electroencephalography (EEG) or magnetoencephalography (MEG), an array of sensors across the scalp or the surface of the head gather information over time. In both these cases, the same data structure leads to the possibility of the same kinds of models that can give powerful insight into what is happening. The Statistics group at Glasgow combines a strong interest in methodology, the tools, concepts and ideas of statistics with serious interests in applications so theres a lot of interdisciplinary work going on, says Professor Bowman, who works closely with people in environmental studies, engineering, health, and medicine. Methodology is the core, and none of the applications would be possible without serious scientific expertise on the methodology. The research group has strong connections with environmental agencies such as the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA), the Environment Agency in England, and the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology. These collaborations have led to research secondments for postgraduate students, and other opportunities have seen students travelling abroad to work with high-profile scientific groups such as the Commonwealth Scientific Industrial Research Organisation in Australia. Good research is almost always international these days so we have many international links, says Professor Bowman. We are well connected nationally and internationally and there are good opportunities for postgraduates to pursue and develop those networks. There are several options for postgraduate study at Glasgow, including a PhD degree and a variety of MSc programmes. We are always very keen to recruit good students, to maintain a strong cohort and a strong student community, says Professor Bowman. We work hard to obtain as much funding as we can to create student opportunities. The EPSRC Mathematical Sciences Programme and the University of Glasgow Scholarship Programme have both provided postgraduate funding, but it doesnt stop there. Researchers are sometimes able to create scholarships themselves through links with external sponsors. The ability to understand, model, analyse and interpret data is absolutely fundamental to a huge array of applications, concludes Professor Bowman. There are plenty of opportunities here for really interesting, exciting projects, which combine methodology and application in a very supportive and indeed enjoyable environment. www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/adrianbowman
Biostatistics
This Masters in Biostatistics will provide you with knowledge and experience of the principles, theory and practical skills of statistics. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time Core courses: Probability; Statistical inference; Introduction to R; Regression models; Biostatistics; Sampling and databases; Generalised linear models; Data analysis; Professional skills; Dataanalysis project (leading to a dissertation). Optional courses: You will choose three optional courses from: Meta-analysis; Statistical genetics; Design of statistical investigations; Time series; Spatial statistics. Entry requirements: Normally, at least a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent, with a substantial mathematics component (at least equivalent to Level-1 courses in mathematics and Level-2 courses in calculus and linear algebra at the University of Glasgow). Previous study of statistics is not required.
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Statistics
This Masters in Statistics will provide you with knowledge and experience of the principles, theory and practical skills of statistics. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time Core courses: Probability; Statistical inference; Introduction to R; Regression models; Generalised linear models; Data analysis; Professional skills; Data-analysis project (leading to a dissertation). Optional courses: You will choose five optional courses from: Multivariate methods; Biostatistics; Sampling and databases; Bayesian statistics (from 2012); Introduction to population studies; Principles of probability and statistics; Design of statistical investigations; Time series; Environmental statistics; Advanced Bayesian methods (from 2012); Statistical genetics; Spatial statistics; Meta-analysis. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent with a substantial mathematics component (at least equivalent to Level-1 courses in mathematics and Level-2 courses in calculus and linear algebra at the University of Glasgow). Previous study of statistics is not required.
Mathematics/Applied Mathematics
The Masters in Mathematics/Applied Mathematics offers courses, taught by experts, across a wide range and in depth. Mathematics is highly developed yet continually growing, providing new insights and applications. It is the medium for expressing knowledge about many physical phenomena and is concerned with patterns, systems and structures unrestricted by any specific application, but also allows for applications across many disciplines. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and take part in project work. If you are studying for the MSc you will take a total of 120 credits from a mixture of Level-4 Honours courses, Level-M courses and courses delivered by the Scottish Mathematical Sciences Training Centre (SMSTC). You will take courses worth a minimum of 90 credits from Level-M courses and those delivered by the SMSTC. The remaining 30 credits may be chosen from final-year Level-H courses. The Level-M courses offered in a particular session will depend on student demand. Below are courses currently offered at these levels, but the options may vary from year to year.
Social Statistics
This Masters in Social Statistics will provide you with knowledge and experience of the principles, theory and practical skills of statistics. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time Core courses: Probability; Statistical inference; Introduction to R; Regression models; Introduction to population studies; Sampling and databases; Generalised linear models; Time series; Design of statistical investigations; Spatial statistics; Data analysis; Professional skills; Data-analysis project (leading to a dissertation). Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent with a substantial mathematics component (at least equivalent to Level-1 courses in mathematics and Level-2 courses in calculus and linear algebra at the University of Glasgow). Previous study of statistics is not required.
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Research environment
With 42 academics and around 13 research fellows, 51 research associates and 81 postgraduate students, the school is a vibrant centre of research in a wide range of fields. This has been recognised over the years by excellent scores in the UK-wide research assessment exercises, consistently high levels of funding for research, and national and international honours for our top researchers. We are a member of the Scottish universities Physics Alliance (SUPA), a research alliance in physics between six Scottish Universities (Glasgow, Edinburgh, Heriot-Watt, St Andrews, Strathclyde, West of Scotland). Our aim is to place Scotland at the forefront of research in physics through an agreed national strategy, an inter-institutional management structure, and coordinated promotion and pursuit of excellence.
companies; finance, for example as a market analyst; consultancy, for example in product development or IT; teaching physics teachers are in great demand; and many more.
Learning environment
Studying Physics and/or Astronomy offers you a fundamental understanding of the way the Universe works, brings you to the forefront of technology, and (specifically in Glasgow) provides the opportunity to work in world-leading research groups. We also host regular research colloquia throughout the year, attracting both UK and international speakers. A team of five academics, nine research staff and five postgraduate students at Glasgow are participating in ATLAS, an international collaborative particle physics experiment at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research), which is exploring the fundamental nature of matter and the basic forces that shape our universe.
ATLAS Experiment 2012 CERN
Career prospects
Our graduates can demonstrate to a potential employer numeracy, problem-solving skills, teamwork experience, capacity for logical thought, and capability to apply abstract concepts to the real world. Career opportunities for physicists can be found in: research in universities or high-tech
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Contact us
Dr David Miller,Senior Lecturer (Physics & Astronomy) and Adviser of Studies and Mrs Valerie Flood, Research and Teaching Support Secretary Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4702 Email: phas-pgradmissions @glasgow.ac.uk www.glasgow.ac.uk/physics/research/ postgraduate
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Renowned physicist William Thomson Lord Kelvin joined the University as a student aged just ten years. A professor at Glasgow for over 50 years, his contributions to the world of science range from thermal physics, electromagnetism and optics through to practical developments in domestic lighting, refrigeration, cable telegraph and marine compasses.
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Physics & Astronomy: taught prgrammes
Astrophysics
The Masters in Astrophysics gives you an understanding of the principles and methods of modern astrophysics at a level appropriate for a professional physicist. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time The programme draws upon a wide range of advanced Masters-level courses. You will have the flexibility to tailor your choice of optional courses and project work to a variety of specific research topics and their applications in the area of astrophysics. You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and take part in lab, project and team work. Core courses include: Cosmology (alternate years, starting 201213); Stellar astrophysics (alternate years, starting 201314); Problemsolving workshop; Research skills; Advanced data analysis; Extended project. Optional courses include: General relativity and gravitation (alternate years, starting 201213); Plasma theory and diagnostics (alternate years, starting 201314); Pulsars and supernovae (alternate years, starting 201213); Statistical astronomy (alternate years, starting 201314); Gravitational wave detection; Advanced electromagnetic theory; Statistical mechanics; Dynamics, electrodynamics and relativity; Applied optics; Advanced astrophysics laboratory. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree in Physics or a related subject.
Theoretical Physics
The Masters in Theoretical Physics provides an understanding of the principles and methods of modern physics with particular emphasis on the theoretical aspects of the subject at a level appropriate for a professional physicist. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time This MSc draws upon a wide range of advanced Masters-level courses. You will have the flexibility to tailor your choice of optional lecture courses and project work to a wide variety of specific research topics and their applications in the area of theoretical physics. You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and take part in lab, project and team work. Core courses include: Quantum theory; Problemsolving workshop; Research skills; Advanced data analysis; Extended project. Optional courses include: Advanced electromagnetic theory; Statistical mechanics; Dynamics, electrodynamics and relativity; Groups and symmetries; Relativistic quantum fields; Applied optics; Advanced physics laboratory; Advanced mathematical methods; General relativity and gravitation (alternate years, offered 201213); Plasma theory and diagnostics (alternate years, offered 201314). Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree in Physics or a related subject.
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School of Psychology
Psychology
Ranked seventh among all UK universities in the most recent Research Assessment Exercise (RAE), our internationally renowned School of Psychology offers an excellent research environment for a thriving postgraduate community.
Contact Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5089 Email: info@psy.glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
Psychology at Glasgow brings together worldleading expertise in experimental psychology, cognitive neuroscience, functional neuroimaging, neuropsychology and computational modelling. Using diverse approaches and paradigms, our research aims to advance our understanding of behaviour and the underlying mental processes and brain functions at multiple levels of analysis. Researchers are grouped across the School of Psychology and the Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging (CCNi), which provides stateof-the-art functional neuroimaging facilities. Many investigators have double-affiliations with links to the Institute of Neuroscience & Psychology, which spans two colleges (Science & Engineering, and Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences), and integrates research from molecular to systems neuroscience across a broad spectrum of interdisciplinary and translational programmes. We are committed to producing basic and applied research of the highest quality with a focus on three main areas: Cognitive and behavioural neuroscience Language and communication Perception and cognition
academic development and are transferable to the workplace. In order to facilitate this, our student learning and support mechanisms are constantly being developed, improved and augmented. Our graduate student seminar programme also forms an essential part of training. Our aim of offering learning and student support of the highest quality has been recognised both by students and by accrediting organisations in the most recent National Student Survey (2011) we were ranked within the top ten of all UK psychology departments.
Career prospects
Graduates have gone on to careers in research and teaching (for example, as lecturers) or entered other areas of psychological employment. Since psychology is about people and develops excellent transferable skills such as critical thinking, it can be applied to most nonspecialised areas of employment.
Learning environment
We are focused on providing excellent learning support for our postgraduate students in order to ultimately promote student success. Student success includes both an in-depth knowledge of psychology (acquired through taught courses and direct supervision), and also the development of key skills that are crucial to
The Universitys Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging (CCNi) brings together many of the worlds top cognitive neuroscientists and creates a research environment unique in Scotland and highly competitive with the rest of the world. See www.glasgow.ac.uk/ccni.
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Brain Imaging
Neuroimaging is fast emerging as a key technique across psychology, many areas of medicine and health sciences in general. The Masters in Brain Imaging will train you in appropriate research skills for brain imaging research, emphasising advanced methods in the field and will provide you with knowledge of advanced research in key areas of cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and take part in lab work. Core courses: Research methods (two courses); Statistics; Professional skills; Brain imaging methods; Research project. Optional courses (one chosen): Visual perception; Psychology of language; Introduction to Matlab programming Entry requirements: Normally at least a 2.1 Honours degree in psychology or neuroscience or acceptable equivalent(s).
Research interests
Cognitive and behavioural neuroscience Auditory cognition High-level vision and cognition Attention and multi-sensory integration Perception and action Social interactions Brain development and ageing Computational modelling of cognition Circadian rhythms Language and communication Dialogue and the visual world Discourse processing Theory of mind and counterfactual processing Syntactic processing Quantifiers in linguistic focus Communication and conversation Second-language processing in aphasia Word recognition in context and semantic ambiguity Emotion word processing Perception and cognition Auditory cognition Biological motion Colour vision Depth perception Face perception Motion perception Psychophysics Predictive coding Perception of attractiveness We offer supervision across a wide range of areas. To find out more about potential supervisors, please view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/psychology/staff. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying.
Contact us
Lynda Young, Postgraduate Secretary Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5089 Email: lynda.young@glasgow.ac.uk www.glasgow.ac.uk/psychology/ postgraduateresearchopportunities
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Graduate School
A supportive environment
The Graduate School for Social Sciences draws together internationally recognised scholars and respected practitioners to offer a range of postgraduate research and taught opportunities.
Schools
Adam
Research environment
Were interested in theoretical, methodological and empirical research that addresses current and future global economic and social political challenges. Our expert academics are undertaking some of the most significant research in the UK in their subject areas. According to the most recent Research Assessment Exercise, which was conducted in 2008, accounting and finance at Glasgow ranked in the UKs top five, with European studies and town and country planning ranked in the UKs top ten. We are home to several dynamic research centres and a number of leading academic journals such as Europe-Asia Studies. Our college also hosts the Adam Smith Research Foundation, which provides a focus for interdisciplinary research.
Smith Business School of Education School of Interdisciplinary Studies School of Law School of Social & Political Sciences
School
Research Institute
Institute of Health & Wellbeing (joint with the College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences)
You may wish to participate in our award-winning online journal eSharp, which is run entirely by graduate students and encourages excellence in arts, humanities, social sciences and education research. Through providing opportunities for hands-on experience in journal management and editing, it can enhance your skills and employability.
Career development
Our college employability officer can give you advice and support on career planning, professional development, transferable skills training, work experience and placements. You may also be able to take advantage of opportunities to network with potential future employers, or train to become a graduate teaching assistant.
Learning environment
Our graduate school draws together internationally recognised scholars and practitioners to offer an intellectually stimulating learning environment. If you study here, youll benefit from our network of national and international links and be able to take advantage of a number of events and conferences that take place throughout the year. We also offer an online writing programme to support and improve skills in writing, and a range of training courses including research workshops, labs and seminars that focus on social science statistics, qualitative methods and social theory for researchers.
Glasgow was arguably the birthplace of the Scottish Enlightenment and at its centre stood the University, where the leading academics of the day, such as father of economics Adam Smith, developed reasoned thinking to expand knowledge to new levels of understanding.
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www.glasgow.ac.uk/socialsciences/graduateschool
Research programmes
We offer the following research degrees: PhD (Doctor of Philosophy): three years fulltime or five years part-time study; MLitt (Master of Letters) by Research: two years full-time and three years part-time; MSc (Master of Science) by Research: two years full-time and three years part-time; EdD (Doctor of Education): 60 months parttime by distance learning.
Taught programmes
We offer around 130 taught postgraduate programmes. These are listed by subject on the following pages.
How do I apply?
The online application is the quickest and easiest way of applying to Glasgow. The system allows you to fill out the standard application form online and submit this to the University immediately: www.glasgow.ac.uk/postgraduate/ howtoapplyforataughtdegree. You can also attach supporting documents including references, certificates and a transcript of previous studies. There are instructions throughout the online form to help you complete your application. You may save and return to your application as many times as you wish before submitting it. You may also access your application again to upload additional documents such as your language test or final transcript. Some programmes require additional information or documents. Please ensure you check prior to making your application.
How do I apply?
The online application is the quickest and easiest way of applying to Glasgow. The system allows you to fill out the standard application form online and submit this to the University immediately: www.glasgow.ac.uk/research/opportunities. You can also attach supporting documents including research proposal, references, certificates and a transcript of previous studies. There are instructions throughout the online form to help you complete your application. Before submitting, you may save and return to your application as many times as you wish within 42 days. You may also access your application again to upload additional documents such as your language test or final transcript.
When do I apply?
International applications (non-EU): Friday, 19 July 2013 UK and EU applications: Friday, 23 August 2013
When do I apply?
Many research programmes begin in September each year and applications should be submitted before 31 July if possible, for study in September.
Entry requirements
Normally a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject unless otherwise stated.
Entry requirements
Normally a 2.1 Honours degree (GPA 3.0 or above) (or Masters) in a relevant discipline. In special circumstances, other academic qualifications, or professional qualifications or experience, may be recognised as equivalent.
Glasgows greats Glasgow has a history of producing high achievers, including industrial relations expert Donald Robertson. Scan the QR code or see www.glasgow.ac.uk/donaldrobertson for more information.
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Business
The University of Glasgow Adam Smith Business School celebrates the legacy of Adam Smith by developing internationally recognised research with real socio-economic impact. We are the largest graduate business school in Scotland and the second largest in the UK.
Contact
Tel: +44 (0)141 330 3993 Email: business-school@glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
The school has over 70 academic staff and 1,488 postgraduate students over 70 of whom are research students. In the Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) 2008, 89% of our research was classed as of international quality, with over 15% being world leading. Our subject areas are: Accounting and finance Accounting and finance is a broad-based subject group, with research strengths in the main subareas of finance and market-based research, financial reporting and management accounting and control. There is also significant presence in the specialist areas of accounting education, accounting history, auditing and corporate governance. Economics Economics at Glasgow dates back to Adam Smith, an 18th-century University professor widely renowned as the father of modern economics. Today, we have research collaborations with several international and government organisations, including the World Bank, United Nations, Commonwealth Secretariat, HM Treasury, European Commission, and a number of government organisations in developing countries. Our research has also been used by numerous private sector institutions. Management Our research contributes to theoretical advancement as well as being relevant to management practice. We have national and international interdisciplinary research collaborations, not only with academic researchers, but also with policymakers and managers, addressing issues ranging from the internationalisation of SMEs through to the impact of technology on consumption.
Learning environment
Our postgraduate students benefit from joining a world-class learning community. Our academics have close connections with industry, which means were at the cutting edge of business knowledge. You will have the opportunity to interact with business people, University staff and your colleagues to increase your knowledge and gain an in-depth understanding of current issues in the global business environment. The school also offers an annual series of practitioners talks, seminars and workshops, which students are encouraged to attend.
Career prospects
Our business is creating leaders, researchers and professionals who can think critically, and who have the ability to affect organisations at the highest global level. As a result our graduates are in continual high demand. Companies and organisations that have recently hired our graduates include American Express, Amazon, Morgan Stanley, Lloyds TSB, JP Morgan, British Gas, Nationwide Building Society, General Motors, IBM, among many others. The school offers networking opportunities throughout the year, which attract students, alumni, staff, entrepreneurs and business leaders from the public and private sectors.
Dr Arjunan Subramanian, an economist in the Universitys Adam Smith Business School, has been awarded more than 430,000 from the Economic & Social Research Council and the Department for International Development for a three-year study to look at the role information and communications technology could play in improving rural welfare in India. www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/arjunansubramanian
Accreditation
The school has accreditations by the following professional bodies: Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business; Association of MBAs (for the MBA programme); Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland; Institute of Chartered Accountants of England and Wales; Association of Chartered Certified Accountants; Chartered Institute of Management Accountants; Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy. We are also members of the Association of Business Schools and of the European Foundation for Management Development.
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Research interests
Accounting and finance in the areas of finance, market reactions to accounting, management accounting and control, judgement and decision-making in accounting and audit, and corporate reporting and governance. Economics in the areas of international finance; macroeconomics; financial economics; development economics; and regional economics. Financial economics a three-year researchbased programme for those with a good Masters in either economics or finance. Management for those who wish to become experts in a specialised field within business and management. Quantitative finance offered as a four-year programme for candidates with a minimum 2.1 Honours degree, or an equivalent nonUK degree, in economics or finance, or as a three-year programme for candidates with qualifications comparable to the MSc Quantitative Finance. We offer supervision across most areas of business. To find out more about potential supervisors, view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/schools/business/staff. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying.
Contact us
Angela Foster, Accounting and Finance Secretary Email: phdapplications@accfin.glasgow.ac.uk Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4985 Jane Brittin, Economics Secretary Email: jane.brittin@glasgow.ac.uk Tel: +44 (0)141 330 4658 Mrs Anne McCusker, Management Administrative Secretary Email: anne.mccusker@glasgow.ac.uk Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5411 www.glasgow.ac.uk/business/ postgraduateresearch
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Financial Modelling
Financial modelling integrates mathematical and statistical methods with advanced studies in finance. This Masters programme will provide you with an enquiry-led understanding of interconnected subject areas in mathematics, statistics and finance. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time Teaching is through a combination of lectures, seminars and tutorials. The programme consists of seven core courses and one optional course, followed by a dissertation of around 12,000 words. The dissertation, which will have a finance-related theme, offers you the flexibility to specialise based on your chosen area of interest. Core courses: International capital markets; Mathematical methods for finance; Statistical inference (half credit course); Probability for finance (half credit course); Dissertation and research methods; Financial reporting and interpretation; Mathematical and statistical modelling for finance.
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a detailed study of banking, with supporting courses in ethics and statistics. You will be expected to analyse and evaluate some of the key recent research in this topic area. Teaching is through a combination of lectures, seminars and tutorials. The programme consists of seven core courses, followed by a dissertation of around 12,000 words. Core courses: International capital markets; International corporate finance; Statistics for business research; Research methods; Financial management in banking; International banking and financial markets; Financial regulation and ethics. Entry requirements: Undergraduate qualification equivalent at least to a 2.1 Honours degree from a UK university.
International Finance
The Glasgow MFin is a long-established and consistently successful Masters programme, and is one of only a few MFin degrees in the UK. It is a wide-ranging finance degree that offers the opportunity to study key issues in international finance. The programmes content is strongly research-led and carefully balances a blend of courses and topics, reflecting the dynamic nature of contemporary finance. Programme overview MFin: 12 months full-time The programme consists of four core courses and a choice of three optional courses, followed by a dissertation of around 12,000 words. Core courses: International corporate finance; Statistics for business research; International capital markets; Research methods. Optional courses: International financial management; Financial analysis and equity valuation; Financial regulation and ethics; Behavioural finance; Mergers and acquisitions; International banking and financial markets. You will also complete a dissertation of around 12,000 words. Entry requirements: Undergraduate qualification equivalent at least to a 2.1 from a UK university. An IELTS (or equivalent) English language qualification is also required with 6.5 average and no individual element lower than 6.0.
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Economic Development
This Masters programme will be suitable if you wish to build upon your knowledge of economics. It will explore the broad themes associated with the economics of development and assist you to pursue careers in teaching and/or research in economic development. It is also appropriate if you work as a government official concerned with economic development, or if you are a development worker in international agencies or similar organisations. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time You will take four core courses and select three optional courses from the list below. Core courses: Development policy; Growth and development; The IMF, World Bank and economic growth; Research methods and dissertation training. Optional courses: Aid and development; Basic econometrics; Environmental economics; Financial institutions and markets in developing countries; Financial sector stability and growth; Foreign direct investment and development; International trade; Money, finance and growth; Policies for sustainability and development; Project planning, appraisal and implementation; Theory and principles of sustainability; The economics of inequality and deprivation.
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An international experience
Postgraduate student Sumeng Chang has found the Adam Smith Business School and University to be cosmopolitan and friendly. My classmates come from many different countries including, for example, China, America, Indonesia, and Malaysia, she says. We share our cultures with each other and we share our experiences here in Glasgow. I think its a wonderful place for international students, and the local people are very kind and helpful. Having arrived in Glasgow in 2011 to study for an MSc in Financial Economics, Sumeng hopes to work as an international business journalist in the future. I started becoming interested in journalism during my student days in China, she explains. I knew that if I wanted to be a business journalist I should focus on business and finance. I felt that I would need to have a very strong background in business and economics, and thats why I came to Glasgow. The University hosts recruitment fairs that attract many large companies, introducing postgraduate students to a variety of careers opportunities, as well as providing careers support through advice and training sessions. I have been given a lot of support here, says Sumeng. The Careers Service helped me with my CV and job applications, and they can also arrange interviews and help us practise and prepare. Glasgows strong reputation in business and finance attracts many international students every year, and Sumeng is proud to tell her friends from home about her experiences here. The University of Glasgow is ancient. It really is an impressive place to study, to live, and to communicate with friends from different countries.
Financial Economics
This Masters programme offers training in the key macroeconomic and microeconomic issues fundamental to financial decision making. It draws on the most recent developments in these areas. It gives you a strong foundation for PhD research as well as a toolkit to gain employment in a wide range of spheres. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time Teaching is provided by lectures. Technical subjects are supported by weekly or fortnightly
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Developing expertise
The Universitys Centre for Development Studies is a leading institution in the UK for postgraduate study and research in the field of development. Dr Luis Angeles is the centres director. We are all economists at the centre, so our research in development is very much from this perspective, he says. One of my colleagues is looking at how foreign direct investment affects different developing countries, another is a specialist in economic growth in China, and we have an expert in agricultural economics and environmental economics. My own research is about long-term determinants of development, especially how the colonial past has an effect on economic development over time. So there is a large range of expertise here for potential research students who are interested in development studies. Dr Angeles upbringing in Bolivia triggered his own interest in development studies. I come from a developing country and you want to understand your own home, he says. And it would seem that the PhD students he is currently supervising, both from Pakistan, share this view. Sohail Farooq is focusing on assessing foreign aid in developing countries, while Khadija Shams is conducting a study to identify the root causes of poverty and income inequalities in rural areas of Pakistan. My PhD students are clearly interested in the development side as its what they see every day. Theyre both lecturers in economics in Pakistan so they will take what theyve learned here on their PhD topics, and also about society and life in Glasgow, back to their own country to pass on. Hopefully this knowledge and experience can help make a difference. www.glasgow.ac.uk/postgraduate/cds
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financial markets (if not taken as a compulsory course); Portfolio analysis and investment (corequisite for Advanced portfolio analysis). You will also complete a dissertation of between 12,000 and 15,000 words. Entry requirements: Applicants should have at least a 2.1 Honours degree or non-UK equivalent. Normally this should be a degree in economics, finance, engineering, physics or another highly mathematical discipline.
International Development
Issues such as aid, debt, foreign direct investment, trade and financial integration are key topics in this Masters in International Development. You will be taught methods of analysing the possible economic effects of aid (in particular, on public expenditure, investment and growth); the possible social and political effects of aid (in particular on poverty eradication, welfare, corruption and good governance); and the underlying theories of development that govern financial assistance by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time You will take four core courses and select three optional courses. Core courses: Aid and development; International trade; The IMF, World Bank and economic growth; Research methods and dissertation training. Optional courses: Basic econometrics; Development policy; Financial institutions and markets in developing countries; Foreign direct investment and development; Growth and development; Policies for sustainability and development; Project planning, appraisal and implementation; Theory and principles of sustainability; The economics of inequality and deprivation. Optional courses are also offered in Politics and Economic and Social History. You will also write a dissertation of between 12,000 and 15,000 words. Entry requirements: Entry requirements for postgraduate taught programmes are a 2.1 Honours degree or non-UK equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in economics or in a relevant subject containing a significant amount of economics. Those who do not have such a background but intend to pursue further studies in the area of development are advised to apply for the MSc Europe & International Development or the MSc Development Studies depending on their interests.
Core courses: International corporate finance; International macroeconomics and policy; International finance and money; International financial management; Research methods and dissertation training. Optional courses: Basic econometrics; Financial analysis and equity valuation; Financial institutions and markets in developing countries; Financial sector stability and growth; Foreign direct investment and development; Growth and development; International banking and financial markets; International financial accounting for MNCs; International trade; Modelling and forecasting financial markets; Money, finance and growth; Project planning, appraisal and implementation; Public finance; The IMF, World Bank and economic growth. You will also write a dissertation of between 12,000 and 15,000 words. Entry requirements: Entry requirements for postgraduate taught programmes are a 2.1 Honours degree or non-UK equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above). Candidates should have a good background in economics though not necessarily an economics degree. In particular, applications will be considered from those with an accounting, finance or management background.
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Quantitative Finance
This Masters programme offers training in the core areas of finance. It draws on recent developments in each of the subject areas with a quantitative approach to understanding the structure of financial markets and forecasting their expected movements. It will develop your understanding of theory and its practical applications as well as real-life skills, such as pricing financial derivatives and forecasting exchange rates. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time You will take five core courses and select two optional courses. Core courses: Basic econometrics*; Financial derivatives; Mathematical finance (co-requisite for Financial derivatives); Modelling and forecasting financial markets; Research methods and dissertation training. * If you already have Basic econometrics you will take three core courses and three optional courses, subject to the approval of the programme director. Optional courses: Advanced portfolio analysis; Applied computational finance; C++ in finance; Empirical asset pricing; Economic fundamentals and financial markets; Portfolio analysis and investment (co-requisite for Advanced portfolio analysis). You will also complete a dissertation of between 12,000 and 15,000 words. Entry requirements: You should have at least a 2.1 Honours degree or non-UK equivalent. Normally this should be a degree in economics, finance, engineering, physics or another highly mathematical discipline.
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Optional courses include: International brand management; Global online entrepreneurship; Export marketing; Managing the multinational enterprise and subsidiaries; International business ethics; Managing innovation and technology transfer; European business environment; Business environment in China; American business and management in an international context; International negotiations and dispute resolution. Entry requirements: A minimum 2.1 Honours degree (or equivalent) in business and management or in a related subject (containing a significant amount of business, commerce, economics and/or management).
Market planning and decision making; Analytical problems in market futurecast; International marketing foresight; Research methods. Optional courses: International brand management; International business ethics; Export marketing; Advanced topics in marketing futurecast; E-marketing strategy; Knowledge economy; Internationalisation of small and medium-sized enterprises; Business growth. Entry requirements: A minimum 2.1 Honours degree or non-UK equivalent in business and management or in a related subject (containing a significant amount of business, commerce, economics and/or management).
Management
This Masters programme provides a detailed understanding of modern business principles, including financial information management, managing people in organisations, marketing and strategy. As a graduate from a nonbusiness discipline, this programme will provide you with a rapid and reliable understanding of contemporary management principles, priorities, practices and issues. You will combine an academic understanding of management with applied knowledge and effective, practical insights and capabilities. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time For the MSc you will take six core courses, four optional courses and complete an individual project comprising a comprehensive and critical review of a selected topic. There is also a nonassessed, compulsory workshop programme. You will also participate in a series of reflective learning exercises. These include induction events (involving outdoor challenges and crosscultural team building), strategic case analyses and debates on topics like business ethics. The taught courses comprise a combination of lectures, seminars, tutorials, fieldwork and project work, both in groups and individually. You will also have opportunities for study trips in the UK and abroad. Core courses: People in organisations; Operations management; Financial information management; Marketing management; Research methods; Strategy and the competitive environment. Optional courses include: E-Commerce; Processes of entrepreneurship; The internationalisation of small and medium enterprises; The knowledge economy; Entrepreneurial finance; Export marketing; Analytical marketing; Managing diversity in organisations; Learning and development; The business environment in China; American business and management in an international context. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent in any subject. Prior work experience is encouraged but not required. If you have a degree in a business-related discipline and
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include induction events (involving outdoor challenges and cross-cultural team building), strategic case analyses and debates on topics like business ethics. You will learn to use financial reports and information to meet the needs of an organisation. The taught courses will enhance your ability to interpret data, and give you the tools to compile reports of key findings and recommendations, understandable to managers of all functions. The taught courses comprise a combination of lectures, seminars, tutorials, fieldwork and project work, both in groups and individually. You will also have opportunities for study trips in the UK and abroad. Core courses: People in organisations; Operations management; Financial information management; Marketing management; Research methods; Strategy and the competitive environment; International corporate finance. Optional courses: Behavioural finance and financial regulation; International banking and financial management; Ethics and corporate governance and accountability. Entry requirements: A minimum 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent in any subject. Prior work experience is encouraged but not required. There should also be evidence of numeracy from your degree or work experience.
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Core courses: People in organisations; Operations management; Financial information management; Real estate valuation and appraisal; Research methods; Advanced real estate valuation and appraisal; Real estate markets; Strategic real estate management; International real estate markets. Optional courses: Real estate finance and investment; Real estate development; International e-commerce; The business environment in China; American business and management in an international context; The internationalisation of small and medium enterprises. Entry requirements: A minimum 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent in any subject. Prior work experience is encouraged but not required. Theme 2: Strategy and organisational performance: Strategy; Managing people and resources; Marketing; Accounting and finance; Economics. Theme 3: Strategic foresight: Political contexts (geopolitics, corporate responsibility, scenario planning); Economic contexts (regulation and international markets, risk management, social and environmental accounting); Social contexts (the importance of place, personal and corporate ethics, cross-cultural management); Technological contexts (innovation, ICT and global communications); Environmental contexts (climate change, energy); Legal contexts (changing roles of the state, citizen and consumer rights). Optional courses: Entrepreneurship; International business; Human resource management; Corporate communication; Ethics and judgement; Marketing management; E-business and innovation. Entry requirements: You should have three years relevant work experience in addition to standard entry requirements.
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School of Education
Education
We offer a dynamic environment for researchers and research students, with a strong network of national and international collaborative links.
Contact
Tel: +44 (0)141 330 2514 Email: patricia.shiels@glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
The school has deep roots within the educational traditions of the University and the surrounding environment of Scottish higher education. These roots include the heritage of Scottish teacher education, of adult and lifelong learning and of renowned centres for research into educational policy and practice such as the Scottish Centre for Research in Education (SCRE). The school is ranked second in Scotland and in the top 15 in the UK for the volume of world leading and internationally excellent research in education. Staff within the school belong to one of five research and knowledge transfer groups: Creativity, culture and faith focusing on the interdisciplinary exploration of the place of cultural identity in the experience of education. Interdisciplinary science education, technologies and learning focusing on the interdisciplinary exploration of education and learning in and through science and technology. Professional learning and leadership focusing on the continuing development of people working in education and other human service areas. Pedagogy, policy and practice focusing on the improvement of educational quality for all learners. Social justice, place and lifelong education focusing on the effects of education on patterns of social inclusion, the enrichment of social environment, the development of social capital and global justice.
These groups bring together staff with shared research and knowledge transfer expertise and capabilities, and they coordinate events, research opportunities and other activities for group members.
Learning environment
The school offers an excellent environment in which to pursue postgraduate research and training. We seek to provide the widest possible range of opportunities for disciplinary, multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary postgraduate study. Our postgraduate programmes are extensive and continually evolving and we support a wide variety of part-time and full-time taught and research students. In keeping with the identity and ambition of a major international and research-led university, the school has developed a wealth of fresh opportunities for those who wish to study with scholars of international reputation across a diverse spectrum of educational thought and practice. Our postgraduates also benefit from the wide range of research-related events which take place throughout each academic year; some school-wide and others with colleagues from across the College of Social Sciences.
Professor Michael Osbornes research focuses on the development of learning cities and regions, the role of higher education in regional development and widening of access to higher education. He and colleagues work closely with many inter-governmental agencies and national and regional governments, providing valuable connections to policy and practice internationally for postgraduate students. www.glasgow.ac.uk/people/michaelosborne
Career prospects
Opportunities exist in primary and secondary schools, UK and international universities, community organisations, local councils, healthcare departments and adult literacy. Graduates have secured roles as class teachers, lecturers, policy developers, psychologists, special education professionals, head teachers, education administrators, researchers, course designers and directors and teacher educators.
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Research interests
Intercultural education Education in the creative arts Childrens literature Religion, spirituality and education Literacy and education Education and technology Strengthening science education Education for mathematical understanding E-learning and online technologies Effective learning and teaching Curriculum and assessment Education for inclusion Citizenship Teacher professionalism and identity Responding to educational inequality and disadvantage Social class and gender, and politics Ethnicity and education Youth, education and society Additional support needs Adult and continuing education Widening participation International comparative education Education, social capital and regeneration Public sector leadership Leadership and ethics Continuing professional development Management and organisations. We offer supervision across most areas of education. To find out more about potential supervisors, view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/schools/education/staff. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying.
Contact us
Arlene Burns, Administrative Assistant Tel: +44 (0)141 330 2514 Email: arlene.burns@glasgow.ac.uk www.glasgow.ac.uk/education/research/ postgraduate
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Leadership, Policy & Communities: taught programmes
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Strategic Leadership
This PgCert is designed to bring together public servants working at management levels in local authorities or large public organisations, with the view of developing better ways of understanding change, leading strategically, and reviewing the impact of change on the development of organisations. Programme overview PgCert: 9 months full-time; 12 months part-time The flexible delivery of the programme, with intensive face-to-face sessions, is supported by a substantial online package. This will allow you to balance your professional commitments and your study. Core courses: Leading organisations; Strategic thinking and change management; Practitioner inquiry and decision making. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent (eg GPA of 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject. You must also be employed in a related field.
Organisational Leadership
This Masters combines a general focus on the leadership of organisations with a focus on the leadership of specific services and agency sectors. The programme, the only one of its kind in Scotland, brings together people from early childhood, schools, higher education, adult education and public service agencies through common leadership programmes. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will take three core courses, an optional course (selected from six options) and a dissertation. The programme offers intensive teaching days supported by substantial documentation on the Universitys virtual learning environment Moodle.
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Thought, Pedagogy & Practice: taught programmes
in Childrens Care, Learning and Development or Playwork. You will be expected to undertake placement-based assignments. You will be required to provide an employers reference to help support your application. advancing research methods; Open studies two: applying research methods. Years 4 and 5: You will work towards the submission of your dissertation of 50,000 to 60,000 words, supported by an appropriate supervisor. Entry requirements: The normal entry qualification is a Masters-level qualification, or equivalent, in education or a cognate subject area.
Academic Practice
The PgCert in Academic Practice provides a route for academic staff to demonstrate fulfilment of the UK Professional Standards Framework for teaching and supporting learning in higher education. Programme overview PgCert: 24 months part-time You will have the opportunity to work in collaboration with academic colleagues from all disciplines (in the first year) and then with colleagues from your own disciplinary area (in the second year). Taught sessions are grounded on discussion and sharing practice while working through relevant, structured activities. You will be assessed through reflective and evidence-based case studies on elements of your current practice. The key areas of learning, teaching and assessment include: course and curriculum design; principles of assessment and feedback; teaching methodologies including lecturing, small group work and online learning; evaluation of teaching practice. Entry requirements: The minimum qualification for entry to the programme will generally be a degree plus some higher education teaching experience. Normally, applicants will already hold a teaching position in a higher education institution.
Education (Primary/Secondary)
The Postgraduate Diploma in Education is a Masters-level qualification in teacher education. Programme overview Postgraduate Diploma in Education (PGDE): 10 months full-time The programme will prepare you to meet the demands of the profession through the following areas of study Understanding learning and teaching; Learning and teaching in the primary curriculum OR Learning and teaching in the secondary curriculum; Evaluating learning and teaching; Religious education (students who complete this course will be awarded the Catholic Teachers Certificate in Religious Education). Secondary teaching qualifications are offered in the following subjects: Art and design; Biology; Business education; Chemistry; Computing; English; Geography; History; Mathematics; Modern languages (French, French with Spanish, French with Italian, French with German, Spanish with French); Modern studies; Physics; Religious education. Entry requirements: A bachelor degree from a UK university or equivalent. For secondary education, the degree should contain 80 credit points relevant to the subject chosen, 40 of which at Year 2 or above plus Higher English at grade C or equivalent. For primary education, also minimum Standard Grade Mathematics at credit level or equivalent. Some work experience in a school classroom is also required.
Childhood Practice
This programme provides a practice-based examination of the theoretical approaches important to leadership and management within childhood practice. Programme overview PgDip: 24 months part-time; MEd: 36 months part-time You will take four core courses and two placement courses. The taught component will be delivered through a combination of lectures, seminars, tutorials and group project work. You will develop the research, writing and professional skills to enable you to register with Scottish Social Services Council at a manager level. Core courses: Childhood practice: building a professional learning community; Leading improvements in childhood practice; Contemporary perspectives on children and childhoods; Understanding educational enquiry. Entry requirements: You will be required to have a degree (or equivalent) in any academic discipline. You should also have completed or be prepared to undertake an HNC, PDA, SVQ3, SVQ4 or equivalent professional qualifications
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Seminar on contemporary issues; Advanced educational research. Optional courses: These are chosen from a range (which may vary from year to year) including: Work-related education; Educational management and leadership; Science education; Inclusive education; English language teaching; Educational psychology; Arts in education. Entry requirements: Normally a first degree (or equivalent) and professional teacher training in education or a related profession, eg social work, nursery nursing, clinical nursing. (Recognition is also given for professional experience with extra weighting given to experience in a promoted post.) Core courses: English language and linguistics; Advanced discourse analysis; Advanced studies in language and the media; World Englishes; International writing in English; Introduction to research methods. Entry requirements: A first degree in English, education or a relevant subject, plus a teaching qualification or two years teaching experience.
I thoroughly enjoyed my time studying my MSc in Inter-Professional Science Education & Communication. I found the degree to be engaging and challenging, yet approachable and accessible in equal measure. It was able to introduce different social sciences and link them to science in a unique and exciting way.
Graham Lough, MSc in InterProfessional Science Education & Communication graduate
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School of Education
You will be taught through a combination of lectures, seminars, tutorials and fieldwork. There is also an emphasis on building your collaborative skills through group-based project work and research. The programme offers opportunities for study trips in the UK and abroad. Core courses: MSc, PgDip, PgCert: Science, education and society; Making science accessible. MSc and PgDip only: Introduction to educational and social research; Modern educational thought. MSc only: You will complete a dissertation or portfolio of practice in either science education or communication. Optional courses: You can choose from a wide range of courses from the School of Education, the College of Science & Engineering, and the College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences. Entry requirements: Applicants would normally be expected to hold an upper-second honours degree or equivalent in a relevant subject area. Entry requirements: You must be teaching in higher education in order to undertake the first year of the MEd programme. This is because the assessed work for the PgCert in Learning & Teaching in Higher Education requires you to have your teaching observed by a peer and to evaluate your own teaching practice. As part of the application process you will need to complete a personal statement which requests details of your current teaching commitments.
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Teaching Adults
This programme provides a strong grounding in the practices used in teaching adults, as well as an opportunity to conduct a practice-related research project. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time; 18 months part-time You will take a taught component of four core courses alongside the work placement. For the MSc you will also complete a supervised research project of between 12,000 and 15,000 words. The teaching segment provides great opportunities to build professional and personal relationships through seminars, fieldwork and self-directed or group projects. Core courses: The psychology of adult learning; Modern educational thought; International issues in adult and continuing education; Curriculum development in adult and continuing education. Entry requirements: 2.1 Honours degree or the equivalent.
Psychological Studies
This Masters in Psychological Studies is designed to provide you with a broad and critical awareness of psychological theory and practice, together with opportunities to focus on aspects of psychology with particular relevance to your own experience and interests. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time You will take four core courses, one optional course and complete a dissertation of 12,000 to 15,000 words. Core courses Semester 1: Research methods 1; Human development; Individual differences; Cognitive psychology.
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Interdisciplinary Studies
The School of Interdisciplinary Studies is based at our stunning rural campus, two hours from Glasgow in the university town of Dumfries. Our postgraduate community includes 20 academic staff, 21 research students, 6 research assistants and 9 research fellows.
Contact
Tel: +44 (0)1387 702001/702131 Email: admissions-dumfries@glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
The school offers a truly interdisciplinary approach across a range of fields, drawing on expertise from the sciences, arts and social sciences. Our research falls within the following broad themes: Globalisation, competitiveness and sustainability Governance, policy, accountability and risk management Inequalities, inclusion, identities and social change People, places, engagement and change. Environment and culture We place strong emphasis on the importance of tackling environmental issues and tourism in a cultural context. Our subject areas identify important themes in the local region, which also resonate with other rural regions, worldwide, and are the focus of the Solway Centre for Environment & Culture, our research hub at Dumfries. Health and wellbeing In addition, the campus has a significant history of research in the areas of health, wellbeing and social studies, including ageing, palliative and end-of-life care. There are also plans to consolidate and expand activity in these areas to capitalise on existing partnerships and generate further leading research initiatives. Knowledge transfer We work closely with our knowledge transfer partners in the region, bringing together expertise from seven further and higher
education institutions in the South of Scotland and providing a joint approach to knowledge exchange activity. We are funded by the Scottish Funding Council, the European Regional Development Fund and partner contributions.
Learning environment
The school offers exciting possibilities in postgraduate study across a range of complementary disciplines. Our specialised suite of programmes is professionally orientated and affords you great depth of study while also developing relevant practical skills through our programme of placements, field trips and guest speakers. Our postgraduate students also benefit from our Cultural Currents Research Seminar Series, along with a range of lectures, public events and conferences throughout the academic year. We place great value in a practical approach and in variety of perspective, ensuring that you gain a strong set of professionally orientated skills as well as a solid academic background. You can be confident that, whatever your discipline, your learning will be active and interesting.
Career prospects
Our graduates have found employment in both the public and private sector in fields such as: environmental education; arts and culture; media and journalism; advertising; tourism and heritage; technology assessment; carbon management; policymaking and analysis with government agencies and consultancy, environmental consultancies and private companies; advisor to councils, businesses and planning bodies; or pursuing further postgraduate study.
Set in 85 acres of leafy parkland with stunning views, our specialist campus in Dumfries offers postgraduate students the chance to be part of a world-leading university in a unique and very special environment.
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Research interests
Carbon management, renewable energy and climate change Environmental sustainability and land management Tourism and heritage Hospice, palliative and end-of-life care Public health, wellbeing and ageing Community studies Eco-criticism and ecopoetics History and sociology of science and technology Political philosophy Science and technology studies Scottish history and Scottish studies Scottish literature Folklore and ethnology Wildland fire management Educational studies To find out more about potential supervisors, view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/ schools/interdisciplinary/staff. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying. We welcome enquiries from both PhD and MRes applicants.
Contact us
David Borthwick, Lecturer (Interdisciplinary Studies) Tel: +44 (0)1387 702024 Email: david.borthwick@glasgow.ac.uk
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Teaching is through a combination of lectures, seminars, projects, study trips and fieldwork. As a graduate of the programme you will: be able to demonstrate an understanding of the conceptual and methodological bases for conducting highquality investigations in the context of carbon management; be able to analyse the ethical considerations relevant to carbon management in an occupational or professional context; be able to apply the tools employed for tackling greenhouse gas emissions; be able to evaluate the effectiveness of different strategies employed to tackle greenhouse gas emissions; have the knowledge and technical ability to assess and advise on carbon management. Core courses: Carbon auditing and management; Climate, carbon and change; Theory and principles of sustainability; Environmental ethics and behavioural change. Optional courses: Climate change: impacts on ecology; Sustainable Buildings; Environmental economics; Sustainable energy technologies; Tourism sustainability and climate change; Policies for sustainability and development. Other optional courses are available. You will also complete either a work placement project or dissertation. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject.
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The library provides good e-journals and research material accessible from home and there are other virtual learning tools and courses which are really helpful for part-time students living some distance from Glasgow. Sara Denver, part-time postgraduate research student
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School of Law
Law
The School of Law has a long and illustrious history and today we remain one of Scotlands leading law schools.
Contact
Tel: +44 (0)141 330 3583 Email: enquiries@law.glasgow.ac.uk
Research environment
The school fosters the research potential of academic staff and postgraduate students. Our objective is to cultivate a strong, innovative and collaborative research culture, with a high level of commitment to research activity and output. We engage in research of international and national excellence, which is academically rigorous and contributes to the theoretical and practical advancement of the discipline. We have a number of research clusters to help achieve our goal of pursuing excellence in research: Commercial and competition law International and comparative law Legal history Legal theory Private law Public and European law Members of the school conduct a wide range of legal research including doctrinal, theoretical, and empirical research in areas such as legal theory, public law, Scots private law, criminal law, commercial law, public international law and many others. Work is carried out both by individual researchers and collaborative groups across the University or elsewhere.
generic research knowledge and skills. You will be introduced to legal research methodologies, the ethics of legal research, key traditions of legal inquiry and concepts of legal thought. The school supports a vibrant seminar series, which attracts papers from scholars of national and international renown. We also organise a series of lectures featuring talks from highly successful judges and lawyers and events for external speakers to present papers. Our annual James Wood lecture is held in the first semester, and we regularly host conferences and workshops. Some of our programmes offer work placements and with our support many students have secured internships.
Career prospects
All of the schools postgraduate programmes provide excellent opportunities for growth and career development and offer qualifications that are highly attractive to many employers. There is a high demand for law professionals and opportunities can be found in law firms, banks, insurers, and as asset managers and regulators. Graduates have also gone on to successful careers in policymaking, enforcement agencies, international institutions, government departments and non-governmental organisations. You will also be well placed to enter into further advanced-level study and academia.
Learning environment
Dedicated experts in their field, our academics provide supervision across a very wide range of legal subjects, and are approachable and eager to help. We place a strong emphasis on research training, in order to help you develop
In January 2013, the School of Law will launch an 8 million research centre for copyright and new business models. The Centre for Creativity, Regulation, Enterprise and Technology (CREATe) is a collaboration between Glasgow and six other UK universities. Supported by a 5 million grant from UK research councils, CREATe will ensure the University becomes a leading destination in Europe for world-class research in copyright law and the creative economy. See www.create.ac.uk.
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Research interests
Competition and antitrust law Commercial law Comparative law Constitutional and public law (administrative law, devolution/regional governance, constitutional and political theory) Corporate governance Criminal law and trials Employment law European law Financial law and regulation Human rights and civil liberties Intellectual property International law (including security, international legal theory, international criminal law, law of international organisations, international humanitarian law and minority rights, international economic and trade law, international law and the use of force) Legal history Medical law and genetics Philosophy of law and legal theory Property Welfare law and housing law. We offer supervision across most areas of law. To find out more about potential supervisors, view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/schools/ law/staff. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying.
Contact us
Professor Mark Furse, Adviser of Studies Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5239 Email: mark.furse@glasgow.ac.uk Susan Holmes, Administration Secretary Tel: +44 (0)141 330 6239 Email: susan.holmes@glasgow.ac.uk www.glasgow.ac.uk/law/postgraduateresearch
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School of Law
Law: taught programmes
Entry requirements for Law programmes are normally a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent with at least 50% of the credits in Law, unless otherwise specified.
subject areas), and are required to submit a dissertation approved as falling within the area. Courses: Competition law enforcement; Intellectual property law and the market; International competition law and policy 1; International competition law and policy 2; International merger control.
International Law
This Masters reflects the breadth of contemporary international law, addressing issues as diverse as world trade disputes, United Nations peacekeeping, international human rights litigation, State responsibility and criminal trials before international courts. It is based on the conviction that the international system requires a functioning legal framework, and that rules of international law are of practical relevance. Programme overview LLM : 12 months-full time; 24 months part-time You are required to take at least three courses from the following list (plus one other) and to submit a dissertation (15,000 words) approved as falling within the area. Courses: Foundations of international law (normally compulsory); Globalisation, constitutionalism and human rights; International criminal law; International and European human rights law; International economic law; International law of human security; International law and international security; International investment law; International tax law; The settlement of international disputes; United Nations law.
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Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent with at least 50% of the credits in Law. We also consider politics, international relations, European studies and war studies graduates.
Medical Law
This Masters programme provides a detailed account of medical law in Scotland and in England and Wales, including a rigorous exploration of the arguments around the law. You will explore how law affects healthcare practice. This is due not only to patients seeking compensation for clinical injuries in ever larger numbers but also to frequent applications to the courts to settle issues relating to access to and the provision of appropriate treatment in complex and controversial situations. Programme overview MML: 36 months part-time (distance learning) The first two years involve online interactive modules and your attendance at two annual residential weekends at the University in each year. The method of assessment in each of the first two years is four essay-style assignments of around 5,000 words each. The first year consists of compulsory core and optional modules covering fundamental principles of medical law. Core modules (one assignment from each): Introduction to law; Medical negligence; General principles of consent. Optional modules (one assignment to be chosen): Decision making for the incompetent patient; Confidentiality; Product liability and vaccine damage. The second year allows you the opportunity to consider issues arising in reproductive medicine and in end-of-life care. There are module options to choose from in both areas but you must choose two modules to complete assignments on from each area. Issues at the beginning of life (two assignments to be chosen): Assisted reproduction; Controlling reproduction; Maternalfetal issues; Surrogacy. Issues at the end of life (two assignments to be chosen): The legal meaning of death (including consideration of PVS); Withholding and withdrawing treatment; Organ transplantation; Assisted suicide and euthanasia. In both years all online modules will be available to you, regardless of the assignment chosen. At the end of this two-year period, you will have one further academic year to submit a dissertation of around 20,000 words, on a relevant subject, under supervision. However, please note that successful completion of this programme does not qualify you to undertake professional legal practice as a solicitor, advocate or barrister, for which separate academic and professional qualifications are required. Entry requirements: A 2.2 Honours degree or equivalent qualification. A medical degree is treated as equivalent to the Honours Degree for this purpose. Applicants with other qualifications should contact Ms Sarah Elliston: sarah.elliston@glasgow.ac.uk
Law (LLM)
This Masters provides a challenging general legal education at graduate level. Programme overview LLM: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will complete four courses plus a dissertation. There is also a compulsory one-week induction programme, tailored specifically for the LLM. This offers you information and guidance on learning methods, research skills, and on non-academic aspects of life and study in Glasgow. For details of courses available, see programme entries for: Corporate & Financial Law (LLM); Intellectual Property & the Digital Economy (LLM); International Commercial Law (LLM); International Competition Law & Policy (LLM); International Law (LLM); International Law & Security (LLM).
Law (MRes)
This Masters provides you with an excellent preparation for further research in Law, serving as a qualification in its own right and a platform for PhD study. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time You will take a combination of core courses and optional courses, followed by a dissertation on a specialised topic during the final three months. Core courses: Advanced legal methods 2: Jurisprudence of concepts; Either: Qualitative research methods, or Social science statistics 1; Either: Advanced legal methods 1A: Legal research methodologies, or Advanced legal methods 1B: Traditions of legal enquiry. Optional courses: You can choose from a selection of Law LLM or MSc options and Politics MSc options. Law (LLM) options (please note that this category requires a prior degree in Law or a degree with a 50% law component): Corporate governance; Law of commercial banking; Intellectual property law and the market; International economic law; Competition law. Law (MSc): Globalisation, law and human rights; United Nations law; Fundamentals of international law. Politics (MSc): Comparative European politics; International theory; Media and democracy; Democratisation in Central and Eastern Europe; Enforcing human rights; EU in international politics and development; Internet, protest and civil society; Political legitimacy: contemporary perspectives; International security and global politics. College of Social Sciences advanced electives in research methods: Advanced qualitative methods; Understanding social research.
Socio-Legal Studies
This Masters offers an advanced introduction to the study of Law with a specific emphasis on socio-legal methodology. It provides you with an excellent preparation for doctoral study in the area of socio-legal research, serving as a qualification in its own right and a platform for PhD study. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time You will take five core courses and one optional course, followed by a dissertation on a specialised topic during the final three months. Core courses: Advanced legal methods 2: Jurisprudence of concepts; Qualitative research methods; Social science statistics 1; Either: Advanced legal methods 1A: Legal research methodologies, or Advanced legal methods 1B: Traditions of legal enquiry; Either: Advanced qualitative methods, or Advanced statistics: Issues and methods. Optional courses: Globalisation, law and human rights; United Nations law; Fundamentals of international law; Other electives from within College of Social Sciences Graduate School (eg in Politics or Sociology).
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Research environment
The school is a leading centre of applied and policy-related research addressing key issues such as: inequalities, identities and social change governance and the state crime and criminal justice health and wellbeing, including disability, urban health and the history of medicine global security and international relations global economy and business, including business and financial history. The schools disciplinary expertise ranges across the subject areas of Central and East European studies, economic and social history, politics, sociology and urban studies. We have 84 academic staff, 20 postdoctoral fellows and research associates, over 100 postgraduate research students and 32 honorary professors and research fellows. Our researchers make major contributions to national and international research networks, and to knowledge exchange with the public, private and voluntary sectors in Scotland and throughout the world. We have particularly strong links with Russia and Central Europe and developing research engagements with China. New research is fostered through networks of staff across the University and via wider collaboration, and our researchers regularly attract substantial grants from the Economic & Social Research Council (ESRC), the Arts & Humanities Research Council (AHRC), the Scottish Funding Council, the Leverhulme Trust, the Wellcome Trust and European programmes.
Learning environment
The school draws together internationally recognised scholars and respected practitioners at the forefront of academic and policy thinking to offer a range of taught and research programmes. Our postgraduate students benefit from regular workshops, seminar series, student away days, and opportunities to meet and discuss progress with supervisors. We regularly attract internationally recognised speakers to Glasgow and can also provide informal opportunities for our students to meet industry professionals at open events and recruitment presentations. We will also support you to arrange professional work placements where appropriate.
Career prospects
Our programmes provide knowledge, skills and training relevant to a broad range of careers, through in-depth study of key economic and social issues and problems. Many of our graduates have found roles in the private sector, voluntary or charitable organisations, civil service and government both in the UK and overseas, journalism, policymaking, higher education and academia, and many more.
Based at Glasgow, the Centre for Russian, Central & East European Studies (CRCEES) is an interuniversity centre of excellence. CRCEES supports activities demonstrating the impact and strategic importance of research in language-based area studies, particularly in terms of building capacity and supporting knowledge exchange in the non-academic sector. See www.glasgow.ac.uk/crcees.
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Research interests
Business and financial history Citizens, communication and political actors Consumption and risk Crime, justice and security Global and regional governance Global security History of medicine History, memory and legacy Housing, real estate and urban economics Human rights Identity, language and culture Inequalities International relations Migration Neighbourhoods and wellbeing Political theory Public and urban policy Regeneration Research practice and methods Social and gender history Social theory Social welfare and soft security Transformations and political change. We offer supervision across most areas of social and political sciences. To find out more about potential supervisors, view our staff profiles at www.glasgow.ac.uk/schools/socialpolitical/ staff. You are welcome to contact individual staff members to discuss a potential research topic before applying. We are active supporters of interdisciplinary research and most staff are involved in providing supervision to students alongside colleagues from other disciplines.
Contact us
Tel: +44 (0)141 330 2514 Email: socsci-gradschool@glasgow.ac.uk www.glasgow.ac.uk/socialpolitical/research/ postgraduate
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City life
Ade Kearns, Professor of Urban Studies, is leading a large research programme called Go Well: Community Health and Wellbeing Impacts of Neighbourhood Regeneration and Housing Investment in Glasgow. Were looking at the health & wellbeing impacts upon residents, of both where they live and of public policy interventions, to try to improve their neighbourhoods, says Professor Kearns. Were interested to know whether public policy actions impact on peoples daily lives, their quality of life, and their health and wellbeing, including physical, mental and psychosocial health. The study is looking at 15 deprived communities in Glasgow. Based around community surveys, samples of residents are being interviewed every two years to build up a picture of how their communities are changing. By also studying the whole city, the aim is to assess whether the gap between the study communities and the rest of Glasgow is narrowing over time. Some of the communities are going through radical restructuring, with demolition followed by new housing developments. The study, which began in 2005, will follow the communities throughout this process, and has recently been extended to look at the effects of regeneration associated with the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgows East End. The multi-million-pound programme is an ongoing ten-year partnership between the University, the MRC Social & Public Health Sciences Unit and the Glasgow Centre for Population Health, and is funded by NHS Health Scotland, Scottish Government, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde and the Glasgow Housing Association. Our findings are fed back to the communities, to practitioners and to policymakers, so that they can learn from them and use them in their own discussions about what to do next. Theres a feedback loop between what we study and whats happening on the ground, which is very rewarding, says Professor Kearns. www.glasgow.ac.uk/gowell
Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time, up to 60 months on modular basis The programme is divided into three equal parts, with the second part further subdivided. You will take a series of core courses, choose optional courses and undertake a dissertation or a major project in real estate or planning. Part 1: Understanding cities, markets, institutions and governance: Changing cities and neighbourhoods; Contemporary government and governance (real estate and planning); Development economics and real estate appraisal. Part 2a: Becoming a reflective and effective practitioner: Professional practice and ethics; Strategic management and decision making. Part 2b: Making a practical difference: Designing places; Spatial planning strategies. Options: Economic development and employment; Sustainable housing development; Urban design policy and practice and either Real estate development or an approved urban design course taught at the University of Strathclyde. Part 3: Research skills and experience: You will complete your dissertation or major project in real estate or planning (with research methods). Entry requirements: Applicants with a 2.2 Honours degree may be accepted, if warranted by strong references and/or relevant work experience.
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Spatial Planning
This programme aims to help you acquire a broad foundation of knowledge in spatial planning, from which more detailed or specialist study can be developed, and to relate academic thinking and research at the forefront of spatial planning to your own experience, whether at work or otherwise. Programme overview PgCert: up to 48 months on modular basis Core courses: Contemporary government and governance (real estate and planning); Designing places; Spatial planning strategies. Optional courses: Changing cities and neighbourhoods; Economic development and employment; Professional practice and ethics; Strategic management and decision making; Sustainable housing development; Urban design policy and practice. Entry requirements: Applications for the Postgraduate Certificate are considered on an individual basis, with particular consideration given to the applicants practical experience.
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Urban Regeneration
This programme offers you a broad understanding of contemporary urban change, governance and policy, and allows you to find a deeper insight into specific issues which contribute to, or detract from, city and neighbourhood development. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time; up to 60 months on modular basis; PgDip: 9 months full-time; 18 months part-time; up to 4 years on modular route; PgCert: 4 months full-time; 8 months part-time; up to 4 years on modular route Core courses: Changing cities and neighbourhoods; Contemporary government and governance; Policy analysis. Optional courses include: Regenerating cities; Designing places; Economic development; Remaking urban neighbourhoods; Strategic management and decision making. You will also research a specialist topic and produce a dissertation (MSc only). Entry requirements: A second-class Honours degree or equivalent qualification. Relevant work or voluntary experience will also be taken into account.
Chinese Studies
This Masters offers an introduction to the fascinating and fast-changing dimensions of China today. It provides a broad grounding in Chinese society, economy, politics and culture. There is the flexibility to combine cultural and political studies with introductory or more advanced modules in Mandarin. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time The programme is made up of two core courses and four optional courses taken over two tenweek blocks. In the final part of the programme you will write a dissertation and may take an internship in China. The core courses focus on contemporary China its politics and society and role in the international economy. You can opt to do intensive language study and/or courses in business, international politics, ancient Chinese philosophy, research methods or an independent study module in an area of staff specialism. Subjects covered include: Chinese politics and society; Chinas international politics; China in the international economy; The business environment in China; Chinese language; Internship in China; Independent study module in selected subjects (such as Chinese art history).
Urban Research
The Masters in Urban Research will equip you with the skills and knowledge to formulate theoretically interesting research questions within the context of public policy and to turn these into robust and feasible research designs. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time; 18 months part-time You will study four core courses: three in methodology and one foundational course in urban policy; as well as optional courses chosen from a range in urban studies and other selected courses offered at the University. You will also write a dissertation on a topic of your choice, under the guidance of a specialist. Core courses: Social science statistics 1; Qualitative methods; Introduction to social theory for researchers; Changing cities and neighbourhoods. Optional courses offered by Urban Studies: Regenerating cities: strategies and evaluation; Economic development and employment; Sustainable housing development; Public policy and fiscal austerity; Evaluation of public policy; Remaking urban neighbourhoods. You can also choose from courses in the other subjects in the School of Social & Political Sciences. Entry requirements: A first degree in a relevant subject. Applicants with relevant professional experience may be accepted with fewer qualifications. Please contact the programme director to discuss.
European Politics
This Masters gives you a comprehensive understanding of contemporary politics in Europe, taking a pan-European approach to European politics (discussing both Eastern and Western Europe) and providing you with extensive analysis of the evolution of the European Union. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will study three core courses and three optional courses. You will also write a dissertation on a topic of your choice in European politics, which will be supervised by a specialist member of staff. Core courses: Comparative European politics; Institutions and policies of the European Union; Qualitative research methods or Social science statistics 1. Optional courses: Challenges in international politics; Chinas international politics; Chinese politics and society; Critical perspectives on human rights; Ethics in global politics; EU in international politics and development; Foreign policy of the United States; Freedom of expression; Globalisation and European integration; Human
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rights and global politics; International security and global politics; International relations theory; Internet and civil society; Media and democracy; Political institutions, crisis and communication; Political legitimacy: contemporary perspectives; Politics of gender in development. Note: Some courses might not be available every year. You may also be able to choose from courses in the other subjects in the School of Social & Political Sciences.
Global Economy
The global economy is a complex and challenging place. This Masters in Global Economy, taught by internationally acknowledged experts in their fields, unravels many of the complexities and explores the challenges. This programme is unique in this field as you do not require to have a first degree in economics or business to apply. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will study core three courses and three optional courses and undertake a dissertation during the final phase of the programme. You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and take part in project and team work. You will benefit from our programme of guest seminars. Core courses: The globalised economy; Business in the global economy; Social science statistics. Optional courses: There is a wide range of options available within the School of Social & Political Sciences. The range of courses available may change from year to year, but may include: Globalisation of banking and financial institutions; Globalisation and labour; Technology transfer in a globalised world; International economic relations since 1945; The EU in international politics and development.
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Core courses: International security and global politics; Thematic issues in global security; Qualitative research methods; Social sciences statistics; Introduction to social theory for researchers; Dissertation. Optional courses: May include: Critical perspectives on securities and vulnerabilities; Comparative approaches to warfare and violent conflict; Freedom, security and justice in the European Union; Globalisation and European integration; Globalisation and the new security agenda in Central and Eastern Europe; Society, environment and the concept of sustainable development in post-Soviet Russia; Post-Soviet Russia: Renegotiating global and local identities; The European Union in international politics and development; International relations theory; The Internet and civil society; Human rights and global politics; Insurgency and counter-insurgency, 1800present; British military power since 1945; The American way of war: From the Revolution to the War on Terror; Social change and social justice: Activism, social movements and democracy; Development, postcolonialism and environment; The global criminal economy; Ethics in global politics.
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Optional courses (one chosen): Challenges in international politics; Chinas international politics; Comparative European politics; Ethics in global politics; EU in international politics and development; Foreign policy of the United States; Globalisation and European integration; Internet and civil society; Media and democracy. Note: Some courses might not be available every year. You may also be able to choose from courses in the other subjects in the School of Social & Political Sciences and the School of Law. Dissertation: The dissertation, written during the final phase of the programme, is your opportunity to explore your own specialist interest in human rights and international politics and to demonstrate the research and writing skills you have developed. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in politics, law or related social science subject. We will consider applications from graduates from other fields, but you should submit a statement indicating why you are interested in changing fields or the connection to your previous study. We will also take relevant work experience into account.
Optional courses (three chosen): Chinas international politics; Chinese politics and society; Comparative European politics; Critical perspectives on human rights; Ethics in global politics; EU in international politics and development; Foreign policy of the United States; Freedom of expression; Globalisation and European integration; Human rights and global politics; International security and global politics; Institutions and policies of the European Union; Internet and civil society; Media and democracy; Political institutions, crisis and communication; Political legitimacy: contemporary perspectives; Politics of gender in development. Note: Some courses might not be available every year. You may also be able to choose from courses in the other subjects in the School of Social & Political Sciences. Entry requirements: A 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in politics, law or related social science subject. We will consider applications from graduates from other fields, but you should submit a statement indicating why you are interested in changing fields or the connection to your previous study. We will also take relevant work experience into account.
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Core courses: State and society under Communism in Russia, Central and Eastern Europe; Language (Czech, Estonian, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Russian or Slovak). Optional courses: Changing state and society in Central Europe; Developments in Czech society since 1989; Economic transformation in Central East Europe; Gender and identity in Soviet and post-Soviet Russia; Globalisation and the new security agenda in Central and Eastern Europe; Society, environment and the concept of sustainable development in post-Soviet Russia; Statehood and nationality in Central and Eastern Europe; Stalin and Stalinism; A maximum of one outside option from an approved subject. Note: Some languages and courses might not be available every year. You may also be able to choose from courses in the other subjects in the School of Social & Political Sciences. Language training is offered over a range of levels from beginners to advanced. If you are a native speaker or have a degree in one of the regions languages, you will take an additional course instead. You can take part in the Collaborative Masters dissertation: this allows you to gain funded work experience while providing much-needed research support to public and third-sector organisations. economic, political and security challenges of the 21st century. Flexible and high-quality language training is an essential part of the programme. You will get international experience in at least two countries, develop your skills in area research and acquire a range of key employability skills through our well-developed placements with associate partners from the business, public policy and third-sector communities. You will also participate in conferences, workshops and other socio-cultural events, making the experience truly rewarding. You will study at the University of Glasgow in the first year. The second year is spent at another Erasmus Mundus double degree partner university or single degree exchange university (listed on the IMRCEES Consortium website) where you will follow one or more distinct study tracks (eg Central Asia Studies; The Caucasus/ Caspian Sea Basin Studies; Baltic Sea Region Studies; Soviet and post-Soviet Studies; and Central European Studies) in Semester 1, followed by a 20,00025,000 word dissertation.
Russian, Central & East European Studies (Erasmus Mundus International Masters)
The International Masters in Russian, Central & East European Studies offers you the unique opportunity to combine a year of study in Glasgow with a year studying overseas (in English) at one of our renowned partner institutions and leads to the award of a double degree or a single degree. The double degree version of IMRCEES has been awarded Erasmus Mundus recognition by the European Commission. Applicants interested in the Erasmus Mundus IMRCEES double degree should visit the IMRCEES Consortiums website at www.glasgow.ac.uk/erasmusmundus. Programme overview International Masters (Double degree/single degree): 2 years full-time This challenging and innovative programme enables you to understand the history of Communism and why it collapsed. You gain an informed knowledge of the process of economic and political transformation in the former Communist states. We want to develop world-class researchers specialising in one or more of the following critical geopolitical areas: Central Asia; the Caucasus and Caspian Sea Basin; Russia; Central and Eastern Europe, including the Baltic Sea Region. This should support bodies like the European Union to address the myriad of socio-
Public Policy
The Masters in Public Policy will equip you with the skills and knowledge to make an effective contribution to the formation, implementation and evaluation of policy in a broad range of fields. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time, up to 60 months on modular route; PgDip: 9 months full-time; 18 months part-time; up to four years on modular route You will take a number of core and optional courses, enabling you to: demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of the key institutions and processes engaged in public policy; contribute to the design of approaches to monitoring and review of policies; better understand your chosen policy fields; develop skills in self-management, critical analysis, and written communication. Core courses: Policy analysis; Policy design and delivery; Contemporary government and governance. Optional courses include: Researching and evidencing the policy process; Public policy and fiscal austerity; Strategic management and decision making; Crime and community safety. You will also research a specialist topic and produce a dissertation (MSc only).
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Criminology
The Masters in Criminology introduces the theoretical and conceptual resources relevant to the study of crime, criminal justice and crime policy. It provides advanced training in social research methods. Programme overview MRes: 12 months full-time, 24 months part-time; PgDip: 9 months full-time, 21 months part-time The four core courses and two optional courses provide you with in-depth knowledge of current criminological issues and refine your social research abilities. For the MRes you will apply your analytical and research skills to a specialised topic and produce a dissertation. Core courses: Understanding and explaining crime and social control; Research and enquiry in crime and criminal justice; Social science statistics 1; Qualitative research methods. Optional courses: At least one must be taken from the following: Criminal justice: global challenges; Rehabilitation and desistance from crime; Penology and punishment; Crime, media and popular culture; Crime and community safety; Criminological perspectives on security; The global criminal economy.
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Sociology
This Masters programme will provide you with an advanced introduction to sociology and you will develop a critical understanding of the discipline. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time The programme has a flexible structure, with over half the taught courses as options. Following from this, you will produce a sustained account of research in a chosen area, and conduct empirical research in that area, through a dissertation project. Core courses: Current issues in social theory; Methods of social research. Optional courses: You will choose three optional courses from the list below. You may choose to take one option from other postgraduate taught courses in the School of Social & Political Sciences. The disabling society; Religion in society; Sexualities and society; Gender and society; Racism and modernity; Introduction to social theory; Class and stratification.
You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and take part in lab and project work. Core courses: Social theory and social history; Research resources and skills for historians. Optional courses (four chosen): War, sacrifice and the nation in Europe 17891918; Gender, politics and power; Governing highs and health: history and the control of drugs; History of medicine 1: studies in the history of medicine before 1850; History of medicine 2: studies in the history of medicine from 1850 to 2000; Poverty and inequality in the modern world; Qualitative research methods; Topics in historical computing; Social science statistics; Work and occupational health in the 20th century. You will also be able to choose courses from Masters programmes in History and Economic & Social History; and research training courses provided by the College of Social Sciences.
Global Health
The Masters in Global Health is a challenging and innovative programme which will develop your critical analysis of key issues within health and medicine, health policy and health planning from a social science perspective. Programme overview MSc: 12 months full-time; 24 months part-time You will attend lectures, seminars and tutorials and take part in project and team work in the UK. Core courses: Health in its social context; Methods of social research. Optional courses: The disabling society; Public policy for health; History of medicine from 1850 to 2000; Medical anthropology; Health economics; Globalisation and health; Psychosocial approaches to health.
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Index
AZ index
AZ of index all postgraduate taught programmes A-Z of of all postgraduate taught programmes
A Academic Practice Adult & Continuing Education Advanced Community Development Advanced Statistics Aeronautical Engineering Aerospace Engineering & Management Aerospace Systems American Studies Animal Welfare Science, Ethics & Law Applied Carbon Management (Dumfries Campus) Applied Medical Science Applied Neuropsychology Aquatic System Science Archaeological Studies Art History: Art: Politics: Transgression: 20th Century Avant-Gardes Art History: Dress & Textile Histories Art History: History of Collecting & Collections Art History: International Art Nouveau Art, Style & Design Arts of China Arts of Europe Astrophysics Automotive Engineering 164 162 162 136 126 126 126 49 80 170 106 90 132 30 34 34 34 34 34 35 35 141 127 Composition 60 Computer Forensics & E-discovery 54 Computer Systems Engineering 127 Computing Science (MRes) 120 Computing Science (MSc) 120 Contemporary Law & Practice 174 Corporate & Financial Law 174 Corporate Governance & Accountability 150 Creative Writing (MFA) 42 Creative Writing (MLitt) 42 Criminology 186 Criminology & Criminal Justice 186 Critical Care Medicine 107 Crop Biotechnology 99 D Development Studies 152 Doctorate in Education (Research) 164 Drugs & Alcohol Studies 162 E Early Modern History Ecology & Environmental Biology Economic & Financial Sector Policies Economic Development Economics, Banking & Finance Education (Primary/Secondary) Educational Studies (MEd) Educational Studies (MSc) Electronics & Electrical Engineering Electronics & Electrical Engineering & Management Electronics Design Embedded Electronic Systems Endodontics English Language & English Linguistics English Language & English Linguistics: Applied English Language Studies (Oman) English Language Teaching Environment & Sustainable Development Environment, Culture & Communication (Dumfries Campus) Environmental Science, Technology & Society (Dumfries Campus) Environmental Statistics Equality & Human Rights (MRes) Equality & Human Rights (MSc) Europe & International Development (Politics & Economics) European Politics European Politics & Law European Studies: Cultures, Societies & Languages Evidence Based Medicine & Education Evolutionary Biology & Systematics Exercise Science F Film & Television Studies Film Journalism Finance & Economic Development Financial Economics Financial Forecasting & Investment Financial Modelling Financial Risk Management Fixed & Removable Prosthodontics Forensic Toxicology Freshwater System Science G Geoinformation Technology & Cartography Geomatics & Management Geospatial & Mapping Sciences Global Economy Global Health Global Mental Health Global Security (MRes) Global Security (MSc) 153 154 150 154 110 107 132
B Banking & Financial Services 151 Battlefield & Conflict Archaeology 30 Bioinformatics 105 Biomedical Sciences 105 Biostatistics 136 Biotechnology 99 Brain Imaging 143 Brain Sciences: From Molecules to Mind 103 C Cardiovascular Practice 106 Cardiovascular Sciences 86 Celtic & Viking Archaeology 30 Celtic Studies 66 Chemistry 117 Chemistry with Medicinal Chemistry 117 Child Health 106 Childhood Practice 164 Childrens Literature & Literacies 164 Chinese Studies 180 City & Regional Planning 178 City Planning & Real Estate Development 178 City Planning & Regeneration 178 Civil Engineering 127 Civil Engineering & Management 127 Classics 37 Clinical Neuropsychology 90 Clinical Nutrition 106 Clinical Pharmacology 86 Clinical Physics 106 Clinical Psychology 90 Clinical Radiation Physics 107 Coastal System Management 132 Community Learning & Development 162
50 80 152 152 152 164 164 165 127 128 128 128 110 42 42 165 165 153 170 171 137 187 187 153 180 181 57 107 81 105
H Health Care 108 Health Technology Assessment 90 Health-Professions Education 108 Healthcare Chaplaincy 108 Historically Informed Performance Practice 60 History 49 History (with an emphasis on the History of Medicine) 51 Housing Studies 179 Human Geography: Space, Politics & Power 133 Human Nutrition 108 Human Rights & International Politics (MRes) 182 Human Rights & International Politics (MSc) 182 I Inclusive Education: Research, Policy & Practice (MEd) Inclusive Education: Research, Policy & Practice (PgDip) Infection & Immunobiology Information Management & Forensics Information Management & Preservation (Digital)/(Archives & Records Management) Information Security (MRes) Information Security (MSc) Information Technology Intellectual Property & the Digital Economy Inter-Professional Science Education & Communication International Accounting & Financial Management International Banking & Finance International Business & Economic Development International Business & Entrepreneurship International Commercial Law International Competition Law & Policy International Corporate Finance & Banking International Development International Finance International Finance & Economic Policy
162 162 95 54
54 121 121 121 174 165 150 155 156 156 174 174 150 155 151 155
47 47 153
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International Financial Analysis International Financial Economics International Law International Law & Security International Management & Design Innovation International Management & Leadership International Management for China International Politics (China) International Relations (MRes) International Relations (MSc) International Strategic Marketing International Trade & Finance Investment Banking & Finance L Landscape Monitoring & Mapping Landscape: Integrated Research & Practice Law (LLM) Law (MRes) Leadership Drugs & Alcohol Setting Learning & Teaching in Higher Education Learning & Teaching of Modern Languages in the Primary School
151 155 174 174 157 157 183 183 183 183 157 156 156
129
O Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery 111 Organisational Leadership 163 Orthodontics 111 P Paediatric Science Philosophy Philosophy (Conversion Programme) Physics: Advanced Materials Physics: Energy & the Environment Physics: Global Security Physics: Life Sciences Plant Science Playwriting & Dramaturgy Political Communication (MRes) Political Communication (MSc) Popular Music Popular Music: Creative Practice Popular Music: Music Industries Primary Care Primary Dental Care Primary Expressive Arts Primary Physical Education Product Design Engineering Professional Development in Education Professional Learning & Enquiry Professional Legal Practice Professional Practice with PGDE Psychological Science, Research Methods of Psychological Studies Public Administration Public Health Public Policy Public Policy & Management Public Policy Research Q Quantitative Finance Quantitative Methods in Biodiversity, Conservation & Epidemiology
M Management 157 Management with Enterprise & Business Growth 158 Management with Human Resources 158 Management with International Finance 158 Management with International Real Estate 158 Managing Health & Wellbeing (Dumfries Campus) 171 Marine & Freshwater Ecology & Environmental Management 81 Marine System Science 133 Material Culture & Artefact Studies 31 Mathematics/Applied Mathematics 137 MBA (Master of Business Administration) 159 Mechanical Engineering 128 Mechanical Engineering & Management 128 Mechatronics 129 Media Management 39 Medical Genetics 108 Medical Law 175 Medical Visualisation & Human Anatomy 105 Medieval & Renaissance Studies 43 Medieval History 50 Mediterranean Archaeology 31 Middle Leadership & Management in Schools 163 Mobile Design & Engineering (MRes) 121 Mobile Design & Engineering (MSc) 122 Modern & Contemporary Art 35 Modern History 50 Modernities: Literature, Theory & Culture 43 Molecular Medicine 109 Museum Studies 55 Musicology 60
109 63 63 141 141 141 141 99 70 184 184 60 60 61 91 111 166 166 129 166 167 175 167 143 167 159 91 185 186 186
S School Leadership & Management (Scottish Qualification for Headship) (inservice programme) Science for International Development Scottish & Celtic Studies Scottish History Search Engine Technologies (MRes) Search Engine Technologies (MSc) Social & Cultural History Social Statistics Socio-Legal Studies Sociology Sociology & Research Methods Software Development Software Engineering (MRes) Software Engineering (MSc) Sonic Arts Spatial Planning Sport & Exercise Medicine Sport & Exercise Science Sports Nutrition Statistics Strategic Leadership Structural Engineering & Mechanics Surgical Oncology Sustainable Energy T Teaching Adults Technical Art History: Making & Meaning Telecommunication Electronics TESOL: Teaching of English to Speakers of Other Languages Textile Conservation Theatre History Theatre Practices Theatre Studies Theoretical Physics Tourism, Heritage & Development (Dumfries Campus) Translation Studies: Translation & Professional Practice Translational Medicine Transnational Crime, Justice & Security U Urban & Housing Practice Urban Policy & Practice Urban Regeneration Urban Research V Veterinary Public Health Victorian Literature W War Studies Y Young People, Social Inclusion & Change
163 133 67 51 122 122 187 137 175 187 187 122 122 123 61 179 86 86 110 137 163 129 110 129
156 81
R Real Estate (MSc) 179 Real Estate (PgCert) 179 Real Estate & Regeneration 179 Religion, Education & Culture 167 Religion, Theology & Culture 73 Religious Education by Distance Learning 167 Reproductive & Maternal Sciences 110 Russian for Social Scientists 184 Russian, Central & East European Studies (Erasmus Mundus International Masters) 185 Russian, Central & East European Studies (MRes) 184 Russian, Central & East European Studies (MSc) 184
111 43
51
163
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AZ by College
Institute of Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences Cardiovascular Sciences Clinical Pharmacology Sport & Exercise Medicine Sport & Exercise Science Translational Medicine Institute of Health & Wellbeing Applied Neuropsychology Clinical Neuropsychology Clinical Psychology Health Technology Assessment Mental Health, Global Primary Care Public Health 90 90 90 90 90 91 91 86 86 86 86 87
Institute of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation Infection & Immunobiology Institute of Molecular, Cell & Systems Biology Biotechnology Crop Biotechnology Plant Science Institute of Neuroscience & Psychology Brain Sciences: From Molecules to Mind School of Life Sciences Bioinformatics Biomedical Sciences Exercise Science Medical Visualisation & Human Anatomy School of Medicine Applied Medical Science Cardiovascular Practice Child Health Clinical Nutrition 106 106 106 106 105 105 105 105 103 99 99 99 95
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School of Geographic & Earth Sciences Aquatic System Science 132 Coastal System Management 132 Freshwater System Science 132 Geoinformation Technology & Cartography 132 Geomatics & Management 132 Geospatial & Mapping Sciences 133 Human Geography: Space, Politics & Power 133 Landscape Monitoring & Mapping 133 Marine System Science 133 Science for International Development 133 School of Mathematics & Statistics Advanced Statistics Biostatistics Environmental Statistics Mathematics/Applied Mathematics Social Statistics Statistics School of Physics & Astronomy Astrophysics Physics: Advanced Materials Physics: Energy & the Environment Physics: Global Security Physics: Life Sciences Theoretical Physics School of Psychology Brain Imaging Psychological Science, Research Methods of 143 143 141 141 141 141 141 141 136 136 137 137 137 137
International Management & Design Innovation International Management & Leadership International Strategic Marketing International Trade & Finance Investment Banking & Finance Management Management with Enterprise & Business Growth Management with Human Resources Management with International Finance Management with International Real Estate MBA (Master of Business Administration) Public Administration Quantitative Finance School of Education
School of Law 157 157 157 156 156 157 158 158 158 158 159 159 156 Contemporary Law & Practice Corporate & Financial Law Intellectual Property & the Digital Economy International Commercial Law International Competition Law & Policy International Law International Law & Security Law (LLM/MRes) Medical Law Professional Legal Practice (Diploma) Socio-Legal Studies School of Social & Political Sciences Chinese Studies 180 City & Regional Planning 178 City Planning & Real Estate Development 178 City Planning & Regeneration 178 Criminology 186 Criminology & Criminal Justice 186 Equality & Human Rights (MRes/MSc) 187 European Politics 180 European Politics & Law 181 Global Economy 181 Global Health 187 Global Security (MRes/MSc) 181, 182 Housing Studies 179 Human Rights & International Politics (MRes/MSc) 182 International Management for China 183 International Politics (China) 183 International Relations (MRes/MSc) 183 Political Communication (MRes/MSc) 184 Public Policy 185 Public Policy & Management 186 Public Policy Research 186 Real Estate 179 Real Estate & Regeneration 179 Russian for Social Scientists 184 Russian, Central & East European Studies (MRes/MSc) 184 Russian, Central & East European Studies (Erasmus Mundus International Masters) 185 Social & Cultural History 187 Sociology 187 Sociology & Research Methods 187 Spatial Planning 179 Transnational Crime, Justice & Security 187 Urban & Housing Practice 179 Urban Policy & Practice 180 Urban Regeneration 180 Urban Research 180 174 174 174 174 174 174 174 175 175 175 175
Academic Practice 164 Adult & Continuing Education 162 Advanced Community Development 162 Childhood Practice 164 Childrens Literature & Literacies 164 Community Learning & Development 162 Doctorate in Education (Research) 164 Drugs & Alcohol Studies 162 Education (Primary/Secondary) 164 Educational Studies (MEd/MSc) 164, 165 English Language Studies (Oman) 165 English Language Teaching 165 Inclusive Education: Research, Policy & Practice 162 Inter-Professional Science Education & Communication 165 Leadership Drugs & Alcohol Setting 163 Learning & Teaching in Higher Education 166 Learning & Teaching of Modern Languages in the Primary School 166 Middle Leadership & Management in Schools 163 Organisational Leadership 163 Primary Expressive Arts 166 Primary Physical Education 166 Professional Development in Education 166 Professional Learning & Enquiry 167 Professional Practice with PGDE 167 Psychological Studies 167 Religion, Education & Culture 167 Religious Education by Distance Learning 167 School Leadership & Management (Scottish Qualification for Headship) 163 Strategic Leadership 163 Teaching Adults 167 TESOL: Teaching of English to Speakers of Other Languages 167 Young People, Social Inclusion & Change 163 School of Interdisciplinary Studies Applied Carbon Management Environment, Culture & Communication Environmental Science, Technology & Society Managing Health & Wellbeing Tourism, Heritage & Development 170 170 171 171 171
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Important information
This publication is intended to help you choose your programme of study at the University of Glasgow. It does not replace the University Calendar as a statement of the University regulations. All students will be required as a condition of registration (matriculation) to abide by, and to submit to the procedures of, the Universitys rules and regulations, as amended from time to time. A copy of the current regulations is available, on request, from Student Services, or the University Calendar can be viewed online at: www.glasgow.ac.uk/senate/calendar.
Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained within this publication but it is subject to alteration without notice. The University will use all reasonable endeavours to deliver courses in accordance with the descriptions set out in this publication. The University, however, reserves the right to make variations to the contents or methods of delivery of courses, to discontinue courses and to merge or combine courses, if such action is reasonably considered to be necessary by the University. If the University discontinues any course, it will use its reasonable endeavours to provide a suitable alternative course. In the event of industrial action or other circumstances beyond the Universitys control interfering with its ability to provide these courses or services, the University will undertake to minimise disruption as far as is practicable. Published admissions requirements are subject to alteration and may differ from those listed in this book. Notification with the Information Commissioner under the Data Protection Act 1998, and is disclosed to third parties only with students consent, or to meet a statutory obligation, or in accordance with the Universitys Notification with the Information Commissioner, or in accordance with the terms of the Act. either institution, you will pursue your studies at that institution but your final degree will be conferred by the University of Glasgow. Applications should be made to the institution and not to the University. The University has made separate arrangements with each institution for access to University facilities. The institution concerned will provide guidance on these arrangements. For further information: www.gsa.ac.uk and www.sac.ac.uk.
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In common with other universities, students on certain courses at the University of Glasgow may incur additional expenditure on items such as fieldwork, specialist materials and supplementary instrumental tuition; although some assistance from University funds may be available to meet such expenditure, responsibility for payment will rest with the student. In addition, small charges may be made in some subjects for such items as course materials, photocopying and laser printing; detailed information may be obtained from the Universitys schools or colleges.
Associated institutions
The University is proud of its associations with two other highly regarded seats of learning in Scotland: The Glasgow School of Art and the Scottish Agricultural College. Both are independent higher education institutions. If you apply for a programme offered by
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