- UCAS course code
- VL38
- UCAS institution code
- M20
Bachelor of Science (BSc)
BSc International Disaster Management & Humanitarian Response
- Typical A-level offer: AAB
- Typical contextual A-level offer: BBB
- Refugee/care-experienced offer: BBB
- Typical International Baccalaureate offer: 35 points overall with 6,6,5 at HL
Course unit details:
Key Skills in IDMHR
Unit code | HCRI11071 |
---|---|
Credit rating | 20 |
Unit level | Level 1 |
Teaching period(s) | Semester 1 |
Available as a free choice unit? | No |
Overview
This course is about transforming students from A-level learners into independent scholars. It does this by working through a key set of skills, ranging from identifying appropriate academic sources and scholarship, through reading academic texts critically, to producing the required style, tone and level of critical analysis in academic writing and presentations. Students will work with a member of the academic staff in tutorials to study their specialism with them; so that they can understand how disaster management and humanitarian knowledge and scholarly practice work side by side, and why the key skill set they are learning is essential to this.
Pre/co-requisites
Aims
The aims of this course are:
- To manage the leap between school-level work and university level work.
- To get to know one of the lecturers well, to understand what they do and understand their approaches.
- To experience lots of varieties of disaster management and humanitarianism that won't have been experienced in other modules
- To acquire the practical skills required to succeed at Manchester and get a job.
Teaching and learning methods
Students will have the opportunity to develop interpretation and argumentation skills, both written and oral. They will gain experience of working with others and presenting to staff. Students will develop research and project management skills throughout the course. They will develop skills to help them apply the skills developed from this course to all of their future assessments at university
Knowledge and understanding
- Compile and present an annotated bibliography.
- Identify, analyse and contrast academic arguments.
- Plan university-level essays with a clear structure and coherent argument.
- Compose introductions to essays and conclusions to essays
- Understand the aims of academic presentations as alternative communication mechanisms to different audiences.
- Learn how to engage with difficult subjects in the classroom setting.
Intellectual skills
- Discrimination between highly relevant and highly valuable challenging reading, and peripheral or less rigorous styles of writing
- Organisation of ideas in writing and presentations
Practical skills
- Information management skills, requiring evaluation, synthesis, and record-keeping.
- Research skills, including planning, prioritisation of tasks, identification and location of primary and secondary sources, evaluation of findings.
- Essay-writing skills related to the analysis of a specific question, construction of arguments, assessment and deployment of evidence, writing style.
Transferable skills and personal qualities
Students will have the opportunity to develop interpretation and argumentation skills, both written and oral. They will gain experience of working with others and presenting to academic staff. Students will develop research and project management skills throughout the course. They will develop skills to help them apply the skills developed from this course to all of their future assessments at university.
Employability skills
- Group/team working
- Recognising and identifying views of others and working constructively with them.
- Other
- Information Retrieval - ability independently to gather, sift, synthesise and organise material from various sources (including library, electronic and online resources), and to critically evaluate its significance. Presentation - capacity to make oral presentations, using appropriate media for a target audience. Time Management - ability to schedule tasks in order of importance. Improving own Learning - ability to improve one's own learning through planning, monitoring, critical reflection, evaluate and adapt strategies for one's learning.
Assessment methods
Assessment Task | Formative or Summative | Weighting within unit |
Portfolio of reflective learning and individual weekly tasks To include formative elements with feedback in tutorials | Summative | 70% |
Essay- submit early Jan | Summative | 30% |
Feedback methods
Feedback method | Formative or Summative |
Written feedback on assignments | Summative |
Verbal feedback seminars | Formative |
Verbal and peer feedback on practice group presentations and practice portfolio pieces in the tutorials | Formative |
Study hours
Scheduled activity hours | |
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Lectures | 20 |
Seminars | 12 |
Independent study hours | |
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Independent study | 168 |
Teaching staff
Staff member | Role |
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Roisin Read | Unit coordinator |