Undergraduate Degrees
BA Modern Languages ( T901 )
- UCAS Course Code:
- T901
- Duration:
- 4 years
- Attendance:
- Full Time
- Award:
- Degree of Bachelor of Arts
- School of Study:
- Language and Communication Studies
- Brochure:
- School of Language and Communication Studies Undergraduate Brochure (PDF)
- Typical A-Level Offer:
- ABB
As well as taking this programme from post-A level, it is possible to start from GCSE level in French. In these cases, more intensive language study is provided prior to the year abroad in year three. This more intensive study reduces slightly the number of optional modules available in year 1.
This is a four-year degree programme which enables you to devote between about one-half and two-thirds of your time to the study of one or twolanguages, one language to Honours level and one at Subsidiary level, for example. The programme includes a year abroad related to the Honours Language(s).
The programme is designed to provide coherence and focus around core language study. Progression over four years is ensured by the careful sequencing of units, from a range of introductory units in the first year, to greater specialisation and sophistication of approach in subsequent years. The programme is flexible, built on the modular principle, and a number of free choice units are available to enable you to pursue your own individual interests.
In Year One, as subsequently, language modules make up the compulsory component of the programme and you also take an introductory module called Study, Research and Communication Skills which develops the core academic skills, attributes and knowledge necessary for language students to make the most of your study at university. You then have scope to choose from a range of options which normally include: French Language in Action; Language, Culture and Interpersonal Communication, Introduction to International Relations, and Discourse and Power. Single Honours post-A level entry students also choose from our wide range of Subsidiary languages and thus develop expertise in an existing non-A level language, or increase the range of languages they have by starting a new one; many students develop a Subsidiary language over the first two years of their degree. Our range of Subsidiary languages is currently as follows: British Sign Language, Mandarin Chinese, French, German, Modern Greek, Italian, Japanese, Russian, and Spanish. Many of these can be studied for a second year (to intermediate level, i.e. A level equivalent); there are also one-year and two-year post-A level subsidiary courses in some languages.
Core Honours language study makes up at least one third of your study for the remaining two years spent at UEA, more if you are studying two languages to Honours level. In your Final Year, alongside core language study, single Honours students also take an advanced/specialised translation module.
For the non-language credits in years two and four, you have a choice of options in language-related units which currently include, Translation Issues in the Media, Language and Politics, Subtitling and Dubbing, Aspects of the French Language, Translation and Adaptation, Language and Gender, or Interpreting, or cultural units such as France Through the Eye of the Lens. In Year Two single Honours students can continue the Subsidiary language started in Year One. There is also the possibility of choosing one unit of Free Choice in Year Two from the range offered across the university; including the Year Two units listed above. Your choice of options is made in consultation with your Adviser, who will ensure that it not only reflects your interests, but that it is also academically coherent.
Honours Language Work
Each year, you have on average 4 contact-hours per week in your Honours language. The Honours language teaching is closely related to the study of contemporary society in the country (or countries) where your Honours language is spoken and your experience of learning language at UEA will include a combination of lectures, seminars and conversation classes. It will cover grammar, translation from and into French, reading and listening comprehension, précis and paraphrase work, the study of different styles and registers, lexical exercises and oral work. You will also spend a significant proportion of your time working independently using subject-oriented teaching dossiers, radio, TV, films, transcripts, newspapers and online resources while keeping abreast of current affairs and cultural life at home and abroad. Our Language Centre has a digital language laboratory, a viewing and editing room, an interpreting suite for advanced language training, live satellite television broadcasts, a large, multi-media self-access resources room with a wide range of DVDs and reference books, up-to-date computers linked to the internet, and translation software.
You will acquire specific expertise in the traditional language skills of reading, writing, speaking and listening, as well as transferable skills such as time management, self-discipline and self-motivation, intercultural awareness, flexibility and resourcefulness, mediation skills, IT literacy and teamwork.
The Year Abroad
Year Three is spent in a country where your Honours language is spoken. For more information on the Year Abroad, please click on the Study Abroad tab above.
Dr. Carlos De Pablos-Ortega
The School of Language and Communication Studies is a small, lively School where we offer flexible undergraduate degree programmes with an emphasis on language competence and on issues relating to contemporary language and translation. Our graduates are highly employable and enter an extremely wide range of professions using their well-developed language and communication skills, and intercultural sensitivity.
Our MA graduates are equally successful professionally. Courses at this level enable flexible planning in the combination of core and optional modules and in the range of possible dissertation topics, while the Faculty of Arts and Humanities provides a rich interdisciplinary environment designed to encourage dialogue and the cross-fertilisation of ideas.
New for 2012-13
We’re always working to build on our strengths here in LCS, improving your student experience – and your prospects. Here are some new Key Features for 2012-13 that you won’t yet find in our brochure:
- Smaller groups in language classes – as few as 10 – mean even better quality learning.
- New high-spec professional interpreter training facilities – helping to keep you ahead of the game.
- Employability boost – extra timetabled sessions to develop your skills and employability profile for a range of professions using language skills right from the start of your degree course.
Find out what our undergraduate students say or check out our Facebook page for 2013 applicants where you can ask our current students questions about studying and living here:
www.facebook.com/groups/UEALCSapps2013
UniStats Information
You may not take more than one Beginners' language in your course.
Compulsory Study (60 credits)
Students must study the following modules for 60 credits:
| Name | Code | Credits |
|---|---|---|
| INTRODUCTION TO LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION STUDIES | LCS-1E05 | 20 |
| POST A-LEVEL FRENCH LANGUAGE 1/I | LCSU1F21 | 20 |
| POST A-LEVEL FRENCH LANGUAGE 1/II | LCSU1F22 | 20 |
Option A Study (20 credits)
Students will select 20 credits from the following modules:
| Name | Code | Credits |
|---|---|---|
| DISCOURSE AND POWER | LCS-1L20 | 20 |
| FRENCH LANGUAGE IN ACTION (LEVEL 1) | LCS-1F36 | 20 |
| INTRODUCTION TO CONTEMPORARY POLITICS | PSI-1A02 | 20 |
| LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION | LCS-1L22 | 20 |
Option B Study (40 credits)
Students will select 40 credits from the following modules:
You may not take more than one Beginners' language in your course.
Compulsory Study (60 credits)
Students must study the following modules for 60 credits:
| Name | Code | Credits |
|---|---|---|
| ASPECTS OF THE FRENCH LANGUAGE | LCS-2F51 | 20 |
| POST A-LEVEL FRENCH LANGUAGE 2/I | LCSU2F01 | 20 |
| POST A-LEVEL FRENCH LANGUAGE 2/II | LCSU2F02 | 20 |
Option A Study (40 credits)
Students will select 40 credits from the following modules:
Free Choice Study (20 credits)
Students will select modules worth 20 credits from the course catalogue with the approval of their School
Compulsory Study (120 credits)
Students must study the following modules for 120 credits:
| Name | Code | Credits |
|---|---|---|
| YEAR ABROAD | LCS-2X0Y | 120 |
Compulsory Study (60 credits)
Students must study the following modules for 60 credits:
| Name | Code | Credits |
|---|---|---|
| ADVANCED TRANSLATION (FRENCH TO ENGLISH) | LCS-3T47 | 20 |
| FRENCH ORAL AND WRITTEN COMPOSITION | LCS-3F13 | 20 |
| TRANSLATION (ENGLISH TO FRENCH) | LCS-3F14 | 20 |
Option A Study (60 credits)
Students will select 60 credits from the following modules:
| Name | Code | Credits |
|---|---|---|
| DISCOURSE AND SOCIETY (LEVEL 3) | LCS-3L47 | 20 |
| DISSERTATION IN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE (AUTUMN) | LCS-3C05 | 20 |
| DISSERTATION IN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE (SPRING) | LCS-3C06 | 20 |
| INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION IN PRACTICE | LCS-3C04 | 20 |
| INTRODUCTION TO CONFERENCE INTERPRETING | LCS-3T51 | 20 |
| INTRODUCTION TO PUBLIC SERVICE INTERPRETING | LCS-3T58 | 20 |
| LANGUAGE AND GENDER (LEVEL 3) | LCS-3L52 | 20 |
| LANGUAGE AND POLITICS (LEVEL 3) | LCS-3L48 | 20 |
| LANGUAGE AND SOCIETY (LEVEL 3) | LCS-3L46 | 20 |
| LANGUAGE IN ACTION (LEVEL 3) | LCS-3L45 | 20 |
| TECHNOLOGICAL TOOLS FOR SUBTITLING AND DUBBING (LEVEL 3) | LCS-3T56 | 20 |
| TECHNOLOGICAL TOOLS FOR TRANSLATING AND REAL-WORLD TRANSLATION (LEVEL 3) | LCS-3T54 | 20 |
| THE CONSTRUCTION OF NEWS (LEVEL 3) | LCS-3L50 | 20 |
| TRANSLATION AND ADAPTATION (LEVEL 3) | LCS-3T22 | 20 |
| TRANSLATION ISSUES IN THE MEDIA (LEVEL 3) | LCS-3T26 | 20 |
Disclaimer
Whilst the University will make every effort to offer the modules listed, changes may sometimes be made arising from the annual monitoring, review and update of modules and regular (five-yearly) review of course programmes. Where this activity leads to significant (but not minor) changes to programmes and their constituent modules, there will normally be prior consultation of students and others. It is also possible that the University may not be able to offer a module for reasons outside of its control, such as the illness of a member of staff or sabbatical leave. Where this is the case, the University will endeavour to inform students.
Year Abroad
Year Three is spent in a country where your Honours language is spoken. It is normally spent in one of three ways: (1) by working as a language assistant teaching English; (2) by doing other suitable work; (3) by studying at a foreign university, either as an exchange student or as a temporary student.
Language assistantships, usually teaching English in a secondary school, provide a useful opportunity to gain some experience of teaching. You become a paid employee of the education authority abroad. Generally, foreign schools want you to stay for a whole academic year, thus an assistantship will not normally be suitable for Double Honours students who need to divide their time abroad between two separate countries.
Students who wish to do so are encouraged to find a work placement and are given support and advice in doing this. The University is not in a position to act as an employment bureau but we do have a number of contacts with companies which employ our students each year and make the details of these vacancies available. Generally, we approve a job provided it involves the use of your foreign language for a wide range of purposes and that most of your colleagues will be native speakers.
As regards study at a foreign university, we have Erasmus exchange schemes and well-established links with a range of universities in France and Spain: (France) Clermont Ferrand, Corsica, Lyon III, Nancy II, Pau, Toulouse II, and Tours; (Spain) Alicante, Castilla La Mancha, Alcalá de Henares, Granada, Salamanca, Toledo and Zaragoza, as well as the Universidad de Guadalajara and the Universidad de las Americas in Mexico.
If you are taking Spanish and French from A level, you will normally split the year between two countries where those languages are spoken. If you are taking one of the languages from below A level, you will normally spend your year in a country where the weaker language is spoken and the summer in a country where your stronger language is spoken.
If you are a highly proficient native (or near-native) speaker of French or Spanish, then you are normally exempted from the compulsory year abroad for that language and spend your first year studying a completely different language from our wide range of Subsidiary languages; in your following two years your compulsory language strand consists of Final Year level units in your native language. If you are studying two languages to Honours level and one of these is your native language, then you will spend a year abroad in a country where your non-native language is spoken.
For more information on the study abroad options, please take a look at the Faculty of Arts and Humanities Study Abroad website.
Entry Requirements
- A Level:
- ABB
- International Baccalaureate:
- 32
- Scottish Advanced Highers:
- ABB
- Irish Leaving Certificate:
- AABBBB
- Access Course:
- Please contact the University for further information.
- HND:
- Please contact the University for further information.
- European Baccalaureate:
- 75%
Students for whom English is a Foreign language
We welcome applications from students from all academic backgrounds. We require evidence of proficiency in English (including writing, speaking, listening and reading). Recognised English Language qualifications include:
- IELTS: 6.5 overall (minimum 6.0 in all components)
- TOEFL: Internet-based score of 88 overall (minimum 18 in the Listening and Writing components; 19 in the Reading component; and 21 in the Speaking component)
- PTE: 62 overall with minimum 55 in all components
If you do not meet the University's entry requirements, our INTO Language Learning Centre offers a range of university preparation courses to help you develop the high level of academic and English skills necessary for successful undergraduate study.
Interviews
The School does not currently interview all applicants for undergraduate entry as standard, however we do offer the opportunity to meet with an academic individually on a Visit Day in order to gain a deeper insight into the course(s) you have applied for.
Gap Year
We welcome applications from students who have already taken or intend to take a gap year.
Deferred Entry
We also welcome applications for deferred entry, believing that a year between school and university can be of substantial benefit. You are advised to indicate your reason for wishing to defer entry and may wish to contact the appropriate Admissions Office directly to discuss this further.
Special Entry Requirements
It is generally expected that you should have at least a Grade A at A Level, or its equivalent, in the language or languages that you intend to take at honours level.
In the case of Spanish or Japanese studied from Beginners' or French from post-GCSE level, we require evidence of foreign language learning ability, such as a good grade in a foreign language at GCSE.
If two honours languages are studied, only one can be taken from below A Level.
Intakes
The School's annual intake is in September of each year.
Alternative Qualifications
If you have alternative qualifications that have not been mentioned above then please contact the University directly for further information.
GCSE Offer
Students are required to have Mathematics and English at Grade C or above at GCSE level.
Assessment
For the majority of candidates the most important factors in assessing the application will be past and future achievement in examinations, academic interest in the subject being applied for, personal interest and extra-curricular activities and the confidential reference. We consider applicants as individuals and accept students from a very wide range of educational backgrounds and spend time considering your application in order to reach an informed decision relating your application. Typical offers are indicated above. Please note, there may be additional subject entry requirements specific to individual degree courses.
Fees and Funding
University Fees and Financial Support: UK/EU Students
Further information on fees and funding for 2012 can be found here
University Fees and Financial Support: International Students
The University will be charging International students £11,700.00 for all full time School of Language and Communication Studies undergraduate programmes which start in 2012.
Please click to access further information about fees and funding for International students.
Applications need to be made via the Universities Colleges and Admissions Services (UCAS), using the UCAS Apply option.
UCAS Apply is a secure online application system that allows you to apply for full-time Undergraduate courses at universities and colleges in the United Kingdom. It is made up of different sections that you need to complete. Your application does not have to be completed all at once. The system allows you to leave a section partially completed so you can return to it later and add to or edit any information you have entered. Once your application is complete, it must be sent to UCAS so that they can process it and send it to your chosen universities and colleges.
The UCAS code name and number for the University of East Anglia is EANGL E14.
Further Information
If you would like to discuss your individual circumstances with the Admissions Office prior to applying please do contact us:
Undergraduate Admissions Office (Language and Communication Studies)
Tel: +44 (0)1603 591515
Email: admissions@uea.ac.uk
Please click here to register your details online via our Online Enquiry Form.
International candidates are also actively encouraged to access the University's International section of our website.


