Programme details | |
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Degree: | Master of Arts (MA) |
Discipline: |
Sociology
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Study modes: | full-time, part-time |
University website: | Methods of Social Research |
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This MA programme at Kent exposes students to a wide range of thinking and approaches in social science research presented in a multi-disciplinary context and at an advanced level.
The focus of the programme is on developing practical skills in data collection, in data analysis and interpretation, and in the presentation of research findings so that students gain insight into the research process from design to the production of new knowledge.
More generally students will broaden their understanding of the philosophical, theoretical and ethical issues that matter in research, and will become aware of debates about the relationship between theory and research and between research and policy/practice.
It is possible to study certain individual modules from the MA on a Standalone basis. They provide a taster and introduction to studying Methods of Social Research, and if you wish to continue studying, you can use the credits from your taster modules to work towards a qualification in Methods of Social Research (PCert or MA). Costs for standalone modules can be found on the Kent Online store (please note that you must submit an application (link below) before paying for a module on the online store).
Apply to study a Standalone module
Our School has a long and distinguished history and is one of the largest and most successful social science research communities in Europe. In the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021, 100% of our Social work and social policy research was classified as world-leading or internationally excellent for impact and environment.
The School supports a large and thriving postgraduate community and in 2010 distributed in excess of 贈100,000 in Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) quota awards, and in University and SSPSSR bursaries and scholarships to new students.
Academic staff specialise in research of international, comparative and theoretical significance, and we have collective strengths in the following areas: civil society, NGOs and the third sector; cross-national and European social policy; health, social care and health studies; work, employment and economic life; risk, risk society and risk management; race, ethnicity and religion; social and public policy; sociology and the body; crime, culture and control; sociological theory and the culture of modernity.
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