Programme/Approved Electives for 2022/23
None
Available as a Free Standing Elective
No
A dissertation is a piece of personal research, testing students' ability to ask interesting questions, find and assess evidence in the quest to answer them, and fit questions and answers together in an extended piece of written work. The finished piece should express students' final conclusions in a convincing and coherent way.This dissertation module allows you to produce your own piece of independent historical research, guided by a supervisor who will be a world-leading expert in the field. The dissertation, of between 8,000 and 12,000 words, will normally be linked to a semester-one History programme elective but this is a matter for negotiation with your supervisor. The dissertation will allow you to engage in personalised research, into questions or source genres of interest to you. The very best dissertations are of publishable quality and are submissible to national prize competitions. Keele students have been successful in the past in the History Today competition, and the Maritime History competition. Successful completion of the dissertation will represent a substantial piece of final-year undergraduate work that will facilitate entry to a postgraduate course and/or demonstrate writing and research skills relevant to a number of different careers. It should also give you considerable satisfaction; the dissertation is often the History module that people enjoy the most during their three year degree programme.
Aims
To demonstrate the ability to formulate, execute, and complete an independent extended piece of research with appropriate supervision, exploring some historical or historiographical problem.
Talis Aspire Reading ListAny reading lists will be provided by the start of the course.http://lists.lib.keele.ac.uk/modules/his-30103/lists
Intended Learning Outcomes
identify and critically analyse a range of primary sources appropriate to the topic: 1formulate a question or series of questions to answer an historical problem: 1relate the particular study to the wider field of scholarship: 1plan and manage a substantial piece of research in a recognised area of historical scholarship: 1produce an extended, structured piece of writing with appropriate scholarly apparatus: 1place primary sources in their historiographical context: 1
Workshops 6 hoursPresentation session 2 hoursIndividual supervision 2 hoursResearch 180 hoursPreparation for presentation 10 hoursWriting plan 30 hoursWriting dissertation 55 hoursPolishing &proof-reading 15 hours
Description of Module Assessment
1: Dissertation weighted 100%DissertationStudents will produce a substantial piece of written work of 8,000-12,000 words, on a topic chosen by the student in consultation with their supervisor. The dissertation will normally be subdivided into an introduction, conclusion and an appropriate number of chapters, accompanied by appropriate scholarly notes and bibliography.