Unit name | Musicology Project 1 |
---|---|
Unit code | MUSI30063 |
Credit points | 20 |
Level of study | H/6 |
Teaching block(s) |
Teaching Block 1 (weeks 1 - 12) |
Unit director | Dr. Scheding |
Open unit status | Not open |
Pre-requisites |
None |
Co-requisites |
None |
School/department | Department of Music |
Faculty | Faculty of Arts |
Building upon the techniques acquired at Level I, this unit will offer an opportunity for detailed study of a particular area of interest in the field of historical musicology. The project will result in an extended dissertation, presented according to modern, professional scholarly conventions. It will necessarily involve a substantial degree of independent study, although there will be weekly support seminars and regular tutorial supervision in which bibliographies, outlines and methodological strategies will be formulated, or drafts discussed, as relevant. While original work is not expected at this level, it is encouraged and the submitted project should demonstrate an ability to research a topic effectively and sufficiently, and to present a coherent synthesis of the research findings, both orally (in the seminars) and in the submitted dissertation.
Aims:
This unit allows students who have identified a strong interest in pursuing historical investigation of music at Levels C and I to devote themselves to writing a short dissertation on a defined topic. The topic will be chosen from a list of research areas advertised annually and fitting the interests of academic staff. Individual tutorial supervision will be provided and in addition, there will be regular work-in-progress seminars for all students taking this unit, to allow for discussion of general problematics, presentation of ideas and drafts, and formative feedback.
Successful completion of this unit will enable students to:
1. devise an appropriate approach to a topic (with tutorial guidance, as appropriate)
2. develop and demonstrate bibliographic skills
3. formulate an outline of an extended topic, write draft versions and benefit from constructive criticism, tutorially and in the support seminars
4. comment in detail and at length on a particular field of enquiry
5. contribute effectively to seminar discussions (whether as presenter or respondent)
Work-in-progress seminars (2 hrs per week) and individual supervisions (approximately 2 hours in total).
Annotated bibliography and dissertation plan – for credit only (ILO1-2)
1000-word subsection – for credit only (ILO3)
10 minute presentation plus 5 minute Q&A – 20% of unit mark (ILO1, 3, 5)
Final dissertation of 5000 words – 80% of unit mark (ILO1, 2, 4)
To be identified tutorially, depending on the particular topic chosen.