Postgraduate Programme Specification
PgCert English - Poetry
Academic Year 2022/23
A programme specification is required for any programme on which a student may be registered. All programmes of the University are subject to the University's Quality Assurance processes. All degrees are awarded by Queen's University Belfast.
Programme Title | PgCert English - Poetry | Final Award (exit route if applicable for Postgraduate Taught Programmes) |
Postgraduate Certificate | |||||||||||
Programme Code | ENG-PC-PY | UCAS Code | HECoS Code |
100320 - English studies - 100 |
ATAS Clearance Required |
No |
Health Check Required |
No |
|||||||||||
Portfolio Required |
Please note, applicants for this course are required to submit either a sample of recent written work on a literary topic that represents their best work to date (not more than 3000 words) or a 10-15 page poetry portfolio. If you wish to take both the critical and creative assessments of this MA programme you must submit both an essay and portfolio of poetry. |
Interview Required |
-- |
|||||||||||
Mode of Study | Part Time or Full Time | |||||||||||||
Type of Programme | Postgraduate | Length of Programme |
Part Time - 2 Academic Years Full Time - 1 Academic Year |
Total Credits for Programme | 60 | |||||||||
Exit Awards available | No |
Institute Information
Teaching Institution |
Queen's University Belfast |
School/Department |
Arts, English and Languages |
Quality Code Higher Education Credit Framework for England |
Level 7 |
Subject Benchmark Statements The Frameworks for Higher Education Qualifications of UK Degree-Awarding Bodies |
English (2015) |
Accreditations (PSRB) |
|
No accreditations (PSRB) found. |
Regulation Information
Does the Programme have any approved exemptions from the University General Regulations N/A |
Programme Specific Regulations |
Students with protected characteristics N/A |
Are students subject to Fitness to Practise Regulations (Please see General Regulations) No |
Educational Aims Of Programme
The Certificate in Poetry: Creativity and Criticism provides students with a unique opportunity to acquire an in-depth knowledge and understanding of British, Irish and American modern poetry, alongside the development of their own creative practice in the writing of poetry. The programme reflects current critical thinking and key critical debates in the field and draws on the creative and research expertise of staff to offer new perspectives on the writing and appreciation of poetry. Designed to attract students from local, national and international contexts, it provides and delivers the best possible learning and teaching experience in an environment of equality, tolerance, and mutual respect. The programme also fosters an atmosphere of sophisticated intellectual inquiry by offering modules which encourage a stimulating interchange of ideas and offers the opportunity for engagement in the broader cultural activities of Northern Ireland, in which the writing, study and appreciation of poetry occupies a central place.
Specific aims include:
acquiring knowledge of a broad range of poetry written in English in the major literary traditions of Ireland, Britain and the United States of America;
developing and fostering skills in the close reading of poetry;
equipping students to use their literary talents to the best of their ability, to develop as independent writers and self-reflective lifelong learners;
gaining insight into the modes of relationship between the different literary traditions of Ireland, Britain and the United States of America;
raising awareness of the history of creative writing in the School of English and the many acclaimed writers who have studied here;
encouraging future generations of new writers;
acquiring a better understanding of poetic form in all its aspects, and in its interrelationship with literary and/or intellectual and/or social and/or political history, as appropriate;
developing skills gained through undergraduate study of English and/or Creative Writing as well as adding new skills, particularly in research methodology, appropriate to higher degree level work;
enhancing skills in the writing of poetry and/or the writing of scholarly essays on poetry, which integrate, in judicious balance, the close reading of poetry with a due consideration of its wider context.
Learning Outcomes
Learning Outcomes: Cognitive SkillsOn the completion of this course successful students will be able to: |
|
recognise and appreciate the varying effects of different poetic forms of expression; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies N/A Methods of Assessment Formative and summative written work, thereby testing students' ability to engage with and critique existing criticism and scholarship while developing and defending their own ideas and judgements of the texts or topics in question. |
think independently, analytically, synthetically, and in an organised fashion; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Skills are nurtured through class debate and discussion, through the drafting of creative work, and through the practice of writing. Methods of Assessment Formative and summative written work, thereby testing students' ability to engage with and critique existing criticism and scholarship while developing and defending their own ideas and judgements of the texts or topics in question. |
work autonomously, manifested in self-direction, objective-setting, prioritising and time-management; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Skills are nurtured through class debate and discussion, through the drafting of creative work, and through the practice of writing. Methods of Assessment Formative and summative written work, thereby testing students' ability to engage with and critique existing criticism and scholarship while developing and defending their own ideas and judgements of the texts or topics in question. |
critically analyse and assess their own performance, and that of others, in the context of scholarly endeavour; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Skills are nurtured through class debate and discussion, through the drafting of creative work, and through the practice of writing. Methods of Assessment Formative and summative written work, thereby testing students' ability to engage with and critique existing criticism and scholarship while developing and defending their own ideas and judgements of the texts or topics in question. |
summarise and synthesise theoretical and experiential learning, drawing on a range of evidence and perspectives; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Skills are nurtured through class debate and discussion, through the drafting of creative work, and through the practice of writing. Methods of Assessment Formative and summative written work, thereby testing students' ability to engage with and critique existing criticism and scholarship while developing and defending their own ideas and judgements of the texts or topics in question. |
analyse and interpret material with an awareness of both historical contexts and appropriate technical and/or critical approaches; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Skills are nurtured through class debate and discussion, through the drafting of creative work, and through the practice of writing. Methods of Assessment Formative and summative written work, thereby testing students' ability to engage with and critique existing criticism and scholarship while developing and defending their own ideas and judgements of the texts or topics in question. |
differentiate between and critique different ideological and theoretical positions; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Skills are nurtured through class debate and discussion, through the drafting of creative work, and through the practice of writing. Methods of Assessment Formative and summative written work, thereby testing students' ability to engage with and critique existing criticism and scholarship while developing and defending their own ideas and judgements of the texts or topics in question. |
identify appropriate and practicable areas for further work and to formulate suitable written responses. |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Skills are nurtured through class debate and discussion, through the drafting of creative work, and through the practice of writing. Methods of Assessment Formative and summative written work, thereby testing students' ability to engage with and critique existing criticism and scholarship while developing and defending their own ideas and judgements of the texts or topics in question. |
Learning Outcomes: Transferable SkillsOn the completion of this course successful students will be able to: |
|
construct complex arguments that are lucid and well-organised and draw on a range of appropriate types of evidence, from the large to the small scale, and communicate these effectively in writing; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Workshops, seminar presentations, student interaction and discussion with individual staff hone communication and rhetorical skills and offer the opportunity to learn from constructively critical feedback. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
develop efficient time-management skills, including the ability to work under time pressure; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Workshops, seminar presentations, student interaction and discussion with individual staff hone communication and rhetorical skills and offer the opportunity to learn from constructively critical feedback. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
offer and receive constructive criticism of their own and others’ work, and to respond positively and productively to feedback on their own work; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Workshops, seminar presentations, student interaction and discussion with individual staff hone communication and rhetorical skills and offer the opportunity to learn from constructively critical feedback. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
think creatively and maturely in diverse intellectual situations; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Workshops, seminar presentations, student interaction and discussion with individual staff hone communication and rhetorical skills and offer the opportunity to learn from constructively critical feedback. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
access electronic databases and other information sources; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Library work, and the use of QConnect and other on-line resources, will ensure that students have a rich source of different theoretical and scholarly frameworks to draw upon. Methods of Assessment Student-devised essays. |
identify and use appropriate resources. |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Library work, and the use of QConnect and other on-line resources, will ensure that students have a rich source of different theoretical and scholarly frameworks to draw upon. Methods of Assessment Student-devised essays. |
display effective oral and written communication skills; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Skills are nurtured through class debate and discussion, through the drafting of creative work and through critical presentations. Workshop sessions and seminars encourage students to respond to other writer's work and to take on board constructive criticism of their own writing. Methods of Assessment All modules culminate in assessed work - either creative or critical - and the MA culminates in a final dissertation or portfolio. Students are required to meet fixed deadlines for the submission of work, thereby emphasising the importance of objective setting, prioritisation and time management. |
Learning Outcomes: Knowledge & UnderstandingOn the completion of this course successful students will be able to: |
|
read complex and demanding poems in a range of styles and genres; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Combination of core modules and elective options, supported by training in the practice of creative as well as critical writing. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
discuss the literary-critical and theoretical debates to do with poetry in the period; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Combination of core modules and elective options, supported by Research Methods training in the practice of creative as well as critical writing. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
assess the interaction between politics and aesthetics in the particular case of poetry; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Combination of core modules and elective options, supported by Research Methods training in the practice of creative as well as critical writing. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
identify rhetorical, formal and aesthetic strategies of different types of poetry; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Combination of core modules and elective options, supported by Research Methods training in the practice of creative as well as critical writing. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
articulate the ways in which concepts and figurings of gender roles and attributes may modify poetry, both formally and in terms of its subject-matter; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Combination of core modules and elective options, supported by Research Methods training in the practice of creative as well as critical writing. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
understand the relationship between poetry and history, and more particularly that which obtains between poetic form and its historical context in the widest sense; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Combination of core modules and elective options, supported by Research Methods training in the practice of creative as well as critical writing. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
demonstrate the detail and complexity of a wide range of poetry written in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Combination of core modules and elective options, supported by Research Methods training in the practice of creative as well as critical writing. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
discuss the relationship of poetry to different concepts of nationhood and tradition, including problematisation of those concepts; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Combination of core modules and elective options, supported by Research Methods training in the practice of creative as well as critical writing. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
demonstrate how the production and transmission of texts influences issues of interpretation and intentionality; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Combination of core modules and elective options, supported by Research Methods training in the practice of creative as well as critical writing. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
know current practices for preparing creative writing for agents, editors, publishers etc; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Poetry seminars in poetic form, editing, and study of individual published collections as well as dedicated workshop sessions for the discussion of students own work. Methods of Assessment Exercises in aspects of poetic craft to enable students to put theory into practice. |
have a greater understanding of creative writing in general and their own writing in particular. |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Poetry seminars in poetic form, editing, and study of individual published collections as well as dedicated workshop sessions for the discussion of students own work. Methods of Assessment Exercises in aspects of poetic craft to enable students to put theory into practice. |
Learning Outcomes: Subject SpecificOn the completion of this course successful students will be able to: |
|
read and respond to the work of other writers with a greater understanding of the works’ formal and structural properties; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Poetry workshops and seminars on poets and literary periods. Methods of Assessment Oral feedback on the work of other writers. |
appreciate and analyse a range of features of poetry, including imagery, symbolism, metre, rhythm, rhyme, verbal music in general, and stanzaic form; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Seminars that attend to the literary qualities of poems and to the relevant history, and are informed by literary-critical perspectives, including those arising in the period. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
apply the insights gained from literary criticism and theory in discussion of poetry; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Seminars that attend to the literary qualities of poems and to the relevant history, and are informed by literary-critical perspectives, including those arising in the period. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
analyse poetic texts with a sophisticated awareness of the ways in which their formal and generic properties interact with particular cultural and historical contexts; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Seminars that attend to the literary qualities of poems and to the relevant history, and are informed by literary-critical perspectives, including those arising in the period. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
draw on, engage with, and formulate a position in relation to, different critical perspectives on poetry; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Seminars that attend to the literary qualities of poems and to the relevant history, and are informed by literary-critical perspectives, including those arising in the period. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
write lucid, well-organised and scholarly essays which integrate the close reading of poetry with an understanding of its wider contexts, and which offer convincing and sustained arguments on key issues in its interpretation; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Seminars that attend to the literary qualities of poems and to the relevant history, and are informed by literary-critical perspectives, including those arising in the period. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
handle a range of critical and primary sources in the context of formulating an independent argument; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Library work, and the use of QConnect and other on-line resources, will ensure that students have a rich source of different theoretical and scholarly frameworks to draw upon. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
utilise a range of research tools, resources, and methodologies, and to understand and put into practice the standard protocols of referencing in the advanced literary essay; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Library work, and the use of QConnect and other on-line resources, will ensure that students have a rich source of different theoretical and scholarly frameworks to draw upon. Methods of Assessment Practical work and student-centred learning encourage and test the ability to present and summarise knowledge to their peers in a coherent, structured form. |
offer lucid, well-organised and scholarly oral presentations on poetry; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Class presentation. Methods of Assessment Class presentation. |
apply what they have learnt of the craft of writing – e.g. structure, characterisation, voice - and apply it to their own work, which should emerge as more achieved and distinctive as a result; |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Creative writing workshops and the drafting processes involved in producing work for assessment. Methods of Assessment Assessed exercises. |
present their own work in accordance with established norms of presentation of creative writing for agents, editors, publishers, theatre companies, broadcasters etc. |
Teaching/Learning Methods and Strategies Creative writing workshops and the drafting processes involved in producing work for assessment. Methods of Assessment Assessed exercises. |
Module Information
Stages and Modules
Module Title | Module Code | Level/ stage | Credits | Availability |
Duration | Pre-requisite | Assessment |
|||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
S1 | S2 | Core | Option | Coursework % | Practical % | Examination % | ||||||
Reading and Writing Poetry | ENG7307 | 7 | 40 | YES | -- | 11 weeks | N | -- | YES | 100% | 0% | 0% |
Love Poetry | ENG7375 | 7 | 20 | -- | YES | 11 weeks | N | -- | YES | 100% | 0% | 0% |
Special Topic Creative Writing | ENG7199 | 7 | 20 | -- | YES | 11 weeks | N | -- | YES | 100% | 0% | 0% |
Form in Poetry | ENG7300 | 7 | 20 | YES | -- | 11 weeks | N | -- | YES | 100% | 0% | 0% |
The Poetry Collection | ENG7301 | 7 | 20 | -- | YES | 11 weeks | N | -- | YES | 100% | 0% | 0% |
Irish Poetry | ENG7305 | 7 | 20 | -- | YES | 11 weeks | N | -- | YES | 100% | 0% | 0% |
Poetry: Creative Writing Workshop | ENG7094 | 7 | 20 | -- | YES | 11 weeks | N | -- | YES | 100% | 0% | 0% |
Notes
Students can complete a Postgraduate Certificate in Poetry upon successful completion of any 60 CATS