Durham University
Programme and Module Handbook

Undergraduate Programme and Module Handbook 2010-2011 (archived)

Module FREN3321: DISSERTATION IN FRENCH (ENGLISH)

Department: Modern Language and Cultures (French)

FREN3321: DISSERTATION IN FRENCH (ENGLISH)

Type Open Level 3 Credits 20 Availability Available in 2010/11 Module Cap None. Location Durham

Prerequisites

  • French Language 2 (FREN2051) AND one relevant second-year or final-year option in French other than French Translation (FREN3051) and Marketing and the Media in France.(FREN3211). This is to ensure that your dissertation is adequately supported in terms of background knowledge and/or suitable critical and theoretical approaches.

Corequisites

  • French Language 4 (FREN3041) or French Language 4 following Year Abroad (FREN3351) AND one relevant second-year or final-year option in French other than French Translation (FREN3051) and Marketing and the Media in France.(FREN3211). This is to ensure that your dissertation is adequately supported in terms of background knowledge and/or suitable critical and theoretical approaches.

Excluded Combination of Modules

  • Student may take a Dissertation module in only one of the languages they are studying as part of their Modern European Languages programme. Joint Honours students may not take this module if they are taking a dissertation module in (one of) their other subject(s). Students taking three languages at Level 3 are excluded from writing a dissertation. Students may also take the Translation Theory (MELA3111) module.

Aims

  • To provide those students who have opted for greater depth by studying one or two languages the opportunity to gain in-depth knowledge of one aspect of their studies by researching and writing in English an extensive piece of work in an area in which the department can offer research supervision.
  • To provide experience in planning, documenting and writing an extended piece of work (8000 words). It will also increase students’ facility in expressing themselvesd at a suitable academic level in English and in presenting and referencing their work according to the conventions of academic writing. It will provide invaluable practice for those students wishing to progress to postgraduate study.
  • To develop independent learning, a genuine commitment to research, the ability to organise and manage a longer project, and to write fluently and accurately.

Content

  • The dissertation involves researching and writing an extended piece of work in English in which the department can offer research supervision. Students will thus be working closely with an expert in the field.
  • In order to be accepted onto the dissertation module, students will have to demonstrate their preparedness by having done a relevant module at level 2, or by registering for a relevant modules at level 3. This is to ensure that their dissertation is adequately supported in terms of background knowledge and/or suitable critical and theoretical approaches. Its precise contents are to be determined by negotiation with their supervisor, subject to approval by LTC.
  • Preparation for the dissertation will begin at the end of the second year, when students should approach the relevant Head of Department, who will direct them to the appropriate supervisor. Supervisors will suggest possible subjects, and a preliminary bibliography, so that students can pursue a guided course of reading during their year abroad.
  • In the light of your reading and discussion with their supervisor when students return to Durham in their final year, their subject will be defined and the dissertation title approved by the Board of Studies early in the Michaelmas term. Students will work independently, with some further advice from their supervisor, and will submit their dissertation by the last day of the Epiphany term.

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:
  • By the end of the module, the student will have greatly enhanced knowledge of a specialised subject. S/he will be familiar with both primary and secondary sources, and with the wider debates surrounding the texts, films, or other artefacts that form the main subject of the dissertation.
Subject-specific Skills:
  • The student will have further developed their ability to express complex ideas in a suitable register.
Key Skills:
  • The student will have acquired skill and practice in researching a subject using primary and secondary sources, planning a coherent argument with the evidence to support it, presenting these arguments clearly and cogently in a sustained piece of writing, conforming to the norms of academic referencing.

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • The topic of the dissertation will be chosen in conjunction with the student’s supervisor, and they will follow an agreed programme of reading.
  • Students will be given two seminars on research skills, and will have an additional six individual supervisions over the course of the academic year, written records of which will be kept.
  • By the end of the second week of the Michaelmas term, students must submit to their supervisor a title, together with a programme of study for the dissertation. Failure to meet this deadline will result in students being required to drop the dissertation module at this point and to take an alternative module.
  • By the end of Teaching week 6, students should submit a 300-word outline plan in English of the dissertation to their supervisor. By the first Friday of the Epiphany term, they should submit a 1000-word extract in English to their supervisor. The supervisor will comment in writing on both plan and extract, and these will be discussed in tutorials and further advice will be given.
  • Assessment of the dissertation will evaluate students’ ability to assimilate, understand and analyse critically the primary and secondary material associated with their dissertation topic, also their ability to present a sustained argument with suitable evidence, and to express themselves fluently and accurately in the target language, paying due attention to the relevant conventions of academic writing. Students will also be expected to produce a full and proper bibliography.

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

Activity Number Frequency Duration Total/Hours
Seminar 2 In Michaelmas Term 1 hour 2
Tutorial 6 Split between Michaelmas & Epiphany Terms 1 hour 6
Student preparation and reading time 192
Total SLAT hours 200

Summative Assessment

Component: Dissertation Component Weighting: 100%
Element Length / duration Element Weighting Resit Opportunity
Dissertation, to be written in English 8,000 words 100% No

Formative Assessment:

300-word summary in English to be submitted by the end of Michaelmas term; 1000-word extract in English to be submitted during Epiphany term.


Attendance at all activities marked with this symbol will be monitored. Students who fail to attend these activities, or to complete the summative or formative assessment specified above, will be subject to the procedures defined in the University's General Regulation V, and may be required to leave the University