Cynlluniau Astudio
Media and Creative Writing
Information provided by Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies
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Information provided by Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies
- Communications, Media, Film and Cultural Studies
Information provided by Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies
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September 2023
Information provided by Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies
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To provide students with a grounding in the range of approaches developed for understanding mediated communication, from their foundations in linguistic and visual communication to specific modes of communication in, for instance, journalism, advertising, different kinds of writing, and the current transformations of these in digital environments
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To bring these to bear specifically on current developments in new media, paying attention to processes of globalisation, and convergence and their implications
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To develop in students the knowledge and abilities to be able to consider critically and productively the role of traditional and new media in contemporary social and political processes
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To develop in students a range of skills and understandings that will enable them to take up employment within the wide range of jobs and industries concerned with the production, organisation, storage, distribution and use of mediated knowledge and communication
Information provided by Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies
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Information provided by Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies
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Key concepts and theories of communication and mass communication
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The role of media in the history of communication
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Contemporary transformations of mediated communication associated with globalisation, digitisation and media convergence
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The role of mediated communication within specific (e.g. political) situations
Information provided by Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies
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The ability to examine critically a wide range of communication situations and forms, exploring their history, meanings and implications
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The ability to seek and to draw upon a wide range of sources
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The ability to measure critically the status and strength of knowledge-claims
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The ability to apply course-derived understandings to current social and political policy-debates
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The ability to analyse forms of language and visual communication for their complex meanings
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The ability to use a range of digital media and software applications, with due attention to issues of purpose and audience address
Information provided by Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies
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During the course of and on completion of this scheme, the following transferable skills will be fostered:
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Oral and written communication will be developed through a range of assessed and non-assessed tasks. Students will be expected to produce a wide range of written work, from traditional academic essays and examinations to notebooks of reflective practice. Oral communication will be developed in seminar and workshop contexts, where the students will be expected to prepare and deliver presentations on set topics and discuss issues (both theoretical and in relation to certain texts/media), as well work towards the production of websites, short films etc. through practical modules.
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Personal initiative will form a key element in the successful completion of this scheme. Students will be expected to formulate their own work routine and demonstrate self-discipline and planning by meeting deadlines. Scope for following personal interests and developing creativity will also be allowed in some modules, where students will be able to formulate their own assignment tasks (based on the approval of the module co-ordinator) or produce films/websites on topics of their choosing.
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Many of the modules, particularly those that involve a 'practical' element, will require the students to work in teams. Further collaboration will be encouraged during seminar contexts where students will need to work collaboratively on set mini-tasks.
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Other transferable skills will include competent use of ICTs and other technologies. Students will be expected to word process their written work, regularly access e-mail, find and retrieve information on-line (as well as in the library context) and operate production/editing equipment.
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Students will have the opportunity to develop and apply a range of research skills
BA Media and Creative Writing [P3W8]
Blwyddyn Academaidd: 2024/2025Cynllun Anrhydedd Cyfun - ar gael ers 2019/2020
Hyd (astudio Llawn Amser): 3 blwyddynBeginning Creative Writing Part 1
Beginning Creative Writing Part 2
American Literature 1819-1925
Critical Practice
Academic Writing: Planning, Process and Product
Re-imagining Nineteenth-Century Literature
Literature And The Sea
Greek and Roman Epic and Drama
Ancestral Voices
Contemporary Writing
Critical Practice
Language Awareness for TESOL
Academic Writing: Planning, Process and Product
Introduction to Poetry
Peering into Possibility: Speculative Fiction and the Now
Beginning the Novel
Classical Drama and Myth
Literary Theory: Debates and Dialogues
Literary Modernisms
In the Olde Dayes: Medieval Texts and Their World
Writing Women for the Public Stage, 1670-1780
TESOL Approaches, Methods and Teaching Techniques
Effective Academic and Professional Communication 1
A Century in Crisis: 1790s to 1890s
Telling True Stories: ways of Writing Creative Non-Fiction
Adventures with Poetry
Literary Geographies
Contemporary Writing and Climate Crisis
Literature and Climate in the Nineteenth Century
Place and Self
Literature since the '60s
Effective Academic and Professional Communication 1
Short stories: Grit and Candour
Writing Selves
Shaping Plots
Reading Theory / Reading Text
Romantic Eroticism
The Mark of the Beast: Animals in Literature from the 1780s to the 1920s
Effective Academic and Professional Communication 2
Remix: Chaucer In The Then and Now
The Writing Project
Writing Horror
Writing and Place
Writing Music
Big Ideas: Writing Popular Science
Humour and Conflict in Contemporary Writing
Victorian Childhoods
Writing in the Margins: Twentieth-Century Welsh Poetry in English
Haunting Texts
Ali Smith and 21st Century fiction(s)
TESOL Materials Development and Application of Technologies
Effective Academic and Professional Communication 2
Literatures of Surveillance
The Writing Project
Poetry for today
Crisis Writing
Writing Crime Fiction