German & Portuguese & Brazilian Studies with a year abroad
Starting dates and places
Description
Attain a high level of proficiency in German on this joint degree in the heart of London and develop knowledge and understanding of the culture and society. Portuguese study embraces the language, history and culture of four continents: Europe, America, Africa and Asia.
Watch the video here, or access the 'interactive' tab to view at a larger size and see any alternative films playOverviewVideo('/prospectus/images/home.jpg','http://podcast.ulcc.ac.uk/accounts/kings/KCL_Marketing/MODERN_LANGUAGES.flv','true','details_111'); KEY BENEFITSGerman:
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Attain a high level of proficiency in German on this joint
degree in the heart of London and develop knowledge and
understanding of the culture and society. Portuguese study embraces
the language, history and culture of four continents: Europe,
America, Africa and Asia.
Watch the video here, or access the 'interactive' tab to view at a
larger size and see any alternative films
playOverviewVideo('/prospectus/images/home.jpg','http://podcast.ulcc.ac.uk/accounts/kings/KCL_Marketing/MODERN_LANGUAGES.flv','true','details_111');
KEY BENEFITSGerman:
- Highest-rated department in German within London and nationally on the strength of its world-leading and internationally excellent research.
- Teaching informed and delivered by staff who carry out that research.
- Exceptionally wide range of modules covering literature, language, film, and history.
- Central location offers students access to a variety of libraries and resources, including the Goethe-Insitut and the Austrian Cultural Forum.
- Opportunity to study in a German-speaking country offers students the opportunity to immerse themselves in culture and society and achieve language fluency.
- Programme taught by world-class lecturers in a friendly environment.
- Wide range of modules is unique in the UK.
- King’s library contains the most complete collection of material on Portugal, Brazil and Portuguese-speaking Africa available in any UK university.
- Central location offers students the opportunity to make use of the library of the Luso-Brazilian Council.
- Opportunity to study abroad for a year offers students the chance to immerse themselves in culture and society and achieve language fluency.
PROGRAMME DESCRIPTIONYou will have the opportunity to attain a
high level of proficiency in speaking, writing and reading the
German language, whilst developing your knowledge and critical
understanding of German culture and society. Our exceptionally wide
range of modules covers literature of all periods, the evolution
and structure of the German language, German film, German history,
German philosophical thought, and German political and social
theory.
The study of Portuguese embraces the language, history and culture
of four continents: Europe, America, Africa and Asia. The
department is exclusively devoted to studying the Lusophone world
and offers an unrivalled choice of modules in literature, cultural
history and history together with the opportunity to gain a high
level of linguistic proficiency.
For more about the departments of German and Spains, Portuguese
& Latin American Studies, follow the departmental contact
links.
Click here to read about the Department of German
ABOUT THE Department of German
CAREERS Studies of graduate employability repeatedly stress the
career value of language degrees. Employers in UK and international
business, the press and media, IT and technology, marketing and
public relations, public administration, international development,
law, finance, teaching and lecturing, interpreting, translating and
others have been found repeatedly to value foreign language
competence, not just as a specialist skill, but as a personal
quality that fosters relationship-building, teamwork, and the
capacity to move easily in international contexts. Studying German,
you will also gain fluency in a language and knowledge of a country
and its culture that is increasingly in demand, given Germany’s
central role in European economic and political development, and
German and Austrian membership of the EU. Recent graduates have
found employment in sectors including media production and
journalism, human relations, finance, business development, retail
and marketing, the civil service, teaching and lecturing. A
considerable number have continued to further study. Recent
employers of King’s German graduates include Goldman Sachs, Astra
Zeneca, the National Assembly of Wales, CNN, the American
University in London, and the University of Oxford.
TEACHING STYLE In 2011-12, the Department launched a new curriculum
that reflects our commitment to innovative and research-led
teaching. Staff across the Department contribute introductory and
specialist modules that draw from their own research in German
literature, culture and history. Modules are taught through a
combination of lectures, small seminars or tutorials, and
one-to-one supervision. This brings you into close contact with
tutors, in a department that is regularly ranked among the top
three research departments in the UK. Language classes involve
in-depth work with different kinds of media, literary and academic
texts. Teaching is in German and English, according to the subject
area. Our teaching style is interactive; students participate
informally in small group discussions in seminars or online
discussion fora, and formally through seminar presentations and
oral assessments.
STRUCTURE OF PROGRAMMES & ASSESSMENT Following Year 1
foundation modules in culture, history and politics, more
specialised modules in Years 2 and 4 reflect the rich research
expertise of Department staff. The King’s German Department ranked
joint second in the country in the 2008 Research Assessment
Exercise, and the commitment of our staff to research excellence is
matched by our enthusiasm for teaching. Our rigorous three-year
language programme is tailored both to your own level of language
competence, and to the internationally recognised Common European
Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR). Non-native speakers
take core language modules covering the key skills of reading,
writing, listening, spoken interaction and production, and
translation. Native speakers currently take a separate module in
Translation from and into German. Assessment is in a variety of
forms including précis and oral presentation, work placement
portfolios, longer academic essays in both English and German, and
oral and written exams
LOCATION Located in the heart of London, the department can draw on
unparalleled print, audio-visual and online resources, including
the King’s Maughan Library and Senate House Library, the Institute
of Germanic and Romance Studies, the British Film Institute and the
British Library. All are within easy walking distance of the Strand
Building. The Goethe-Institut and Austrian Cultural Forum also have
extensive media and library holdings, and run lively programmes of
films, readings, seminars and exhibitions which complement the
Department’s internal film screenings, open seminars, exhibitions,
and annual departmental play. All teaching takes place at the
Strand Campus.
SPECIAL NOTES The third year of this programme is spent in Germany,
Austria or German-speaking Switzerland, normally as a student at
university or as a teaching assistant in a school. We have exchange
links with universities in Munich, Frankfurt (Main), Heidelberg,
Berlin and Vienna (under the European Union Socrates-Erasmus
scheme).
Click here to read about the Department of Spanish, Portuguese and
Latin American Studies
ABOUT THE Department of Spanish, Portuguese and Latin American
Studies
CAREERS Recent graduates have gone on to gain employment in a
variety of areas including business and commerce, finance,
marketing, accountancy, law, the Civil Service, the media,
charitable and non-governmental organisations, while others have
remained in higher education to gain a teaching qualification or
continue their studies at postgraduate level. Recent graduates have
found employment as…. • Events Intern, Mexican Chamber of Commerce
• Operations Support Assistant, an environmental consultancy •
Political Researcher • Member Services Executive, Streetcar
TEACHING STYLE Our department is active in all fields of Hispanic
and Lusophone language, literature and cultural history from the
earliest times to the present day. Our particular strengths are in
medieval and early modern studies, modern literature, history and
culture, and the modern Spanish and Portuguese languages. You will
be studying with staff who are experts in their fields and whose
advanced research is reflected in the optional modules available.
Some of our lecturing staff also teach across disciplines in the
History, European Studies and Comparative Literature
programmes.
STRUCTURE OF PROGRAMMES & ASSESSMENT Our programmes offer
students a flexible yet coherent structure within which to explore
the richness of the Hispanic and Lusophone worlds. Each year, you
will follow a core language module and take options in literature,
culture and history, covering a wide range of historical periods.
Our programmes enable you to build incrementally upon your
knowledge and develop areas of individual interest which form the
basis of your final-year modules (which include a dissertation
option). Progression from year to year depends upon passing the
required number of credits and the compulsory language module.
LOCATION We are located in the heart of London, within easy access
to a wide range of institutes and centres (eg the Instituto
Cervantes, Camoes Institute) that promote Hispanic and Lusophone
culture including theatre, music, and art. The Maughan Library
contains an extensive collection of material on the Hispanic and
Lusophone worlds, including several in the Rare Books collection.
Within London there are other important complementary collections
in the libraries and research institutes of the University of
London and the British Library.
SPECIAL NOTES The year abroad is an obligatory part of our
programmes, with a wide range of options to study (eg under the
Socrates-Erasmus programme) or, through the British Council English
Language Assistant programme, to teach in a variety of institutions
in Spain, Portugal and Latin America.
ABOUT THE Department of German
CAREERS Studies of graduate employability repeatedly stress the
career value of language degrees. Employers in UK and international
business, the press and media, IT and technology, marketing and
public relations, public administration, international development,
law, finance, teaching and lecturing, interpreting, translating and
others have been found repeatedly to value foreign language
competence, not just as a specialist skill, but as a personal
quality that fosters relationship-building, teamwork, and the
capacity to move easily in international contexts. Studying German,
you will also gain fluency in a language and knowledge of a country
and its culture that is increasingly in demand, given Germany’s
central role in European economic and political development, and
German and Austrian membership of the EU. Recent graduates have
found employment in sectors including media production and
journalism, human relations, finance, business development, retail
and marketing, the civil service, teaching and lecturing. A
considerable number have continued to further study. Recent
employers of King’s German graduates include Goldman Sachs, Astra
Zeneca, the National Assembly of Wales, CNN, the American
University in London, and the University of Oxford.
TEACHING STYLE In 2011-12, the Department launched a new curriculum
that reflects our commitment to innovative and research-led
teaching. Staff across the Department contribute introductory and
specialist modules that draw from their own research in German
literature, culture and history. Modules are taught through a
combination of lectures, small seminars or tutorials, and
one-to-one supervision. This brings you into close contact with
tutors, in a department that is regularly ranked among the top
three research departments in the UK. Language classes involve
in-depth work with different kinds of media, literary and academic
texts. Teaching is in German and English, according to the subject
area. Our teaching style is interactive; students participate
informally in small group discussions in seminars or online
discussion fora, and formally through seminar presentations and
oral assessments.
STRUCTURE OF PROGRAMMES & ASSESSMENT Following Year 1
foundation modules in culture, history and politics, more
specialised modules in Years 2 and 4 reflect the rich research
expertise of Department staff. The King’s German Department ranked
joint second in the country in the 2008 Research Assessment
Exercise, and the commitment of our staff to research excellence is
matched by our enthusiasm for teaching. Our rigorous three-year
language programme is tailored both to your own level of language
competence, and to the internationally recognised Common European
Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR). Non-native speakers
take core language modules covering the key skills of reading,
writing, listening, spoken interaction and production, and
translation. Native speakers currently take a separate module in
Translation from and into German. Assessment is in a variety of
forms including précis and oral presentation, work placement
portfolios, longer academic essays in both English and German, and
oral and written exams
LOCATION Located in the heart of London, the department can draw on
unparalleled print, audio-visual and online resources, including
the King’s Maughan Library and Senate House Library, the Institute
of Germanic and Romance Studies, the British Film Institute and the
British Library. All are within easy walking distance of the Strand
Building. The Goethe-Institut and Austrian Cultural Forum also have
extensive media and library holdings, and run lively programmes of
films, readings, seminars and exhibitions which complement the
Department’s internal film screenings, open seminars, exhibitions,
and annual departmental play. All teaching takes place at the
Strand Campus.
SPECIAL NOTES The third year of this programme is spent in Germany,
Austria or German-speaking Switzerland, normally as a student at
university or as a teaching assistant in a school. We have exchange
links with universities in Munich, Frankfurt (Main), Heidelberg,
Berlin and Vienna (under the European Union Socrates-Erasmus
scheme).
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