Module Descriptors
GLOBAL LIFE STORIES
HIPO40510
Key Facts
Health, Education, Policing and Sciences
Level 4
15 credits
Contact
Leader: Alun Thomas
Hours of Study
Scheduled Learning and Teaching Activities: 39
Independent Study Hours: 111
Total Learning Hours: 150
Assessment
  • Essay - 1000 words weighted at 50%
  • Essay - 1500 words weighted at 50%
Module Details
Module Additional Assessment Details
Essay 50%: 1,000 words, Learning Outcomes 1-4
Essay 50%: 1,500 words, Learning Outcomes 1-4
Module Indicative Content
Built around a series of personal primary sources, from memoir to correspondence and artwork, this module has three core aims. The first is to teach students the rudimental skills necessary to interrogate primary source materials in order to extract historical information. The second is to inform students of some of the larger historiographical trends which have coloured the discipline since its inception. The third is to introduce some of the key study skills necessary for students to successfully fulfil their course, including referencing, writing introductions and conclusions and creating a bibliography.
Module Learning Outcomes
1.Demonstrate an understanding of the changing experience of the individual and the self in an international context.
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING

2. Learn some basic historiographical assumptions and methodologies and demonstrate an ability to apply them to historical information
Analysis

3. Acquire the skills necessary to critically interrogate primary source materials in order to extract historical information from them
Enquiry

4. Acquire some of the study skills necessary to write and speak effectively in academic presentations and academic assignments
Communication

Module Learning Strategies
Each week will feature a lecture introducing students to some of the historiographical, historical and skills-based knowledge necessary to successfully interrogate that week’s primary source. In the seminar the students will be asked to analyse and discuss the source in question, with which they will have thoroughly familiarised themselves in advance. Seminars will also feature some opportunity to develop the students’ study skills. For example, they may be asked to write an introductory paragraph on that week’s primary source, or to create a footnote for it.
Module Resources
Library access and Blackboard
Module Texts
S. Barber (ed.), 2008. History Beyond the Text, Routledge.

E. H. Carr, 2008. What is History?, Penguin.

M. Dobson and B. Ziemann (eds), 2008. Reading Primary Sources: The Interpretation of Texts from Nineteenth and Twentieth Century History, Routledge.

A. Freund and A. Thomson (eds), 2011. Oral History and Photography, Springer.

R. Howells (ed.), 2009. Using Visual Evidence, Open University Press.

D. A. Ritchie, 1995. Doing Oral History: A Practical Guide, Oxford University Press.