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| Application Deadline: | None - rolling admissions | ||
| Annual Tuition Fee: | ≈ € 17,973 - | ||
| Location: | London / United Kingdom / View location on map ▾ Hide location on map ▴ | ||
| Duration: | 12 months | Start Date: | September |
| Educational Form: |
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| Education Variants: |
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| Credits (ECTS): | 90 | ||
| Languages: | English | ||
This programme offers an intensive, year-long exploration of the relations between politics, media and communications. It aims to provide:
* An advanced understanding of theoretical and applied knowledge in the intersecting fields of politics and communication research.
* The flexibility to pursue particular topics of interest in the fields of media, politics and communication, culminating in an independent research project in politics and communications.
* The opportunity to take courses taught in the Department of Government, as part of the programme options.
* An ideal preparation for research work and employment in media, politics, communication and related fields.
All the MSc programmes in the Department of Media and Communications offer the following benefits:
* An intensive, high quality graduate education in media and communications.
* A broad social science foundation in qualitative, quantitative, empirical and critical skills.
* A diverse, multi-disciplinary and theoretically oriented approach to contemporary developments, issues and debates in the field.
* A range of specialist courses within media and communications and related fields, including an independent empirical research project.
* An intellectually stimulating, well resourced learning environment, with strong links to media and communications industries and policy makers.
* The opportunity for lively cross-cultural exchange of ideas among a dynamic group of fellow students in the Department and School.
* Study with internationally recognised active researchers with expertise in media and communications and politics and democracy, regulation and policy, technological change, audiences, globalisation, culture, and more.
Teaching and assessment
The programme consists of four units, including required and optional courses and the dissertation. Courses typically involve a combination of lectures and seminars. The Methods of Research course is taught as a series of lectures and practical classes. You will be examined by written examinations, research assignments, essays related to courses and the dissertation, which must be submitted in September. The programme runs for a full calendar year. Formal teaching is usually completed by the end of the Lent term. Examinations for all courses are generally held during May and June. The remaining months are set aside for students to complete their dissertations, and it is not normally essential for students to remain in London during these months. Part-time students will normally take and be examined in courses to the value of two units in each year of study. In the first year, these two units, selected in discussion with the student's academic adviser, will usually include the compulsory theoretical course(s) and one or more option course(s). The methods course(s) and the dissertation are then usually taken in the second year, together with the remaining option course(s). Students may be permitted to vary the courses to be taken in each year with the approval of their academic adviser. Please note that we do not provide a practical training in journalism, production, campaigning or media management.
Compulsory courses (* half unit)
* Political Communication*
* Theories and Concepts in Media and Communications (Key concepts and interdisciplinary approaches)*
* Methods of Research in Media and Communications (including Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis)*
* Democracy and the Media*
* Dissertation
Options
Choose to the value of one unit:
* Mediated Resistance and Citizens*
* The Audience in Media and Communications*
* Contemporary Issues in Media and Communications Regulation*
* International Media and the Global South*
* Media and Communications Governance*
* Information, Communication and Knowledge Systems*
* Democracy in East and South-East Asia*
* Citizens' Political Behaviour in Europe: Elections, Public Opinion and Identity*
* Nationalism
* Politics and Policy in Britain*
* Theories and Concepts in Media and Communications II (Processes of communication in modern life)*
* Modern Campaigning Politics*
* Critical Studies in Media and Journalism*
* Global Media Industries*
* Interpersonal Mediated Communication*
* Media, Technology and Everyday Life*
* Film Theory and World Cinema*
* Any other half unit paper which is offered in the School at master's level, subject to the consent of the student's teachers
Please refer to the School's policy on course capping: lse.ac.uk/coursecapping Please note that the availability of option courses is dependent upon a number of factors and thus neither the School nor the Department of Media and Communications can guarantee that all options will be available each year.
You are normally required to take an English Proficiency Test.
Most European Universities recognise the IELTS test.
Take testMinimum entry requirement:
* 2:1 in social science, or degree in another field with professional experience in the media and communications field. Exceptionally, professional experience alone
English requirement:
* TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) with a minimum score of 627 in the paper test or 107 in the internet based test
* IELTS (International English Language Testing System) with a minimum score of 7.0
| Minimal degree required: | Bachelor's degree |
| Minimal amount of work experience | Not specified |
| IELTS Band: | 7.0 |
| Cambridge English: Advanced (CAE): | Grade A (Score: 80) |
| TOEFL Paper-based: | 627 |
| TOEFL Internet-based: | 107 |
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