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| Application Deadline: | March | ||
| Annual Tuition Fee: | ≈ € 3,739 - ≈ € 13,455 (non-EEA) | ||
| Location: | Oxford / United Kingdom / View location on map ▾ Hide location on map ▴ | ||
| Duration: | 12 months | Start Date: | October |
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| Languages: | English | ||
The history of science, medicine, and technology is a long-established discipline in Oxford. R. T. Gunther and Charles Singer were among the pioneers of the subject early in the twentieth century, and since the 1920s the Museum of the History of Science has housed an outstanding collection of scientific instruments and a fine specialist library.
Oxford now has one of the largest communities of teachers, research fellows, and postgraduate students in these fields in the British Isles. The expertise covers most of the main areas and periods of the history of science, medicine, and technology. A varied programme of seminars, lectures, and conferences enables graduate students to obtain knowledge of subjects beyond their chosen speciality and to meet visitors from elsewhere in Britain and abroad.
The M.Phil. is a two-year programme and the M.Sc. a one-year programme. They offer a wide range of options and allow students to specialize in the history of science and technology, or the social history of medicine, although the boundaries between these areas are deliberately permeable.
Teaching and examination comprises three elements:
(1) The Qualifying courses
These two papers are taught in classes during Michaelmas Term, afforced by lectures on specific issues. The class convenors are requested to submit a report on each candidate's preparation and participartion in the weekly classes. Formal assessment is through a methodological essay of 3,000 words for each of the papers.
* Methods and Themes in the History of Science and Technology
* Methods and Themes in the History of Medicine
(2) A choice ofAdvanced Papers
Advanced papers are usually taught in small classes, mostly during Hilary Term. Assessment is usually by three-hour written examination, but candidates may choose to be assessed for up to half of their advanced papers by two extended essays of up to 5,000 words each. M.Sc. candidates offer two advanced papers, and M.Phil. candidates four, of which they may offer up to two in their first year.
* Birth of the clinic, 1750-1850
* Comparative reception of evolutionary biology and eugenics in Britain, France, and Germany, 1850-1950
* Disease, medicine, and colonial expansion
* Electrotherapy. A case study in nineteenth- and twentieth-century science, technology and medicine
* Health, medicine, and social conditions in early modern England
* International health and welfare organizations in the twentieth century
* Knowledge, science, and empire
* Medicine and modern warfare
* Political economy of health and medicine in Africa
* The scholarly medical traditions: Islamic and Chinese medicine
* Science, technology, and instrumentation to 1800
* Social studies of science and technology
* Technology and twentieth-century development in the tropics
* Transmission and understanding in the sciences
* Western medicine in colonial Africa c.1900-1965
(C) A dissertation
In the case of the M.Sc. a dissertation of not more than 15,000 words on a topic of the student's choice, approved by her or his supervisor, and submitted at the end of the Long Vacation; in the case of the M.Phil. a dissertation of not more than 30,000 words on a topic of the student's choice, approved by her or his supervisor, and submitted at the beginning of Trinity Term in the candidate's second year.
Successful candidates often use these master's programmes as a preparation for further research, and they have been structured with this possibility in mind. It should be stressed, however, that the admission of any candidate to further study at Oxford will depend on his/her overall performance in the master's programme, together with the viability of any proposed research topic and the availability of appropriate supervision at Oxford.
You are normally required to take an English Proficiency Test.
Most European Universities recognise the IELTS test.
Take test* The usual entry requirement is the completion of a university course with a high Upper Second Class degree or the equivalent. The degree may be in any branch of the humanities, social sciences, science, medicine, or engineering.
* applicants for master´s degrees will be expected to have attained BA Hons equivalent before starting the programme (outside the UK, this normally entails at least four years of full-time study)
* applicants for doctoral degrees will be expected to have completed a postgraduate master´s course or the equivalent before starting the programme (in European terms: M2 level)
* applicants whose native language is not English must submit language test results
* IELTS: an overall score of 7.5, with at least 7.0 in each component.
* TOEFL: an overall score of 630 with a Test of Written English score of 5. - Applicants who have taken the computer-based TOEFL test must achieve an overall score of 267 with an essay-writing score of 5. - Applicants who have taken the new Internet-based TOEFL test must achieve an overall score of 109
* Cambridge Certificate of Proficiency in English (CPE) Grade B.
| Cambridge English: Advanced (CAE): | Grade A (Score: 80) |
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