PERSPECTIVES IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY

PERSPECTIVES IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
Course Code
GG 2011
Credit Points
15
Course Coordinator
Dr D Watts

Pre-requisites

GG 1007 or GG 1509.

Overview

This course examines political, economic, social and cultural change from a spatial perspective, using a range of concepts and case studies. Although intended to provide a foundation for higher level study of human geography, it is designed to be accessible to students of cognate disciplines such as anthropology, economics, history, international relations and sociology. Topics to be addressed include, for example:
globalisation; political geography; uneven development; rural change in Western Europe; relationships between place and identity. The course is team-taught, often using examples drawn from our own fields of research.

Structure

The course is delivered through 2 one-hour lectures per week (22 hours in total). There are also two drop-in surgery sessions for informal discussion of any issues that students have concerning the coursework assignments (up to 4 hours in total).

Assessment

For students who complete the two coursework assignments to a satisfactory standard: coursework (100%). These students will obtain exemption from the degree exam and their coursework mark will provide the overall course CAS mark.

For students who do not obtain exemption from the degree exam: coursework (50%) plus exam (50%).

Original coursework carried forward (50%), plus exam (50%).

Feedback

Students receive individual, written feedback on their coursework assignments using standard comments sheets. This feedback should help students to improve their subsequent performance within the course and on following courses. There is not stand-alone, formal formative assessment for this course.