- Department: History
- Credit value: 20 credits
- Credit level: C
- Academic year of delivery: 2024-25
- See module specification for other years: 2023-24
Arguments and Analysis is the first of four core modules, collectively known as ‘Approaches’ modules. This family of modules will develop your understanding of the range of approaches, concepts and methodologies used by historians and teach you to apply this to your own historical craft.
Arguments and Analysis will aid you in making the academic transition to university by encouraging you to think about the role of historians in making history. It introduces you to historiography: the study of how history is produced. This is achieved through lectures and discussion groups that draw on a diverse range of case studies and examples of history making across time and place.
Importantly, the course will also equip you with the core skills needed to compose your own university-level historical studies and to succeed throughout your time at York. You will reflect on identifying scholarly arguments, academic referencing, reading, note-taking tactics and essay composition. You will gain an understanding of the criteria that are used to evaluate your work with the department grade descriptors, according to which all assessments across our programmes are judged.
Occurrence | Teaching period |
---|---|
A | Semester 1 2024-25 |
The aims of this module are:
Students who complete this module successfully will:
Students will attend a 1-hour briefing in week 1, then two lectures and a 1-hour discussion group in each of weeks 2-4, 6-8 and 10-11. Weeks 5 & 9 are Reading and Writing Weeks (RAW). Students prepare for and participate in sixteen lectures and eight discussion groups in all.
Lecture and discussion group topics are subject to variation, but are likely to include the following:
Task | % of module mark |
---|---|
Groupwork | 100 |
None
For formative assessment work, students will complete an exercise reflecting on the department’s grade descriptors in week 5 and participate in a presentation in week 11.
For summative assessment, students will participate in a group presentation in the assessment period.
Task | % of module mark |
---|---|
Essay/coursework | 100 |
Following their formative assessment task, students will receive written feedback within 10 working days of submission.
Work will be returned to students in their discussion groups and may be supplemented by the tutor giving some oral feedback to the whole group. All students are encouraged, if they wish, to discuss the feedback on their procedural work during their tutor’s student hours. For more information, see the Statement on Feedback.
For summative assessment tasks, students will receive their provisional mark and written feedback within 25 working days of the submission deadline. The tutor will then be available during student hours for follow-up guidance if required. For more information, see the Statement of Assessment.
For semester-time reading, please refer to the module VLE site. Before the course starts, we encourage you to look at the following items of preliminary reading: