Degree in Modern History at Institue of Historical Research University of London
Accreditation Information :
Pre Requisite Courses :
Qualifying Exams :
Tution Fees :
Financial Aid / Scholarship Offered :
Courses :
Accreditation Information :
Pre Requisite Courses :
Qualifying Exams :
Tution Fees :
Financial Aid / Scholarship Offered :
Courses :
Accreditation Information : Pre Requisite Courses : Qualifying Exams : Tution Fees : Financial Aid / Scholarship Offered : Courses :
Accreditation Information : Pre Requisite Courses : Qualifying Exams : Tution Fees : Financial Aid / Scholarship Offered : Courses :
Accreditation Information : Pre Requisite Courses : Qualifying Exams : Tution Fees : Financial Aid / Scholarship Offered : Courses :
Accreditation Information : Pre Requisite Courses : Qualifying Exams : Tution Fees : Financial Aid / Scholarship Offered : Courses :
The MA in Historical Research is one of three Masters degrees available at the Institute of Historical Research which share a common training programme. The others are the MA in Local and Regional History and the MA in Urban and Metropolitan History. The MA in Historical Research is tailored to individual research interests. It allows students to undertake assessed work and independent projects in the issues and controversies which interest them most. Students are introduced to key historical approaches, sources and methods and learn to apply them to their particular subject area. The course offers wide-ranging research training, and importance is
The MA in Local and Regional History provides an exciting opportunity to obtain valuable local history research skills and, under the guidance of supervisors, produce local historical research to professional standards. The programme focuses on the local history of England, including London, but there is also scope to work on other areas. Students are introduced to key historical approaches, sources and methods and learn to apply them to the study of specific local history projects. The course is interdisciplinary, and importance is placed on the use of architecture, material culture, archaeology and literature as important sources for the study of
The department combines a distinguished intellectual tradition with an ideal situation. It is in the middle of the best concentration of resources for historical research in Europe, being a few minutes from the British Library, Institute of Historical Research, Warburg Institute, Institute for the Study of the Americas, and a Tube ride away from the other research resources of London. The Royal Historical Society has its base in UCL. The research culture in Bloomsbury is intensive and supportive. Within the department graduate students have an active collective intellectual life participating in seminars and conferences. The department is very international, partly because