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Degree type

BA

Course length

4 years full-time

Location

Durham City

Degree type

BA

Course length

4 years full-time

Location

Durham City

UCAS code

R002

UCAS code

R002

Ready to Apply?

Typical offers

Typical offers
A Level AAA
BTEC DDD
International Baccalaureate 37

Course details

We offer post-A level courses in French, German, Italian, Russian and Hispanic Studies. These courses are open to students who have an A level (at least grade A) or equivalent qualification in that language. We also offer beginners’ courses in Arabic, French, German, Italian, Spanish and Russian. Beginners can take cultural modules alongside post-A level students, and completely merge with the advanced stream in the final year.

Here are some examples of how to combine languages

  • You might choose to study one language (chosen from French, German, Italian, Russian and Spanish [Hispanic Studies]). You will need an A level at the appropriate grade pass in your chosen subject. However, if you wish to study Arabic as a single language, you will need an A level at the appropriate grade pass in at least one other foreign language. You take four modules in the language area of your choice, along with a further two modules in a subsidiary subject of your choice outside the School in both your first and second years. You then take your year abroad and return to your final year to take either six modules in your chosen language or five modules in your chosen language and one module from a subject studied in your second year. Subsidiary subjects may be chosen from those available in departments outside of the School, subject to module availability, individual entry requirements and timetable compatibility.
  • You might choose to study two languages (chosen from Arabic, French, German, Italian, Russian and Spanish [Hispanic Studies]). These languages can normally be divided 3 modules +3 modules between two languages, or 4+2 as you prefer (subject to some variation in module availability between the languages).
  • You might initially choose to study three languages (chosen from Arabic, French, German, Italian, Russian and Spanish [Hispanic Studies]), which you study in equal proportions (2+2+2). After your first year, you will be required to drop one of these and study no more than two languages in Years 2 and 3.
  • There are three ways of combining study of a language and its culture with another subject throughout your degree (with a year abroad). Combined Honours in Social Sciences and Liberal Arts allow flexible combinations of one or two languages with other subjects, while the Modern European Languages and History degree allows you to study one language (Advanced or Beginners, excluding Arabic) and History in roughly equal proportions.

Year 1

You will take a core language module for each of the languages you are studying. This is a single module for all languages studied post-A level and a double module for beginners’ languages. These core modules focus on the four skills of reading, writing, speaking and listening. In addition, you will choose from a wide range of modules dealing with various aspects of the literature, film, art, history and politics of the different cultures you are studying. These cultural modules aim to develop students’ independent research and analytical skills as well as introducing them to the cultures in question.

All first-year modules are intended to function as introductions to and more general overviews of areas of study in which you will specialise later in your degree. They have been designed to reflect a commitment to diversity in terms of resources and delivery and will create opportunities for students to engage in critical analysis of different perspectives relevant to the study area.

Year 2

You will continue to take a core language module for each of the languages you are studying. These core modules focus on and continue to develop the four skills of reading, writing, speaking and listening. In addition, you will choose from a wide range of modules on the literature, film, art, history and politics of the cultures you are studying. All second-year modules build on skills and knowledge acquired in the first year and allow you to specialise more in areas which interest you (from medieval literature to contemporary film).

Year 3

Your third year is spent abroad and you divide your time between countries whose languages you are going to study at Level 3 in your final year. You can spend this time as an English assistant in a school, as a student in a university and/or in employment of some kind. During your year abroad you will complete a summative Year Abroad assignment for each of the languages they intend to study at Level 3.

Year4

You will continue to take a compulsory language module for each of the languages you are studying. These compulsory modules focus on and continue to develop to a high level the four skills of reading, writing, speaking and listening. In your final year, you will also research and write a dissertation on an aspect of culture or cultural production, supervised by a member of staff with expertise in the selected topic area.

In addition, you will choose from a wide range of specialist modules on literature, film, art, history and politics relating to the cultures you are studying. These modules are designed around staff research expertise. All fourth-year modules build on skills and knowledge acquired earlier in your degree and allow you to specialise still further in areas which interest you (such as the work of a particular writer or the culture of a particular period).

Placement

You may be able to take a work placement. Find out more.

Study abroad

We attach great importance to your time abroad, during the third year of your degree, which you may spend as an English assistant in a school, as a student in a foreign university, or in employment with an overseas organisation. This is a time of enormous linguistic and personal development from which you should gain a high level of fluency in your language(s) and enjoy a unique opportunity to make new friends, appreciate new cultures and learn to work and study in new ways. Employers at home and abroad are impressed by the lasting benefits, especially in increased linguistic confidence, intercultural agility and general self-motivation.

During the year abroad you will complete a summative Year Abroad assignment for each of the languages you intend to study at Level 3. The assignments will be submitted before the start of the first term of your final year of study. You will need to pass these in order to fulfil the requirements of the BA (Hons) Modern Languages with Year Abroad.

Typical offers

Typical offers
A Level AAA
BTEC DDD
International Baccalaureate 37

Course details

This BA offers you the opportunity to combine the development of high-level language skills with in-depth critical engagement with other cultures through studying literature, art, film, history and politics.

If you already have an A level (or equivalent) in French, German, Italian, Russian and Spanish, we offer advanced courses in those languages. You will also have the choice to study beginner courses in the above languages or Arabic. Whether you are a beginner or a post-A level student in your chosen languages, you will also study cultural modules together, and the beginner and advanced streams fully merge in the final year.

In Year 1 you can study up to three languages, focusing on the key skills of reading, writing, speaking and listening. You will also explore aspects of the literature, film, art, history and politics of the cultures you are studying.

In Year 2 you will be able to study one or two languages, building on your skills and allowing you to begin to specialise in areas that interest you.

You will then spend Year 3 abroad, either as an English assistant in a school or university, as a student or on a work placement. You will divide your time between countries whose languages you will study in your final year. This is a time of enormous linguistic and personal development, when you should gain fluency in your language and enjoy a unique opportunity to make new friends, appreciate other cultures and learn to work and study in new ways. You can also apply to add a placement year to your degree, increasing the course from four years to five.

In Year 4 you will develop your advanced skills in one or two chosen languages. You will also continue your cultural studies, focusing on your areas of interest (such as the work of a particular writer or the culture of a particular period).

Course structure

Year 1

One to three core language modules:

  • Arabic (Beginner)
  • French (Beginner or Advanced)
  • German (Beginner or Advanced)
  • Hispanic Studies (Beginner or Advanced)
  • Italian (Beginner or Advanced)
  • Russian (Beginner or Advanced).

Examples of optional modules:

  • Introduction to Middle Eastern Cultures
  • Islam Observed: Ethnographic Accounts of Muslim Practice
  • Reading French Literature (Beginner or Advanced)
  • Society and its Outsiders in Modern France
  • The Invention of France
  • Picturing the Past of the German-Speaking Countries
  • Reading German Culture
  • Italy and the Arts
  • Understanding Russian: Arts and Ideologies.

Year 2

One or two core language modules:

  • Arabic (Beginner)
  • French (Beginner or Advanced)
  • German (Beginner or Advanced)
  • Hispanic Studies (Beginner or Advanced)
  • Italian (Beginner or Advanced)
  • Russian (Beginner or Advanced).

Examples of optional modules:

  • Arabic Literature
  • Persian
  • Modernity and Disenchantment: 19th and 20th Century French Literature and Culture
  • Sex and Identity in Germanic Cultures
  • Catalan (Beginners)
  • Latin American Texts
  • Narratives of Fascist and Post War Italy
  • The Languages of Italy
  • Russian and Soviet Cinema.

Year 3

The third year is spent abroad as an English assistant in a school, as a student in a university or in employment of some kind. During the year abroad you complete a summative Year Abroad assignment with guidance from Durham staff.

Year 4

You will produce an Extended Dissertation or a Dissertation depending on the number of languages studied.

One or two core language modules:

  • Arabic (double module)
  • French
  • German
  • Hispanic Studies
  • Italian
  • Russian.

Examples of optional modules:

  • Trends in Modern Arabic Literature and Film
  • French Cinema 1930s to 1990s
  • German Interpreting
  • Berlin: City of Diverse Cultures
  • Representing Women: Sex and Power in Colonial Latin America
  • Centres and Margins Across Italian Literatures and Media
  • Italian Cinema
  • The Poet and the State
  • The Making of the Russian Intelligentsia (1762–1917).

Study abroad

If you study on the four-year Modern Languages and Cultures degree, you will spend Year 3 at one or two universities or work placements in different countries.

Placement

You may be able to take a work placement. Find out more.

Learning

Typically, you will have 10-11 hours of classroom teaching per week in the three years of your degree in Durham. How much of this is devoted to language learning will depend on how many languages you study (up to three in the first year and up to two in the second and final years). Post-A level core language modules mostly involve 2 teaching hours per week, while beginners’ core language courses in the first year are double modules with 5 or 6 teaching hours per week.

Language classes develop speaking, listening, reading and writing skills as well as grammatical understanding. Optional modules focusing on a wide range of forms of culture (literary and visual) and cultural history are mostly taught by means of weekly lectures and fortnightly seminars, some of which are conducted in the target language.

Classroom teaching is an important part of your learning, but this is only the beginning of your learning. It provides a starting point for your development as an independent, self-motivated learner. The majority of your time will be spent working independently, reading widely, making notes, finding sources of information, listening to and viewing audiovisual materials. For each hour of timetabled classroom teaching, you will be expected to carry out approximately four hours of independent study and research.

A significant proportion of this time will be spent preparing and completing assessment tasks. In core language and specialised translation/interpreting modules, heavy emphasis is placed on assessment as an ongoing element of the learning process, progressively preparing you for written and oral assessments. In cultural modules, most assessment is largely consisting of a mix of essays and written examinations, with oral presentations in some modules. In addition to regular support and feedback from module teachers and conveners, your learning will be supported at the individual level by a personal Academic Adviser, who will meet with you three times a year to discuss your overall progress. This support network continues during the Year Abroad when you are supported by a designated member of staff.

The Year Abroad is a key element in the progressive, developmental education Modern Languages and Cultures at Durham seeks to provide, fostering the accelerated acquisition of language skills and expanding intercultural competence. The amount of time spent on academic study during the Year Abroad will vary according to whether you choose to do work or study placements. You will, however, work independently during your time abroad on preparation for your final-year dissertation and the summative Year Abroad assignment(s) submitted at the beginning of your final year.

In general, there will be an increasing emphasis on independent learning and research skills, culminating in your final-year dissertation. Rather than imparting detailed information, the main aim of the teaching you receive will be to help you to learn how to learn – guiding you towards using resources effectively, thinking critically and formulating persuasive arguments.

Entry requirements

A level offerAAA including French, German, Italian, Russian or Spanish.

BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma/OCR Cambridge Technical Extended DiplomaDDD including A level requirements as above.

IB Diploma score37 with 666 in higher level subjects. Please see above for required languages

In addition to satisfying the University’s general entry requirements, please note:

  • We welcome applications from those with other qualifications equivalent to our standard entry requirements and from mature students with non-standard qualifications or who may have had a break in their study.
  • Grade A at A level or equivalent in French, German, Italian, Russian or Spanish is required to study that subject at advanced level.
  • Grade A at A level, or equivalent, in a modern European language is required to begin the study of a new beginners’ language, including Arabic.
  • We are pleased to consider applications for deferred entry.

Alternative qualifications

International students who do not meet direct entry requirements for this degree might have the option to complete an International Foundation Year.

English language requirements

Country specific information

Fees and funding

Full Time Fees

Tuition fees
Home students £9,250 per year
EU students £23,900 per year
Island students £9,250 per year
International students £23,900 per year

The tuition fees shown for home students are for one complete academic year of full time study and are set according to the academic year of entry. Fees for subsequent years of your course may rise in line with an inflationary uplift as determined by the government.

The tuition fees shown for overseas and EU students are for one complete academic year of full time study, are set according to the academic year of entry, and remain the same throughout the duration of the programme for that cohort (unless otherwise stated).

Please also check costs for colleges and accommodation.

Scholarships and Bursaries

We are committed to supporting the best students irrespective of financial circumstances and are delighted to offer a range of funding opportunities. 

Find out more about Scholarships and Bursaries

Career opportunities

School of Modern Languages and Cultures

Of those students who graduated in 2019:

  • 91% are in paid employment or further study 15 months after graduation across all our programmes

Of those in employment:

  • 81% are in high skilled employment
  • With an average salary of £27,000.

(Source: HESA Graduate Outcomes Survey. The survey asks leavers from higher education what they are doing 15 months after graduation. Further information about the Graduate Outcomes survey can be found here www.graduateoutcomes.ac.uk)

Department information

School of Modern Languages and Cultures

Employers of all kinds are looking for ‘global graduates’: people with excellent communication skills, the ability to mediate sensitively between cultures and the confidence to adapt to different environments.

At Durham University, you can specialise in one or two languages and the cultural worlds associated with them – choose from Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hispanic Studies, Italian, Japanese and Russian. You will develop high-level language skills and in-depth intercultural awareness. The year abroad will give those capabilities a crucial boost, as well as provide valuable experience.

For more information see our department pages.

Ranking

  • World Top 100 in the QS World University Subject Rankings 2022
  • 4th in The Complete University Guide 2023
  • 6th in The Guardian University Guide 2022.

Staff

For a current list of staff, please see the School of Modern Languages and Cultures pages.

Research Excellence Framework

8th in the UK for research power (REF 2021).

Facilities

The School of Modern Languages and Cultures is a leading centre of teaching and research in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hispanic, Italian, Japanese and Russian Studies. The language laboratories have excellent audio-visual facilities and both main lecture rooms and small group teaching rooms are equipped for the increasing integration of film and other audio-visual material. The School’s Open Access Centre is situated in the same building, offering further self-access resources. Durham has first-class library facilities, with the main University collections supplemented by those of college libraries.

Apply

Find out more:

Use the UCAS code below when applying:

Apply

R002

The Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS) handles applications for all undergraduate courses.

Learning

Language modules cultivate speaking, listening, reading and writing skills. For cultural and historical modules, lectures will introduce themes, context and commentary. Seminars then provide an opportunity to develop your critical skills through discussion with other students and staff.

Classroom teaching is only the start – in general, there is an increasing emphasis on independent learning and research, culminating in your dissertation in Year 4. Most of your time will be spent working independently – reading widely, making notes, finding sources and watching/listening to audiovisual materials. Rather than delivering detailed information, the course aims to help you learn how to learn, guiding you towards independence in using resources effectively, thinking critically and formulating persuasive arguments.

Feedback is an ongoing element of the learning process, progressively preparing you for written and oral assessments.

The year abroad is a key element in your developmental education, enhancing your language skills and expanding your intercultural competence.

Assessment

Cultural and historical modules are assessed by essays, commentaries, projects and examinations, while language modules are assessed by a mixture of oral, listening and written examinations. You will also complete a dissertation or extended dissertation in your final year. During your year abroad you will complete a Year Abroad assignment.

Entry requirements

A level offerAAA including French, German, Italian, Russian or Spanish.

BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma/OCR Cambridge Technical Extended DiplomaDDD including A level requirements as above.

IB Diploma score37 with 666 in higher level subjects. Please see above for required languages

In addition to satisfying the University’s general entry requirements, please note:

  • We welcome applications from those with other qualifications equivalent to our standard entry requirements and from mature students with non-standard qualifications or who may have had a break in their study.
  • Grade A at A level or equivalent in French, German, Italian, Russian or Spanish is required to study that subject at advanced level.
  • Grade A at A level, or equivalent, in a modern European language is required to begin the study of a new beginners’ language, including Arabic.
  • We are pleased to consider applications for deferred entry.

Alternative qualifications

International students who do not meet direct entry requirements for this degree might have the option to complete an International Foundation Year.

English language requirements

Country specific information

Fees and funding

The tuition fees for 2024/25 academic year have not yet been finalised, they will be displayed here once approved.

The tuition fees shown for home students are for one complete academic year of full time study and are set according to the academic year of entry. Fees for subsequent years of your course may rise in line with an inflationary uplift as determined by the government.

The tuition fees shown for overseas and EU students are for one complete academic year of full time study, are set according to the academic year of entry, and remain the same throughout the duration of the programme for that cohort (unless otherwise stated).

Please also check costs for colleges and accommodation.

Scholarships and Bursaries

We are committed to supporting the best students irrespective of financial circumstances and are delighted to offer a range of funding opportunities. 

Find out more about Scholarships and Bursaries

Career opportunities

School of Modern Languages and Cultures

A degree in Languages and Cultures will provide you with an impressive portfolio of cultural knowledge, transferable skills and real-world experiences that is valued by employers worldwide. In particular, the year abroad which, as well as developing language abilities, can also greatly enhance your intercultural, problem-solving and communication skills.

With the UK as a whole producing fewer linguists, proficiency in languages coupled with the intellectual rigour and cultural understanding acquired during your degree will make you highly employable in a wide range of careers both in the UK and internationally. These include occupations such as interpreting, translation and teaching, media and the arts but also working across wider industry in research, administration, human resources, sales and business development, and the financial services.

Of those students who graduated in 2019:

  • 91% are in paid employment or further study 15 months after graduation across all our programmes

Of those in employment:

  • 81% are in high skilled employment
  • With an average salary of £27,000.

(Source: HESA Graduate Outcomes Survey. The survey asks leavers from higher education what they are doing 15 months after graduation. Further information about the Graduate Outcomes survey can be found here www.graduateoutcomes.ac.uk)

Department information

School of Modern Languages and Cultures

In an era of increasing globalisation, a skill set that includes cultural understanding and proficiency in languages will help you view the world through a different lens while equipping you with the skills that global employers are looking for.

Our language-based courses offer the flexibility to specialise in one or two languages and the cultural worlds associated with them – choose from Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hispanic Studies, Italian, Japanese and Russian. You can study from beginners’ level or opt for a more advanced route if you already have an A level or equivalent qualification.

All of our language degrees include a year abroad, a valuable experience that will broaden your horizons, boost your skills and give you the confidence to adapt to different environments. You will return to Durham for the final year with a deeper understanding of language and cultures, and be better equipped to make meaningful connections with people around the world.

The BA in Visual Arts and Film includes optional modules in languages and an opportunity to apply for a placement year or a year abroad. Course content is almost global in geographical reach covering art, film, and visual culture from the Western world, the Middle East, Eurasia and East Asia.

For more information see our department pages.

Ranking

  • World Top 100 in the QS World University Subject Rankings 2022
  • 2nd for Italian, 3rd for Russian & Eastern European Languages and 5th for German in The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2023
  • 4th in The Complete University Guide 2023
  • 6th in The Guardian University Guide 2023

Staff

For a current list of staff, please see the School of Modern Languages and Cultures pages.

Research Excellence Framework

8th in the UK for research power (REF 2021).

Facilities

Our highly skilled academics share their expertise in languages, as well as in literature, cultural history, cinema and visual culture, and translation. Many of our language academics are native speakers, while others have lived experience of the culture and language of the country.

Our location on Elvet Riverside is close to the ancient Elvet Bridge, and within easy walking distance of the colleges, Students’ Union and the historic centre of Durham. Learning facilities include language laboratories, computer classrooms and a large study area. There are satellite and recording facilities for viewing programmes in all the major taught languages.

The University's fully equipped Centre for Foreign Language Study is housed in the same building, and Languages and Cultures students have access to its facilities.

Apply

Find out more:

Use the UCAS code below when applying:

Apply

R002

The Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS) handles applications for all undergraduate courses.

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