School of Arts: Research Student Guide For Applicants 2012-2013
School of Arts: Research Student Guide For Applicants 2012-2013
School of Arts: Research Student Guide For Applicants 2012-2013
Research Student
Guide for Applicants
2012-2013
Contents
Page
Introduction
Applying to the Programme
Making an Application
Progress of Application
Key Staff
Taking up your Offer
Starting a Research Degree
Postgraduate Events and Opportunities
Student Support and Available Resources
Upgrading to a PhD
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Introduction
College
When Birkbeck College was established in 1823, its principal mission was to provide
education and training to working adults who earlier in life had lacked educational
opportunity. A College of the University of London since 1920, Birkbeck is committed
to the concept of lifelong education, and especially within the world of work. Birkbeck
and the other member colleges of the University of London have many research
interests in common and share the same standards and degrees structures, but in
one important respect Birkbeck is unique. Our mission is to provide courses of study
to meet the changing educational, cultural and training needs of adults who are
engaged in earning their livelihood, and others who are able to benefit (Birkbeck
College Charter).
Birkbeck College has built up special expertise in providing a stimulating, positive
learning in the heart of a vibrant, world-class research environment. We award
undergraduate degrees in a full range of disciplines and have an unusually high
proportion of students following taught Masters and MPhil/PhD courses.
You will probably find postgraduate research very different from the kind of study that
you have been used to up to now. Inevitably, a large amount of your time will be
spent working on your own. You will need to get used to taking responsibility for your
research, initiating and following up ideas yourself, evaluating your progress,
projecting and sticking to targets and schedules of writing. This intellectual autonomy
is one of the most exciting and rewarding features of postgraduate research in the
arts.
At Birkbeck, we believe that it is really important to develop and sustain your sense
of belonging to an intellectual community here at Birkbeck and in the School of Arts
in particular. This sense of belonging is important because it makes your life as a
postgraduate more stimulating and enjoyable and also because it will help to deepen
and diversify your own work. Indeed, we regard it as part of your intellectual
responsibility as a postgraduate student to discuss your own research and that of
others, and to contribute generally to the intellectual life of the School and the
College.
The School of Arts provides an exciting research community, with over 200 students
undertaking postgraduate research. We welcome applications for a traditional MPhil
or PhD thesis (an MPhil does not normally exceed 60,000 words, a PhD does not
normally exceed 100,000 words, and both are assessed by a viva voce
examination). We also welcome applications for MPhil or PhD degrees by practicebased research, which have slightly different requirements. We welcome
interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary applications too.
The School of Arts is ideally located near a range of world-class research institutions
such as the British Library, the British Museum, Senate House Library, the
Wellcome Library and has world-class resources to support your research.
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Progress of Application
Please see below for a general overview of the application procedure.
Application Received Online
Registry confirm qualifications are sufficient to study at a postgraduate level.
Registry confirm international student status and the International Student
Administration Section of the Registry will advise the School and applicant
about required documentation.
Application Passed to Postgraduate Administrator
Postgraduate Administrator to confirm that the student has provided the
research proposal, references and other required documentation.
Postgraduate Administrator will notify the relevant Graduate Tutor when all
documentation has been provided.
Application sent to Department for Review
Provided your qualifications are suitable, the Graduate Tutor examines your proposal
and application. They will then seek to identify appropriate supervisor(s) for it, who
will also help with its assessment. Your request of supervision by a specific staff
member will be noted and discussed. At this point a decision of acceptance or
interview will be made. Although, we try to reach a decision on applications as
quickly as possible, it often takes a few weeks as staff may be away on leave and
need to be contacted or we may be under pressure of applications.
Application Decision
You will be notified of a decision as soon as it is practicable by the relevant
administrator for your programme via email.
All offers are provisional until confirmed by registry.
Conditional offers must be resolved as soon as possible to prevent delays in
enrolment.
Please note the following regarding applications
We try to accept as many good applications as we can. However, we currently have
over 200 MPhil/PhD candidates in the School and this means that some areas of our
supervisory expertise are under intense pressure. We place great and equal
emphasis on the quality of our supervision and the postgraduate student experience
at Birkbeck. To maintain this quality, for practical reasons of numbers, we currently
have to turn down a number of highly regarded applications.
Applications in July and August will experience a slower processing than those
submitted earlier in the year due to availability of staff on research leave. Students
applying at this time should not expect a decision on their application until midSeptember and should make accommodation for that time scale. You are strongly
encouraged to apply as soon as possible to avoid delays in processing. You may be
contacted by both administrative and academic representatives to discuss your
application or interview, so please provide up-to-date contact details in your
application.
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In order to be considered for AHRC and School of Arts Studentships you must apply
for a place on the course before the College funding application deadline (further
details about the AHRC/ARS funding application process will be advertised on the
College and School of Arts websites).
Key Staff
Administrative Staff
Departmental Office
Mailing Address
School of Arts
Birkbeck, University of London
43 Gordon Square
London WC1H 0PD
Office Hours
Administrative Staff
The Postgraduate Administrator is able to provide admissions information and advise
you about the progress of your application.
Penny Luker-Brown
Postgraduate Administrator
0203 073 8374
p.luker-brown@bbk.ac.uk
G22, 43 Gordon Square
Academic Staff
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Dr Eckard Michels
e.michels@bbk.ac.uk
Deputies:
Dr Joanne Winning from Oct to Dec 2011
j.winning@bbk.ac.uk
Dr Laura Salisbury from January 2012
l.salisbury@bbk.ac.uk
Department of History of Art and Screen
Media
History of Art:
Dr Tag Gronberg
t.gronberg@bbk.ac.uk
Dr John Kraniauskas
j.kraniauskas@bbk.ac.uk
Screen Media:
Professor Laura Mulvey (SM) from Oct to
Dec 2011
l.mulvey@bbk.ac.uk
Dr Dorota Ostrowska (SM) from Jan to Sept
2012
d.ostrowska@bbk.ac.uk
Department of Media and Cultural Studies
Dr Tim Markham
t.markham@bbk.ac.uk
Dr Luisa Cal
l.cale@bbk.ac.uk
Dr Patrizia Di Bello
p.dibello@bbk.ac.uk
Please check office hours with individual staff members. We ask you visit offices only when you have
made an appointment. Please ring or email in advance. Staff members are available for meetings at
other times by appointment. Staff is subject to change and their listing in this booklet is not a
guarantee that they will be with the Department in the 2012/13 academic year. Please see our
website for queries regarding academic staffs research interests and Departmental responsibilities.
research but must be seen as one of the most important forms in and through which
research is conducted. For this reason you should take responsibility for regularly
producing and submitting to your supervisor pieces of written work which need not
always be full-blown chapters in which you develop ideas and deploy materials and
evidence. Some research students are anxious about producing work when they are
only at a preliminary stage of their thinking about a topic; but often it is precisely the
students who do not write about their topics regularly who fail to identify the
problems, see the connections and define the themes which enable their research to
develop. As W.H. Audens wise aphorism has it: I dont know what I think until I see
what I say. Very few research students fail to complete because they have not done
enough research; most failures are the result of not writing enough or early enough.
Supervision
Among the responsibilities of your supervisor(s) are the following:
to advise you on the formulation and following through of your research and to
advise you about work already published in your area
to discuss with you questions of approach and methodology
to guide you in the use of primary and secondary literature, as well as
historical, archive and other source materials
to comment in detail and in a reasonable time upon the written work that you
submit
to advise you on how to acquire skills and techniques necessary for your
research (for example, learning another language, or editorial or
bibliographical skills)
to advise you where to go or whom to consult if you have difficulties which
your supervisor cannot herself or himself resolve
to put you in touch with students and teachers with whom you may share
research interests
to keep you informed about how far your work meets the standards required
by the university and about university regulations and requirements regarding
the organisation and submission of your thesis
to provide pastoral advice and support
to write references as and when these may be requested
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important is developing a newsroom culture - our hope is that over time our students
will personalise the Newsroom in line with their interests and requirements.
School of Arts Research Centres and Activities
The School has a dynamic research culture with numerous research centres across
the various Departments. The website has details and further information can be
found at the following link http://www.bbk.ac.uk/arts/
For example research students can also join the Birkbecks Centre for Media,
Culture and Creative Practice. Research expertise in the Centre is diverse, spanning
such areas as: film and television studies; arts policy and management; museum
studies; curating; cultural heritage; visual arts; journalism; media theory; new media;
digital aesthetics; activism, politics and creativity; arts, media and cities;
performance; music; and Japanese and East Asian cultural studies. The Centre
stages research events throughout the year, including speaker events, methods
training and research seminars.
Students can also access the Vasari Research Centre which has a range of unique
connections to other media research institutions in the UK and abroad and working
relationships with museums, galleries and the creative industries that flourish in this
area. It hosts a lively cycle of symposia and conferences to showcase ideas and
provide networking opportunities. Students are welcome to access and use image
collections held in the Vasari. Assistance is available for advice on preparing
presentations and working with analogue and digital media by appointment with the
Arts Media Assistant.
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Career Development
Most students are interested in developing their careers, either within their current
field of work or in a completely new direction. The Specialist Institutions Careers
Service [SICS], part of The Careers Group, University of London, offers great
expertise and experience in working with students and graduates of all ages and at
all stages of career development. And its Birkbecks next-door neighbour!
During term-time they offer an Early Evening Advisory Service specifically and
exclusively for evening students and a Drop-In Advice Service, which is always very
popular with the Birkbeck students.
Longer Advisory Interviews can be arranged if necessary - for complete career
beginners, for people wanting a practice job interview, and for every stage and
situation in between.
They also offer Psychometric Testing and Personality Assessment Workshops,
Employer Presentations, Computer-based Career Guidance Programs, Insight
Career Courses as well as invaluable information on Course Funding.
For more information and opening times visit The SICS website at:
http://www.careers.lon.ac.uk/sics .
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Upgrading to a PhD
All research students of the University of London are initially registered as MPhil
students at the outset and are then normally subsequently upgraded to PhD status.
This does not affect the overall period of your registration.
For both the School and yourself, the upgrading process acts as a type of stocktaking, usually at the mid-point of your degree, to make sure that you are on course,
whether you are part-time or full-time, to complete your doctorate in a proper time
frame.
When to upgrade
All full-time students should upgrade during their second year. For publicly funded,
full-time AHRC students and holders of many overseas awards it is a requirement
that you upgrade during this year.
Part-time students should upgrade during their third or fourth year.
What you need to have accomplished
The principal requirement is to have completed at least 2 chapters of your thesis (or
at least 20,000 words) that are deemed to be of PhD quality. In addition you need to
have a clear timetable for completion within the following 18 months (for full time
students) or 2 or 3 years for part-time students.
What your upgrade submission should include
A Statement (no longer than 2 sides of A4) confirming that you have written
two chapters and detailing what they contain and an indication of your work to
date.
The completed chapters
A Plan for Completion (no longer that 3 sides of A4) providing a description,
chapter by chapter, of your intended thesis and a timetable for the completion
of each chapter.
The name of your supervisor, so that we can contact her/him for a reference.
Outcomes
There is normally one of three possible outcomes to the upgrading process:
You will be upgraded
You will not be upgraded this session but asked to complete further work and
reapply the following year.
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http://www.bbk.ac.uk/maps/centrallondon.pdf
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Christmas and
New Year
closure
There will be no teaching and most services will be unavailable from 5pm
on Thursday 22 December 2011, re-opening at 9am on Tuesday, 3
January 2012
Spring term
Easter closure
There will be no teaching and most services will be unavailable from 6pm
on Wednesday 4 April 2012 to Tuesday, 10 April 2012. Normal services
will resume from 9am on Wednesday, 11 April 2012.
Summer term
Early May Bank There will be no teaching and most services will be unavailable on
holiday
Monday 7 May 2012
Spring bank
holiday and
Queen's
Diamond
Jubilee
August bank
holiday
There will be no teaching and most services will be unavailable from 8pm
on Friday 24 August 2012 to Monday 27 August 2012. Normal services
will resume from 9am on Tuesday 28 August 2012.
Spring term
Summer term
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