Course length
10 months, full-time
Assessment
Graduate Research Skills
Research paper
Dissertation of up to 25,000 words
Department of Archaeology
Benefiting students who have a clearly-defined project in mind and want to go on to PhD work, this MPhil programme will help develop your research skills in archaeology through a combination of independent and supervised research.
You will learn about the research process while reviewing existing work, formulating a research project, collecting and analysing the data. There are also opportunities for you to enhance your writing, presentation, and argument framing and analysis skills through workshops and seminars.
The MPhil in Archaeological Research spans 10 months and includes three components:
The research skills module gives all students on an archaeology MPhil a grounding in research and prepares them for putting together in-depth pieces of work around a central question or discussion. It involves participating in seminars on topics such as planning fieldwork, research ethics, writing and illustrating research, and presenting your work. For this module, you will prepare a short research proposal and present it to the group.
Working with your supervisor, you will formulate your dissertation topic, carry out research, and write it up. This forms an extended, independent, and original piece of research. It is a chance to develop your own research project at substantial length, allowing conceptual, methodological, and empirical exploration – not infrequently, it results in a publishable piece of research or a solid foundation for a PhD project.
With the guidance of their supervisor, students submit a research paper that will help them progress their thinking and methodology. This serves as an important milestone to ensure the proposed research is on the right track, correcting any issues prior to undertaking their dissertation. The paper should not replicate elements that will be used in the dissertation, but instead address parallel and related research questions, explore their means of investigation, and act as a template for interrogating a similar topic at greater length in the dissertation. Some suggestions for the research paper are:
Prof Simon Stoddart is the co-ordinator for this MPhil option. Please get in touch for further information.