MC499
Dissertation: Media and Communications
This information is for the 2013/14 session.
Teacher responsible
Dr Alison Powell S119b
Availability
This course is compulsory on the MSc in Global Media and Communications (LSE and Fudan), MSc in Global Media and Communications (LSE and USC), MSc in Media and Communications, MSc in Media and Communications (Media and Communications Governance), MSc in Media and Communications (Research), MSc in Media, Communication and Development and MSc in Politics and Communication. This course is not available as an outside option.
Course content
The aim of this dissertation is for students to pursue an independent piece of research within the field of media and communications following the guidelines provided in the MSc Dissertation Guide and the instructions by the School's staff members. The dissertation is usually a combination of theoretical enquiry and original empirical enquiry concerning an issue in the field of media and communications. On rare occasions it is based on a theoretical interrogation. Students are encouraged to select a topic that reflects the content of their MSc programme. In all cases, students must obtain the approval of their supervisors before embarking on any research. The dissertation must be word-processed. It should be not less than 10,000 words and not more than 12,000 words in length.
Teaching
MC499.1: Compulsory Teaching and Supervision
MC499.1A
(i) Dissertation symposiums: a two-hour symposium will be held towards the end of LT for all students and another will be held in ST.
MC499.1B
(ii) Group Supervision Sessions: each supervisor holds three two-hour group supervision sessions for their supervisees: (i) early in LT, after supervisors have been allocated; (ii) towards the end of LT; (iii) week 7 or 8 of ST.
(iii) Individual Supervision Sessions: ad hoc sessions for each student and their supervisor that can be organised during term-time during feedback and consultation hours.
MC499.2: MCLabs – Optional Sessions
MC499.2A
(i) Lectures:
Two x 2-hour lectures in LT5 and LT7, on dissertation preparation skills (literature reviews, ethics).
MC499.2B
(ii) Workshops led by Graduate Teaching Assistants:
Three x 1.5-hour workshops in MT2, MT5 and MT9.
Three x 1.5-hour workshops in LT2, LT5 and LT9.
Places in these workshops are limited, students must attend all sessions in order to keep their place.
Students are required to submit Ethics Checklists and Dissertation Plans to their supervisor in LT and ST.
Indicative reading
There are no formal reading lists, but students are encouraged to consult handbooks on how to write dissertations. In addition, students are advised to consult dissertations submitted in previous years for style and formatting purposes and to make sure that they are not replicating previous work.
Assessment
Dissertation (100%, 12000 words).
Two hard copies of the dissertation must be submitted on the last Friday of August . Students on the MSc Global Media and Communications are required to submit their dissertations by 15 August or the Friday before that if 15 August falls on the weekend. Students are also required to upload their dissertation file(s) to Moodle by the same deadline.
Key facts
Department: Media & Communications
Total students 2012/13: 189
Average class size 2012/13: 15
Value: One Unit