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25% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
BA Dutch and Norwegian
About this course
Dutch and Norwegian is a combination that brings together two of the North Germanic and West Germanic language families and gives you access to the cultures, literatures, and modern societies of the Netherlands, Belgium, and the Nordic countries. Dutch is one of the world's more widely spoken Germanic languages, the official language of the Netherlands and Belgium and one of the official languages of the European Union, with an additional reach in parts of the Caribbean and former colonial territories. Norwegian is the language of a Scandinavian nation with an outsized contribution to world literature, shipping, and environmental policy, and with a characteristic combination of natural grandeur and social progressivism that has made it consistently interesting to scholars across many disciplines. At University College London, this four-year full-time programme develops your competence in both languages from your point of entry, whether that means building from a foundation or extending existing knowledge. You will study the grammar, phonology, and written registers of both languages alongside their respective literatures, cultural histories, and contemporary societies. UCL's Scandinavian and Low Countries studies provision is strong, and you will benefit from specialist teaching that draws on the research expertise of the department. The programme develops the full range of linguistic and cultural skills: reading and translation, oral production, literary analysis, and the ability to situate texts and cultural products within their historical and social contexts. The skills built through language study at this level are genuinely transferable. Precision with language, the ability to analyse texts carefully, and cultural fluency across national boundaries are all valued in professional life. Graduates pursue careers in translation and interpreting, journalism, international business, education, cultural institutions, and the public sector. Many continue to postgraduate research in Germanic linguistics, Scandinavian studies, or European cultural history. The combination of Dutch and Norwegian is rare and rewarding for the breadth of cultural knowledge it develops.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 10 respondents (52% response rate)
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