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BA English Language
About this course
English language as an academic discipline is the systematic study of how language works, not simply the practice of using it well. It draws on linguistics, sociology, cognitive science and cultural theory to examine the structures of English at every level, from the sounds of speech and the grammar of sentences to the patterns of conversation and the conventions of written genres. It asks how language varies across regions, social groups and historical periods, how it is acquired by children, how it is used to exercise power or build solidarity, and how it is changing in the digital age. At the University of Chester this programme begins with a foundation year, providing the academic grounding and study skills you need to engage confidently with university-level linguistics. Once you move into the degree itself you will cover core areas including phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics and discourse analysis, developing both theoretical understanding and the ability to apply analytical frameworks to real language data. You will also engage with sociolinguistics, examining how language reflects and constructs social identity, and with the history of English, tracing the language's development over time. The programme includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to experience English in a different national and cultural context, a perspective that can transform your understanding of the language you study. English language graduates are valued across a wide range of careers. The ability to analyse communication precisely, to understand how language functions in different contexts and for different purposes, and to think critically about meaning and interpretation are transferable abilities that employers in education, publishing, broadcasting, journalism, marketing, public policy, the legal sector and technology all recognise. Many graduates go on to careers in teaching, speech and language therapy, lexicography or corporate communications. Others pursue postgraduate study in linguistics, applied linguistics, TESOL, or communication research. The foundation year route makes this a genuinely open path.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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