

BA Linguistics (International Programme)
About this course
Linguistics is the scientific study of language as a human faculty, concerned with how languages are structured, acquired, used, and how they vary and change. It is a discipline that combines the rigour of the natural sciences, applying systematic methods and seeking generalizable explanations, with the breadth of the human sciences, engaging with the social, cultural, and historical dimensions of language as a phenomenon central to what it means to be human. Modern linguistics encompasses phonetics and phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, historical linguistics, and computational linguistics, and it has contributed foundational insights to cognitive science, anthropology, philosophy, and artificial intelligence. The International Programme in Linguistics at University College London is a four-year degree that is designed for students who are coming to the study of English and linguistics from a non-native English background, providing the linguistic and academic preparation to engage fully with degree-level linguistic study in English. UCL has one of the leading linguistics departments in the world, with exceptional strength across the full range of sub-disciplines, and the international programme enables students from diverse linguistic backgrounds to access this education. You will study the core areas of linguistic analysis alongside the academic English skills needed to read, write, and discuss linguistics at the highest level. The programme's four-year structure provides the time and support for linguistic and academic development alongside the intellectual demands of the discipline. Graduates from linguistics programmes enter careers in which understanding language is directly relevant. Language teaching at all levels, translation and interpreting, speech and language therapy support, and roles in organisations concerned with language policy and planning draw on linguistic knowledge. The technology sector is a significant employer of linguistics graduates, particularly in natural language processing, computational linguistics, and the development of voice interfaces and machine translation systems. Publishing, lexicography, and roles in media organisations draw on the analytical skills the degree develops. Academic research in linguistics, cognitive science, or related fields is the path for those who want to pursue the discipline professionally, and UCL's research environment is an excellent foundation for this.
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