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48% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
BA Sociology
About this course
Sociology is the discipline that turns scientific methods on the most fundamental questions of social life: how societies are organised, why inequalities persist, how institutions shape the behaviour of individuals and groups, and how change happens. It developed in the nineteenth century as a response to the rapid social transformation brought about by industrialisation and urbanisation, and it has continued to evolve as the societies it studies have grown more complex, more interconnected, and more contested. Today sociology addresses questions as varied as the sociology of digital life, the politics of race and gender, the structures of global inequality, and the relationship between culture and power. At the Open University, this programme is offered by distance learning on a part-time basis, which makes it particularly accessible to students who cannot commit to full-time study or who are balancing education with work, family, or other responsibilities. The Open University is one of the world's leading distance learning institutions, and its sociology provision reflects decades of investment in supporting students who learn independently and at their own pace. You will engage with the classical tradition of sociological theory alongside contemporary debates, study quantitative and qualitative research methods, and apply sociological thinking to substantive areas such as health, education, crime, and the environment. The distance learning format means you develop strong self-management and independent study skills alongside your subject knowledge. Sociology graduates are employed across a remarkable range of settings, including social work, education, public health, journalism, the civil service, market research, human resources, and community development. Many go on to postgraduate study in sociology, social policy, social research methods, or professional qualifications in social work or counselling. The discipline's combination of empirical rigour and critical analysis of social life is valued wherever organisations need to understand the people they serve.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 1330 respondents (51% response rate)
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