

BA Education, Childhood and Culture with a Year Abroad
About this course
Education, childhood and culture is an interdisciplinary subject that examines how children's lives, learning, and development are shaped by the cultural, historical, and social contexts they inhabit. It asks not just how children develop in psychological terms, but how childhood itself is constructed differently across cultures, how educational systems embody particular values and serve particular social functions, and how cultural forces including media, family, religion, and politics shape what it means to grow up in different times and places. This four-year full-time programme at the University of East Anglia includes a year abroad, which gives you the opportunity to study at an international partner institution and to experience education and childhood from a genuinely different cultural vantage point. That comparative dimension is particularly appropriate for a subject that is concerned with how cultural context shapes children's lives, and the experience of studying in another country adds a personal and intellectual layer that enriches your engagement with the material. With a typical tariff of 120 points, the programme attracts students who are curious about children and culture and motivated to think critically about the institutions and environments that shape young lives. At UEA you will draw on developmental psychology, sociology, anthropology, and cultural studies to engage with questions about learning, play, family, schooling, and childhood across different settings and communities. Research methods, both qualitative and quantitative, are an important part of the curriculum, giving you the skills to study education and childhood independently and rigorously. Graduates from this programme move into careers in education, social care, early years practice, youth work, international development, research, and policy. The year abroad gives many graduates confidence and connections that open doors to internationally oriented roles. Further professional training in teaching, social work, or educational psychology is a common next step, and the degree also supports postgraduate research in education or childhood studies.
Syllabus & Modules
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