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Rhodes>JMS>Curriculum>Journalism and Media Studies Honours

Journalism and Media Studies Honours

JMS4

Honours

Co-ordinator: Dr Kealeboga Aiseng

Email: k.aiseng@ru.ac.za

Office: Room 110

The Honours degree in Journalism and Media Studies is an NQF 8-level qualification. It is offered full-time over one year.

The Honours programme is structured to introduce students to selected key theoretical frameworks and the research methodologies and methods relevant to this level of study in the fields of journalism and media studies. The core courses are concept-driven rather than topic-driven. By the end of the year, honours students should be able to assess important media studies approaches and apply these understandings on their own within a chosen research area. Students should be able to recognise broad distinctions in the research paradigms taught, in particular between qualitative and quantitative research. However, they are only expected to demonstrate competency in the application of one research method under the guidance of the supervisor.

 

Students are therefore assisted to take full responsibility for their learning strategies. As part of their intellectual journey, students are encouraged to develop the ability to interrogate knowledge and to reflect critically on the complexity of knowledge creation when working with unfamiliar, complex and problematic social issues. They also learn how to respond creatively to such problems and issues and to effectively share these responses with their classmates.

 

The Honours programme is weighted at a minimum of 120 credits, and consists of six modules:

 

Media Studies: 15%

Media research methods: 15%

Academic writing: 15%

Two elective modules: 15% x 2 = 30%

Research paper: 25%

 

Media Studies – Associate Prof Priscilla Boshoff

This course introduces you to some key concepts that offer a critical understanding of the relationship between contemporary digital media and society in South Africa, and Africa more broadly. In order to orient ourselves to our material, we start by looking closely at our current social context and how it has been shaped by the processes of coloniality and neoliberalism. Examples from contemporary empirical research in Africa demonstrate how we can apply - and expand our understanding of - these concepts in our lived context.

 

Media research methods – Dr Kealeboga Aiseng

The purpose of this course is to give students the necessary tools and knowledge associated with doing research in the field of media. The course also intends to enable students to understand and critique literature from within media and cultural studies from a methodological point of view.

 

Academic writing – Prof Anthea Garman

The academic writing course helps postgraduate students:

  • Familiarise themselves with the range of academic practices of thinking, talking, reading, writing and research which take place within the humanities and social sciences.
  • Learn how to develop a practice of such thinking, talking, reading, writing and research in ways that empower them to operate as emerging members of the media studies community in South Africa.
  • Learn how to operate as independent researchers who can develop research questions and research projects

 

The electives

Students choose two electives from the range of courses offered in terms two and three.

 

The research paper

Students are allocated supervisors early in the year and will work closely with them in order to develop a research topic and proposal. All students, however, will work within the departmental research project on a dedicated theme, for example, Digital Inequalities and/or Digital Cultures. This supports the research process, as students become part of a research community and can share their research journeys.

Centre for Postgraduate Studies Programme

Funding

Postgraduate Gateway

Thesis proposal cover sheet

Thesis proposal format (Humanities)

Thesis Supervision Policy

 

 

Last Modified: Thu, 25 Jul 2024 09:16:07 SAST