Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

This section of the handbook focuses on the rules that determine your progression through the course and how your final mark is calculated. These rules are standardised across different degrees in the university, and we describe them in outline below.

Additional information about the content covered at each stage of your course is described in an accompanying guide (Student Wiki) which we think you'll find useful throughout your studies. 


Image RemovedImage AddedThe overall structure of the BSc Psychology programme.  Please visit the accompanying BSc Psychology guide for a full overview of the course structure and content.

Stages

An undergraduate programme of study is divided into a specified number of stages. Each stage is equivalent to a year of full-time study. You must satisfy the requirements for one stage of your programme before being able to progress to the next stage. In Psychology, our stages correspond to Years 1, 2, and 3 as illustrated above.

When we calculate your degree classification, different stages are weighted differently.  More  More information on this can be found in under 'Your ‘Your final degree classification'classification’ in the Assessment, Progression and Award section.

Year 1: 0%

Year 2: 40%

Year 3: 60%

The first 'stage' of your programme (which is your first year) doesn't count towards your degree classification, but you do have to pass it to continue with your programme, and it will appear on your transcript.  The idea is that you will not be penalised for problems you encounter when you are first getting to grips with the subject, with University life and independent study. As you become more familiar with the discipline, and work more efficiently and independently your marks will have a greater impact on your final result.


Modules

Each stage is made up of modules which modules which you will take. Each of the modules you undertake will have a credit value (e.g. 10 credits – 20 credits – etc. ) and a ‘level’ which indicates the module’s level of difficulty (e.g. 'C' for Certificate in first year, 'I' for Intermediate and 'H' for Honours in second and third years).  One credit point equals 10 hours of learning.  You study and are assessed on three modules per semester and each module you take is worth 20 credits. You will achieve the credit for a module by passing the module assessments. Modules are assessed by a range of methods which will result in a numerical module mark out of 100.

If you fail a module there are two possible ways in which you might be able to still pass your year and progress to the next level.  These are compensation and reassessment and are explained in more detail in the Assessment, Progression and Award section.

Modules and stages are also subject to credit-weighting, see below.

Include PagePsySharedDocs:BSc Psychology Stages, Modules, CreditsPsySharedDocs:BSc Psychology Stages, Modules, Credits

Credit-weighting

Credit

Credit-weighting means that, in calculating your average stage mark, each module mark will be given more or less weight according to the volume of credit (i.e. workload) that is associated with it.

For further information on credit-weighting, including how you can use it to calculate your marks, consult the Student Guide to

the University’s Rules for https://www.york.ac

Progression and Award

in Undergraduate programmes:  

.

uk/staff/teaching/procedure/examinations/guide/

Further information on calculating your final degree mark is available under ‘Your final degree classification’ in the

‘Assessment

Assessment, Progression and

Award’ section. Your academic supervisor should also be able to help you with this.For your convenience, in the tables above we have included the credit weightings of each module on the BSc Psychology programme, and we have provided the credit-weighted contribution the module will normally make to your final degree mark in brackets (after combining stage marks)

Award section.