**The information provided on this page was correct at the time of publication (November 2024). For complete and up-to-date information about this course, please visit the relevant University of Oxford course page via www.graduate.ox.ac.uk/ucas.**
The MSc Education (Higher Education) at the University of Oxford is aimed at future academic, policy, and practitioner leaders in higher education (HE). It provides a critical introduction to research, theory, and policy in this complex field, taking into account a range of national, international and global lenses.
Durin...
**The information provided on this page was correct at the time of publication (November 2024). For complete and up-to-date information about this course, please visit the relevant University of Oxford course page via www.graduate.ox.ac.uk/ucas.**<br/><br/>The MSc Education (Higher Education) at the University of Oxford is aimed at future academic, policy, and practitioner leaders in higher education (HE). It provides a critical introduction to research, theory, and policy in this complex field, taking into account a range of national, international and global lenses.<br/><br/>During this full-time course, you will have the opportunity to consider a wide range of issues that higher education systems, and, more broadly, tertiary education systems, around the world are facing today. These include:<br/><br/>the social and economic contributions of HE<br/>graduate employment and employability<br/>access and widening participation<br/>equity and social and epistemic justice<br/>fees and funding<br/>student mobility<br/>‘research on research’<br/>the relationship between HE and vocational and technical education and training<br/>institutional governance<br/>rankings.<br/>Teaching sessions will combine tutor input, class discussion, and working in small groups in order to examine these key issues and the discourses that shape them.<br/><br/>You will study three core papers in the first two terms, which consider a wide range of policy issues across higher education systems and the role higher education plays in the economy and society from theoretical, historical and empirical perspectives. Academic staff will also present their own recent research findings, ensuring that the course content reflects live debates at the cutting edge of the field of higher education studies.<br/><br/>In addition to these three pathway-specific core papers, two core papers in research methods will develop your understanding of key concepts and principles of educational research design and methodology, using quantitative and qualitative methods and data. You will benefit from the expertise available through the Qualitative Methods Hub and the Quantitative Methods Hub at the Department of Education. <br/><br/>The five core modules are:<br/><br/>Higher Education: Systems, Structures and Institutions<br/>Higher Education in the Economy and Society<br/>Global Higher Education<br/>Foundations of Educational Research 1: Concepts and Design<br/>Foundations of Educational Research 2: Strategies and Methods<br/>You will also choose one assessed option paper in the second term, from a selection offered by academic staff across the department. The following list provides an indication of modules usually available (please note, this is not a guarantee of availability for any particular elective in a given year):<br/><br/>Core Principles of Child Assessment<br/>Critical Digital Innovation<br/>Education in Africa<br/>Education, the Internet and Society<br/>Intermediate Quantitative Research<br/>Perspectives and Debates in Qualitative Research<br/>The Implementation of the Rights of Children<br/>Research in the department is organised around three major themes:<br/><br/>Language, Cognition and Development<br/>Policy, Economy and Society<br/>Learning: Pedagogy, Learning and Knowledge.<br/><br/>Within each of these themes there are several research groups and centres. All staff and doctoral students belong to one or more of these research groups, each of which has its own seminar programme to which graduate students often contribute. In addition, the department as a whole sponsors seminars and public lectures which attract distinguished national and international speakers.
Some courses vary and have tailored teaching options, select a course option below.
Course Details
Information
Study Mode
Full-time
Duration
12 Months
Start Date
10/2025
Campus
University of Oxford
Application deadline
Provider Details
Codes/info
Course Code
Unknown
Institution Code
O33
Points of Entry
Unknown
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