Education and teaching

Institute of EducationLanguage, values, qualifications and reputation – these are the reasons many students come to the UK to study education and teaching. David Williams looks at the options you will find when you get here

The UK and Ireland have always been a magnet for students of education and teaching. Obviously the language helps, but they do not only draw people looking for qualifications in the teaching of English or who wish to teach in UK schools. There are also a large number of options for early- to mid-career professionals who are looking to deepen their understanding of education, and who are attracted by the broad reputation and specific expertise available here

‘On the broadest level, I think what also attracts people students to come and study here at postgraduate level is that they feel sympathetic to the values of UK education as they are perceived from their home countries,’ says Professor Rosamund Sutherland, Head of the Graduate School of Education at the University of Bristol.

What’s on offer
UK postgraduate qualifications are divided into two main types: taught courses and research degrees. There are various study options and qualifications available, depending on the career you are aiming for.

Beyond the very specific qualifications that prepare people to teach, broader education programmes that are classified as ‘taught’ courses will tend to be modular, and will be facilitated in the main through seminar work and self-study. They will be at least partly assessed through coursework. In contrast, the learning on a research programme will take place through the pursuit of a self-directed project that aims to make a new contribution to human knowledge (although it will also often be part of a broader research programme at an institutional level).

Taught programmes
There are three levels of taught qualification: postgraduate certificate (PGCert), postgraduate diploma (PGDip) or master’s (those in education are usually designated as an MEd, MAEd or, occasionally, MSc). Postgraduate certificates and diplomas can be short courses leading to specific teaching qualifications, such as those awarded in TEFL and TESOL or to people specialising in in-service training.

The PGCE
The PGCE is a programme of initial teacher training for graduates that leads to Qualified Teacher Status in the UK. The programme usually takes a year and includes long placements in at least two schools supported by university-based work. As a trainee, you will be expected to have a knowledge and understanding of the subject that you want to teach before starting training, and your first degree should be related to it in some way.

PGCEs are a special case and there is more funding available than there is for other postgraduate programmes. For the academic year 2008/09, PGCE trainees who are classified as home or European Union (EU) students may be eligible to receive a tax-free training bursary of £4,000 for non-priority subjects in primary or secondary school, or £6,000 if you are learning to teach a priority subject for secondary school. The priority subjects for that year are English, dance and drama.

Alongside this, there are other incentives available to trainees and newly qualified teachers in certain subjects, although the arrangements are different, depending on whether you are studying in England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland or in Ireland. For example, in England, newly qualified secondary teachers with a PGCE in English (including Drama), Information and Communications Technology, Design and Technology, Modern Foreign Languages, Religious Education or Music can receive a ‘golden hello’ of £2,500 when they start their second year of work (£5,000 for mathematicians and scientists).

Master of Education
The more general taught postgraduate master’s programmes will usually be modular and have a number of different routes through them. For example, Bristol University’s Master of Education (MEd) includes the following pathways: counselling in education; educational leadership policy and development; mathematics education; psychology of education; research methods; and special education. Some modules in one of the pathways will be offered as options in other pathways and, in this way, each student can build a programme that most suits them.

Many programmes are offered both part time and full time, although, because these programmes are particularly attractive to established professionals travelling from overseas, they can often be available in various formats. For example, the MA in International Education and Development from the Institute of Education University of London is available one year full time or two to four years part time.

As with most educational programmes, the preferred teaching methodology is through small seminar groups in which there is considerable interaction between the facilitator and the students. A report by the UK’s Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education stated that ‘education programmes are notable for successfully integrating theory and practice and encouraging practitioners to reflect on their own practice. Teaching and learning are generally interactive, involving a range of learning styles.’

A one-year taught MEd will usually cost the standard postgraduate programme fee, and there are different rates, depending on whether you are an EU or non-EU student.

Applications for funding or scholarships must be made well over a year in advance and funding should always be arranged before you leave your home country. Information on the various institutional scholarships is available from the British Council website, while funding for some postgraduate courses may be available from the various UK Government research councils. Furthermore, some home-country funding is only targeted towards students who are enrolled on programmes that are rated 5 by the most recent Research Assessment Exercise (RAE – a UK Governmental exercise which rates the research carried out by UK institutions in specific subjects). In the latest exercise in 2001, 83 institutions submitted their research to the assessment and only 2 (the Universities of Bristol and Cardiff) were awarded 5 status. It should be remembered, however, that other institutions will have different specialisms that may better suit your particular needs.

Research-based programmes
Research programmes at master’s level could also be called a Master of Research (MRes) or, regardless of the actual subject studied, Master of Philosophy (MPhil), which usually takes two years full time. The highest research degree is the Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), which takes a minimum of three years to complete. Apart from some training in research skills, there will be very little taught content on research programmes. The dissertation will be longer, 70,000 to 100,000 words for a PhD, and it should be original and, in theory, publishable. Essentially, possessing a PhD should mean that you are one of a very few experts in your specialism in the world.

One important option is the Doctor of Education (EdD) qualification. This qualification combines both taught elements with a rigorous research project that is similar in depth, if not length, to the PhD. It is aimed at established teaching professionals or, for example, civil servants and policy makers in education, and is usually offered part time.

Graduate destinations
Information on graduate destinations for non-UK students will be held at the programme level and will often be quite anecdotal. Anyone wanting to know exactly where the graduates of a course end up needs to talk to the academics in charge, who will always be aware of the sort of thing people have gone on to do.

‘A master’s is the key career-building qualification for many of our students,’ says Professor Rosamund Sutherland. ‘We are very strong on TESOL qualifications and attract students, particularly from the Chinese-speaking areas of the world, who wish to return to begin a career teaching English. However, programmes, such as our MSc in Education Technology and Society, also attract mid-career professionals who want to return to their home countries to further establish themselves.’

David Williams is a freelance journalist reporting on higher education and graduate careers. He is the co-author of How To Get The Best Graduate Job (Pearson, 2005).

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