Undergraduate
Undergraduate Programmes in Divinity and Theology
Study
materials
Study material is included in the Initial Registration Fee
therefore when
you first register as an External student you will receive:
-
The Arts Good Study Guide
by E. Chambers and A. Northedge
-
Student Handbook
-
subject guides
for
the first units to be studied
-
past examination papers and Examiners' reports
-
copy of the
Regulations
-
access to the
University of London Online Library with
comprehensive selection of links to relevant materials.
Each year you continue to register as an External student, you
will receive updated
materials.
Introductory
Package
Wherever
you are, and however you study, as a registered External student
you will be provided with the following materials, the cost of
which is included in your initial and continuing registration
fees.
Studying
for a Degree in the Humanities and Social Sciences by P. Dunleavy
(Macmillan). Accounting with Law and Management with Law students
also receive Learning Legal Rules by J.A. Holland and J.S. Webb
(Blackstone Press Ltd).
A
handbook containing academic advice on effective study techniques,
planning your studies, using the materials provided and preparing
for examinations.
Subject
guides for each unit studied. These guides introduce you to
topics within the syllabus and should be used alongside the textbooks
which are recommended to you in the guides. The guides show you
how to use textbooks in an organised and productive manner. When
you register, you will get a subject guide for each of your first
year units and then, in subsequent years, a guide for each new
unit plus any revised guides for units that you are continuing.
Accounting with Law and Management with Law students are also
sent a Recent developments in Law booklet in March each
year.
IOLIS:
CD-ROM (Accounting with Law and Management with Law students
only). This Windows CD-ROM covers a number of law subjects and
includes the full text of over 2,000 cases, statutes and articles.
Past
examination papers and Examiners’ reports. The Examiners’
reports give an indication of how individual questions should
have been approached. When you first register, you will be sent
the last three years’ papers and reports, if available, and then,
at the end of each subsequent year, you will be sent the paper
and report for that year’s examinations.
Regulations
containing full details of important information such as syllabuses,
structures, fees, entering for examinations and degree classification
criteria (as appropriate).
A
Resource guide including practical information on, for instance,
bookshops, libraries and your contacts at the University, plus
a list of institutions which offer tuition.
A
note about textbooks: You will need to provide your own textbooks;
these will be the real focus of your studies. You will be advised
to buy some books, and others you will need to refer to in a library.
As far as possible, you should consider the facilities available
locally to you, and how accessible books are likely to be before
registering as an External student. If you apply and the University
accepted you onto the programme, they will give you an Introductory
booklist. This booklist provides you with initial reading for
the subjects you are most likely to take in your first year.