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Programme Specification for Professional Landscape Architecture MA

 

Final award

MA

Intermediate awards available

PG Dip
PG Cert

UCAS code

N/A

Details of professional body accreditation

Professional accreditation for this programme is being sought from the Landscape Institute

Relevant QAA Benchmark statements

 

Date specification last up-dated

February 2012

Profile

The summary - programme advertising leaflet

Programme content

The Architecture programmes in the School of Architecture and the Visual Arts at the University of East London are recognised as among the leaders in the UK and have a particular reputation for innovation in teaching. Their character is recognisable in its ‘hands-on’ approach to architecture at all scales, working with the physical exploration of site and context, as well as developing new critical approaches to the field.

Former UEL Architecture graduates have proceeded to win urban design competitions in Manchester, Germany, Estonia, Iceland and Japan. A former Architecture staff member is the Director of GLA’s Architecture & Urbanism Unit. Two current tutors have studied landscape architecture in the UK, USA  and Japan and can bring a wide range of experience to the school in this field.

The School of Architecture and the Visual Arts [AVA] recognises the opportunity to expand the offering of programmes to attract design professionals who wish to specialise in landscape architectural design locally, nationally and internationally through research by design.

The aim of the programme is also to be the first step towards design based PhDs and professional Doctorates within Architecture.

This new programme is growing logically out of the School’s longstanding preoccupation with material, context, creative interventions, and regeneration both locally and internationally. It expands material and contextual interests into the natural and urban environment and actively seeks to explore the possibilities inherent in the temporal design opportunities that landscape architecture encompasses. The programme is designed to develop intellectual and practical professional tools for landscape architects, and through project based studies search for new solutions to the increasing complexity of our urban landscapes, where the social, political and economic, as well as spatial pressures are most intense. The programme aims to work in collaboration with local and international agencies on live projects where possible, and to tackle cutting-edge issues through the prism of site reality.

The programme is predicated upon understanding the best of current local and international landscape practice, while also emphasizing the development of intuition and processes to test and develop new forms of landscape practice. It welcomes students as fellow collaborators in a programme that seeks to develop new strands to contemporary landscape architecture that are innovative in approach to materials and the temporal possibilities at the core of landscape, and deal proactively with the complex environmental, social, and artistic questions of the time.

The programme is part of the new School of Architecture and the Visual Arts in Docklands, the biggest redevelopment area in Europe. It takes advantage of the University’s London location with visits to development sites as well as lectures. Site visits will strengthen links with the local landscape culture of the city, while wider ones will include the rich historic precedents of southern England. Its teachers are abreast of current developments in the field and currently working on publications, conferences and other projects inside the school, and on innovative approaches to landscape architecture in private practice.

This programme forms part of a new and enriched Masters in Architecture portfolio of programmes within the School of Architecture and the Visual Arts, including MSc Computing & Design, MSc Material Matters, MA Sustainability & Design, MA Alternative Urbanisms, and MA Interpretation and Theories. The programme is organised in two taught modules followed by the Thesis module, which can be written only or a 50/50 split written and design. The taught Modules comprise a series of distinctive components designed for each specific award. This flexibility, it is hoped, will encourage applications for the Doctorate by Design programme.

Architecture at UEL

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Admission requirements

The programme will appeal to a diverse audience:

It will appeal to already qualified design professionals in related disciplines who wish to add further specialisation in landscape architectural practice, and gain professional membership of the Landscape Institute.

It also welcomes students from other post-graduate diploma programmes in the UK and elsewhere who wish to study landscape architecture with us at the University Of East London.

It also welcomes applications from candidates with a design based first degree with a particular interest and ability to contribute to the development of landscape at an advanced level. Applicants whose first degree is not in landscape architecture will need to have completed a graduate diploma in landscape architecture.

It welcomes applications from suitable candidates with an honours degree or graduate diploma in landscape architecture or landscape design with an interest in additional study at an advanced level.

Applications are welcomed from the EU and overseas, in particular, lecturers from Higher Education Institutions wishing to increase their qualifications.

Students whose first language is not English will have achieved a score of 6.0 in IELTS or equivalent. Eligibility for students without degree equivalent qualifications will be assessed via the accreditation of experiential learning [AEL] on the basis of a short essay, statement and a portfolio. Places will be offered after a successful interview with a member of the programme team.

All applicants will be interviewed.

Applicants with either prior-certified learning or prior-experiential learning that closely matches the specified learning outcomes of the taught part of the programme may be able to claim exemption via agreed university procedures.  No exemption can be claimed against the research part of the programme or in situations where a professional body excludes it.

Programme structure

The MA programme can be followed over twelve months full time or twenty four months part time.

Learning environment

At this level students are expected to be highly motivated and committed to design intensive self-directed learning. The programme is divided between lectures, seminars, workshops, fieldwork and studio-based practice. There are also visits and field trips. All students will be supported by tutorials at 1:1

Presentations of work in progress in formal settings will provide opportunities for students to make measured judgements on the achievements and progression of both their own projects, and those of their peer group

The School of Architecture and the Visual Arts has its own new building on the Docklands Campus, designed by one of our staff. As well as its excellent studios there are extensive wood and metal workshops, photographic darkrooms and computer suites. At the end of the academic year the students exhibit their work at the end of year show.

Assessment

Postgraduate programmes strictly adhere to our University regulations on assessment. All coursework for assessment is double marked; practical 3d work, seminar papers and presentations, essay assignments are supervised and double marked.

The two taught programme modules are assessed through an essay/report and design portfolio and by the student’s contributions to seminar discussions and design exercises. The work culminates in the Masters Thesis, on a subject of the student’s choosing, within the wide parameters of the field. A student must pass the two taught modules with a minimum overall average mark of 50% in order to begin the Thesis.

Relevance to work/profession

The MA in Landscape Architecture : Accredited covers critical issues and fields that allow students to work in a wide range of programmes and organisations, both public and private. Students may wish to apply for professional membership of the Landscape Institute or to develop their careers in a wide range of other professional opportunities where knowledge of the environment, and the opportunities and constraints inherent in it is relevant.

Thesis/Dissertation/project work

The Thesis Project is the culmination of the students' work on the programme. The topic is the choice of the student, in consultation with his or her tutor, and normally developed through the project work in the first two modules, following group discussions on topics in the dissertation seminars.

Students will be able to

  • focus their attention on an area of particular interest to them, in order to develop a specialised design approach that can support them in their career
  • contribute to the development of new design based research and advanced study within landscape architecture
  • become familiar with the procedures and conventions of academic scholarship
  • add to the body of knowledge within the field of landscape
  • gain experience in the compilation, ordering and interpretation of research and design, and the development of clear arguments
  • develop writing and presentational skills
  • develop conceptual skills and lateral thinking
  • demonstrate hands on practical skills

Added value

This programme may lead to professional membership of the Landscape institute for suitable candidates who comply with their practical experience requirements and other steps to Chartered status. Accreditation from the Landscape Institute is currently being sought. Please ask us for up-to-date information on the programme’s current accreditation status.

This innovative programme, dealing with cutting edge topics within contemporary landscape architecture, provides a unique set of core conceptual and critical skills for design, and skills adaptable to the varied career paths that exist within landscape architecture. This programme focuses on critical topics in landscape architecture while also allowing students to pursue their own personal interests within this exciting environmental field.

The University of East London is uniquely located to provide access to the educational and environmental possibilities to foster your design ambitions.

Your future career

The integration of environmental design with architectural and urban design practice is of ever-increasing importance. Architects, landscape architects, and designers equipped with these skills are more and more in demand professionally in both the private and public sector, nationally and internationally.

How we support you

The programme offers students a personal tutor, 1:1 tutorial support as well as support of small group working

Personal Development Planning (PDP) is a University requirement to engage formally in reflective practice, through a learning log or a professional development portfolio. This includes creating and maintaining a continuously updated CV, a review of progress in modules, review of assessment outcomes and feedback, a semester based action plan and an annual submission of the PDP. This process is designed to help students reflect on their own progress.

The University provides a comprehensive range of support services to students, which includes: residential/ student finance advice/ careers advise / study skills development/ IT learning resources.

Bonus factors

Full-time students will have the opportunity to participate in any suitable research activity the staff are pursuing in the field, acquiring practical skills and contributing to 'real world' work.

The programme’s location is in London, which has one of the most vibrant design cultures in the world: the programme staff are well connected in relation to London’s design institutions and personalities. The current staff includes landscape architects who have studied and worked both in the UK, America, and the Far East, and are pursuing professionally innovative approaches to the field.

Outcomes

Programme aims and learning outcomes

What is this programme designed to achieve?

This programme is designed to give you the opportunity to:

  • develop a broad understanding of contemporary landscape issues and your own detailed interests within the broad spectrum of this field
  • develop professional skills to allow you to craft a career within the environmental professions
  • develop critical and aesthetic skills in landscape architecture

What will you learn?

Knowledge

  • of a range of tools and principles available to professionals pursuing landscape design development in a wide range of contexts.
  • of the political, social, economic, ethical and aesthetic significance of the choices made by landscape architecture professionals within this field
  • of alternative models for landscape architecture, of new theoretical approaches to this field that draw upon a clear understanding of current practice to allow you to confidently contribute to new forms of landscape practice
  • of the content, sources and feasibility of models of urban development involved in the debates about environmentally sustainable cities, and the possibilities for the open spaces between buildings that form an integral part of urban development
  • of conceptual and practical frameworks from which to develop alternative landscape and open space strategies for specific contexts

Thinking skills

The student will be able

  • to develop a confident position on issues of landscape architecture for their own practice
  • to acquire the knowledge, language and communication skills necessary to explain and communicate their position
  • to assess and discuss pertinent theoretical and design issues with confidence
  • to demonstrate enhanced specialist knowledge
  • to engage in critical analysis and synthesis of arguments through design and writing
  • to evaluate their own analytical, investigative and strategic skills
  • to reflect critically on his or her own learning

Subject-Based Practical skills

Students will be able

  • to gather, sort, analyse and effectively use research material
  • to develop landscape design strategies and to communicate and discuss options with other design professionals
  • to plan, develop and deliver bibliographically-based written research

Skills for life and work (general skills)

Students will be able

  • to develop, structure and communicate ideas with clarity through design projects and in spoken and written form
  • to manage time and work to deadlines
  • to find information and use information technology
  • to assess large amounts of interdisciplinary research cogently
  • to know when and how to get help
  • to learn through reflection on own research, practice and experience

Structure

The programme structure

Introduction

All programmes are credit-rated to help you to understand the amount and level of study that is needed.

One credit is equal to 10 hours of directed study time (this includes everything you do e.g. lecture, seminar and private study).

Credits are assigned to one of 5 levels:

  • 0 - equivalent in standard to GCE 'A' level and is intended to prepare students for year one of an undergraduate degree programme
  • 1 - equivalent in standard to the first year of a full-time undergraduate degree programme
  • 2 - equivalent in standard to the second year of a full-time undergraduate degree programme
  • 3 - equivalent in standard to the third year of a full-time undergraduate degree programme
  • M - equivalent in standard to a Masters degree

Credit rating

The overall credit-rating of this programme is 180 credits.

Typical duration

The typical duration of this programme is one year full-time or 2 years part-time. It is possible to move from full-time to part-time study and vice-versa to accommodate any external factors such as financial constraints or domestic commitments. Many of our students make use of this flexibility and this may impact on the overall duration of their study period. The teaching year begins in October and ends in September.

How the teaching year is divided

The teaching year begins in October and ends in September: there are two year-long 60 credit modules in parallel over A & B, with a third module over the Summer period for the Thesis. A full-time student will study the equivalent of 180 credits over the year. A typical part-time student will study one 30 credit component per Semester.

What you will study when

YearModule titleCreditStatus

1

ARM 173 Landscape Architecture: Tools, Principles, Theories & Practice:

Tools, Principles & Theories
Landscape Architecture:

  • nature and landscape
  • movements in contemporary landscape   architecture
  • drawing dynamic environments
  • landscape history
  • landscape in film and literature
  • professional practice
  • introduction to planting design
  • introduction to hard materials

Advanced Practice 1
Landscape Architecture:

  • major landscape design project

 

60

Core

1

ARM174 Landscape Architecture: Theories, Context and Practice

Theories and Contexts
Landscape Architecture:

  • contemporary landscape technologies
  • contemporary movements in landscape as art
  • natural processes and dynamic environments
  • ecology and advanced planting design
  • post-industrial landscapes
  • environmental legislation
  • contract law, administration, and project management

Advanced Practice 2
Landscape Architecture:

  • Design – live project options

60

Core

1

ARM 175: Thesis project

60

Core

Requirements for gaining an award

In order to gain a Postgraduate Certificate, you will need to obtain 60 credits at Level M.

In order to gain a Postgraduate Diploma, you will need to obtain 120 credits at Level M

In order to obtain a Masters, you will need to obtain 180 credits at Level M. These credits will include a 60 credit level M core module of advanced independent research.

Masters Award Classification

Where a student is eligible for an Masters award then the award classification is determined by calculating the arithmetic mean of all marks and applying the mark obtained as a percentage, with all decimals points rounded up to the nearest whole number, to the following classification

70% - 100%

Distinction

60% - 69%

Merit

50% - 59%

Pass

0% - 49%

Not Passed

Assessment

Teaching, learning and assessment

Teaching and learning

Knowledge is developed through

Lectures, seminars, studio work, fieldwork devoted to aspects of urban tools, theories, context and practice. There are essay tutorials at the end of each component. Specialist guest lectures from practitioners, workshops and crits centring on the students' own design work. Students are asked to lead seminar discussions on assigned reading, and to give talks on their own work and experiences to reinforce the links between what they learn and what they can do with it. The thesis is supported by regular presentations and tutorials in which approach and content are discussed in forum format at regular intervals. Student's contributions to seminar discussions and workshop sessions, provide an opportunity to demonstrate a grasp of complex ideas, and an ability to formulate a response to them.

Thinking skills are developed through

a constant process of critical examination by the students of the programme material and of their own thinking. An increasing understanding of the complexities of the subject matter is acquired in parallel with an increasing understanding of themselves as learners and makers. However large the scale of the particular subject of enquiry, students are always encouraged to relate it to their own experience and work, as well as assessing it in its own right. These skills are developed through the forms of active learning in the programme: workshops, presentations, one-to-one tutorials and written work.

Practical skills are developed through

Design and technical workshops, and seminar sessions on essay and thesis writing. The workshops develop students' ability to carry out p assessments of their designs, and to test design alternatives. The research and writing seminars deal with finding information, organising a piece of written work, and quantitative vs qualitative analysis Bibliographies both for the programme as a whole, and for each lecture series, are provided. A list of available libraries and reliable web sites is also issued. Thesis seminars are run throughout the second semester of the year.

Skills for life and work (general skills) are developed through

the conscientious pursuit of the programme.

Assessment

Knowledge is assessed by

an essay/portfolio per component that asks the student to use the content of the component to develop an informed and cogently defended view of a chosen problem. The work culminates in the Masters Thesis, on a subject of the student's choosing, within the wide parameters of the field. Further information about assessment criteria can be found in the handbook.

Thinking skills are assessed by

student performance in seminars, essays/portfolio and the Thesis. Each of these is a learning as well as an assessment tool.

Practical skills are assessed by

Design presentation workshop and design exercises.

Skills for life and work (general skills) are assessed by

student performance in the Studio essays and the Thesis, as well as in individual tutorials and Thesis seminars.

Quality

How we assure the quality of this programme

Before this programme started

Before the programme started, the following was checked:

  • there would be enough qualified staff to teach the programme;
  • adequate resources would be in place;
  • the overall aims and objectives were appropriate;
  • the content of the programme met national benchmark requirements;
  • the programme met any professional/statutory body requirements;
  • the proposal met other internal quality criteria covering a range of issues such as admissions policy, teaching, learning  and assessment strategy and student support mechanisms.

This is done through a process of programme approval which involves consulting academic experts including some subject specialists from other institutions.

How we monitor the quality of this programme

The quality of this programme is monitored each year through evaluating:

  • external examiner reports (considering quality and standards);
  • statistical information (considering issues such as the pass rate);
  • student feedback.

Drawing on this and other information, programme teams undertake the annual Review and Enhancement Process which is co-ordinated at School level and includes student participation. The process is monitored by the Quality and Standards Committee.

Once every six years an in-depth review of the whole field is undertaken by a panel that includes at least two external subject specialists. The panel considers documents, looks at student work, speaks to current and former students and speaks to staff before drawing its conclusions. The result is a report highlighting good practice and identifying areas where action is needed.

The role of the programme committee

This programme has a programme committee comprising all relevant teaching staff, student representatives and others who make a contribution towards the effective operation of the programme (e.g. library/technician staff). The committee has responsibilities for the quality of the programme. It provides input into the operation of the Review and Enhancement Process and proposes changes to improve quality. The programme committee plays a critical role in the quality assurance procedures.

The role of external examiners

The standard of this programme is monitored by at least one external examiner. External examiners have two primary responsibilities:

  • To ensure the standard of the programme;
  • To ensure that justice is done to individual students.

External examiners fulfil these responsibilities in a variety of ways including:

  • Approving exam papers/assignments;
  • Attending assessment boards;
  • Reviewing samples of student work and moderating marks;
  • Ensuring that regulations are followed;
  • Providing feedback through an annual report that enables us to make improvements for the future.

Listening to the views of students

The following methods for gaining student feedback are used on this programme:

  • Module evaluations and feedback questionnaires
  • Student representation on programme committees (meeting 3 times year)
  • Year group meetings (up to 4 per semester)
  • Module and Group seminars
  • Tutorials
  • Personal Project proformas

Students are notified of the action taken through:

  • circulating the minutes of the programme committee
  • providing details on the programme notice board
  • Group meetings
  • Web CT publication

Listening to the views of others

The following methods are used for gaining the views of other interested parties:

  • Questionnaires to former students
  • Industrial liaison committee
  • Placements Officer
  • Discourse with visiting practitioners
  • Feedback from exhibitions etc.

Further Information

Alternative locations for studying this programme

LocationWhich elements?Taught by UEL staffTaught by local staffMethod of Delivery

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Where you can find further information

Further information about this programme is available from:


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