SD4T101 - Major Project 01 Jul 2023 - 31 Aug 2029 | Version 1

Associated Module Information

Module Code: SD4T101
Module Title: Major Project
Faculty: Faculty of Life Sciences and Education
Faculty Group: Education, Early Years and Social Work
Faculty Sub Group: Youth and Community
Module Leader: Mark Iggulden
Module Team: Kelly McCarthy, Paul Lewis
First Intended Intake: SEP 2023 Final Year of Intake:
Date Closed:
Credit Value: 60 Credit Level: 7
Language: English
Percentage of Module Taught in Welsh: 0
Equivalent Module:
HECOS codes: 100466 - youth and community work
HECOS Code Weighting: 100

Document Version Information

Version 1
Valid From 01 Jul 2023
Valid To 31 Aug 2029

Module Aims

To enable the student to develop a critical understanding of the role, value and application of research within the field of Youth and Community Work, demonstrating independent learning, critical reflection and reflexivity.

To provide the student with the appropriate skills to ethically design, implement, sustain and write up a Major Project in the field of Youth and Community Work reflective of the students’ professional interests, relevant legislation, guidance, policy and practice and their employment/placement experiences.

To enable students to produce a logical, coherent, and defensible study which is critical and analytical, which evaluates the research process and findings and draws logical and thoughtful conclusions and recommendations for practice and /or for further research.

Content Summary

Module content reflects the course and module aims seeking to produce critically reflective students who are innovative, enterprising, digitally literate, commercially aware with the leadership skills required to deliver effective Youth and Community Work within a multi-agency and inter-professional context (USW, 2030 Strategy).

Students will work independently to undertake a major project evidenced through a 10,000 word report and a viva voce spoken assessment.

The Major Project will be linked to practice/placement and directly involve children and young people, practitioners and/or communities in design and data collection. Students will be encouraged to collaborate with practitioners working within their field(s) to engage in the design of solutions for real situations, problems or priorities when planning and carrying out their research projects.

Students will engage in the USW Research ethics approval process.

Students will participate in supervision. This is detailed in the discussion on learning and teaching methods below.

Learning and teaching includes:

Supervision arrangements, expectations, process and paperwork

Self-assessment – what do and don’t you know?

What is a Major Project? Which route best suits your research ideas?

Essential information before you start (process, structure, expectations, word counts)

Appropriate writing style and conventions

Ethical considerations, particularly when working with children and young people participants

Research design: strengths and limitations

Research aims and questions

Participatory research

Ethically informed project planning

Recommendations and dissemination strategies

Research methodology and methods

Literature reviews and use of secondary data

Assessing project/community needs and research opportunities

Planning, designing, facilitating, monitoring evaluating, and reporting a research project

Data collection and analysis

AsPIRE (Sutton, 1999)

Consent, assent and the involvement of gatekeepers

Sampling participants

Reflexivity and critical reflection in a research context

Assessment of Major Project – what and how markers mark.

Recap on handbooks, guidance and self-assessment ‘check lists’

Formatting and presentation

Learning from alumni: Student perspectives on their own research

Module mapped to the National?Occupational Standards for Youth Work (CLDSC, 2019) YW03, YW04, YW05, YW06, YW10, YW13, YW20, YW22, YW23, YW24, YW25, YW26.

Module mapped to the following course learning outcomes: A1, A3, A4, B1, B2, B3, B4, C3, C4

Learning and Teaching Methods

Activity Type Hours
Lecture 30
Seminar 2
Tutorial 24
Project supervision 9
Independent Study 415
Formative Assessment - Scheduled 60
Formative Assessment - Independent 60
Total Hours Selected 600

Learning Outcomes

# Learning Outcome
LO1 Demonstrate a critical understanding of the role and application of research within the field of Youth and Community Work, evidencing independent learning, critical reflection and reflexivity.
LO2 Demonstrate that you can ethically design, implement, sustain and write up a Major Project in the field of Youth and Community Work reflective of professional interests, relevant legislation, guidance, policy and practice and their employment/placement experiences.

Module Requisites

N/A

Assessment Criteria

Assessment Category Assessment Type Description Duration Word Count Weight (%) Best of? Pass Mark
Synchronous Onsite Oral Assessment Oral Assessment (Internally assessed, Onsite) 1 Major project (assessment part 2): An oral assessment scheduled centrally, face-to-face contact required, all participants onsite. 45 N/A 50 No 40
Asynchronous Assessment Dissertation / Major Project 1 Major Project ( assessment part 1): A major piece of work reporting the results of a substantial research project (typically conducted over more than one term in the graduating year), providing a coherent argument about the topic addressed and aiming to incorporate an element of originality in the argument and /or the evidence used to sustain it. The work may be written or practical. 0 10000 50 No 40

Assessment Matrix

Assessment Type Learning Outcomes
LO1 LO2
Oral Assessment (Internally assessed, Onsite) 1
Dissertation / Major Project 1

Reading List

https://rl.talis.com/3/southwales/lists/3C1A7662-A598-667B-6AC9-A00ACBB1C7DB.html