English
BA (Hons)
Application options include:
Course Overview
If you are passionate about literature, culture, ideas and writing, our BA English offers you a varied and flexible course with teaching that builds on the rich literary and cultural history of the local area, once home to the Bloomsbury Group, including Virginia Woolf. You will study some of the most cutting-edge authors, deepen your analytical capacity, expand your knowledge and understanding, and become a skilled reader, writer and communicator. You will be taught by internationally renowned academics, researchers and writers.
Why choose this course?
- On this BA English, you will be supported to be the best thinker, reader and writer you can be. Our classrooms are inspiring, stimulating and welcoming - and we love what we do. Academics teaching BA English regularly receive teaching awards.
- We offer you an exciting and varied curriculum with opportunities to choose modules that match your interests. You will have the opportunity to discover groundbreaking texts that include medieval, Gothic, Victorian and contemporary literatures, including from North America and the Global South.
- We welcome and support an international and intergenerational community of students that want to explore the role of literature, the humanities and the arts, in addressing the most urgent issues of our times: identity, climate justice, social inequality, migration, conflict and what it means to be human.
- Our prestigious research nourishes a vibrant teaching and learning environment in which you will be taught by world-class experts who are shaping the field.
What you will learn
We focus on three main approaches to studying English: storytelling, making stories and understanding texts. This allows you to learn how stories are communicated, how they are created and how texts produce meaning in the world.
We pride ourselves on offering you a wide range of modules that expand the boundaries of literature and your understanding of the world, but also support your career aspirations. These span the medieval to contemporary periods and include creative writing, theatre, film, poetry, science fiction and more.
You will study fiction, non-fiction, autobiography, biography, literary criticism, essays, poetry and plays in interdisciplinary contexts to understand how literature shapes, and is shaped by, our contemporary cultural climate as well as traditions and legacies of the past.
How you will learn
You will be taught in lectures, small seminar groups and workshops. Lectures introduce you to broad topics and ideas, seminars allow you to discuss texts in depth, and workshops allow you to practise your skills.
You will engage in literary study in a cultural and global context while finessing your writing skills, and participate in events involving internationally acclaimed critics, writers, actors and philosophers.
This course is available to study full- or part-time. It has an evening timetable with classes taking place in the evening.
Foundation Year
If you opt for the Foundation Year route, this will fully prepare you for undergraduate study. It is ideal if you are returning to study after a gap, or if you have not previously studied the relevant subjects, or if you didn't achieve the grades you need for the place on your chosen undergraduate degree.
Discover the career opportunities available by taking English (BA (Hons)).
Key information and modules
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English BA (Hons): 3 years full-time, on campus, starting October 2025
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English BA (Hons): 4 years part-time, on campus, starting October 2025
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English with Foundation Year BA (Hons): 4 years full-time, on campus, starting October 2025
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English with Foundation Year BA (Hons): 6 years part-time, on campus, starting October 2025
Pathways for English (BA (Hons))
This course has additional Pathways to offer you the chance to specialise depending on your interests and career goals.
- English and Language (French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Spanish) (BA (Hons))
- Creative Writing and English (BA (Hons))
Find another course:
Highlights
- Birkbeck was ranked 2nd in the UK for its English Language and Literature research in the 2021 Research Excellence Framework.
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Birkbeck is located in the heart of literary London, in Bloomsbury, WC1. You could be studying in a building that was once home to Virginia Woolf and frequented by members of the Bloomsbury Group. The building houses our own creative hub which includes the Peltz Gallery, the Gordon Square Cinema and a theatre and performance space.
- Based at the heart of one of the world's most exciting cities, we combine lectures, seminars and workshops with visits to theatres and other cultural and artistic institutions, and we frequently collaborate with leading arts, cultural, theatre and dance and performing arts organisations, allowing you to ground your studies in real-world practice.
- If you opt for the three-year full-time or four-year part-time course, you can apply to take part in a competitive industry placement module, which offers you the opportunity to spend a term working in an arts-related organisation or arts-related role.
Birkbeck makes all reasonable efforts to deliver educational services, modules and programmes of study as described on our website. In the event that there are material changes to our offering (for example, due to matters beyond our control), we will update applicant and student facing information as quickly as possible and offer alternatives to applicants, offer-holders and current students.
Most of our courses are taught in the evenings, however some of our courses offer a daytime timetable. Where there is an option to attend daytime teaching sessions, this is stated in the Key Information section under Attendance.
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Entry Requirements
We welcome applicants without traditional entry qualifications as we base decisions on our own assessment of qualifications, knowledge and previous work experience. We may waive formal entry requirements based on judgement of academic potential.
3 years full-time and 4 years part-time: As part of the application process, you may be asked to complete a written task or attend an interview.
For part-time courses, standard requirements are a minimum of two A-levels or equivalent.
UCAS tariff points
- 3 years full-time: 112 points (e.g. A-levels BBC)
- 4 years full-time with Foundation Year: 48 points
The UCAS tariff score is applicable to you if you have recently studied a qualification that has a UCAS tariff equivalence. UCAS provides a tariff calculator for you to work out what your qualification is worth within the UCAS tariff.
Foundation year degrees
Our 'with Foundation Year' route is designed to give you extra support as it provides you with an additional year (full-time) or two years (part-time) of supported study. This is an ideal route if you are returning to study after a gap, or if you have not previously studied this subject, or if you did not achieve the grades you need for a place on this degree.
Once you successfully complete your Foundation Year studies, you will automatically advance onto the main degree.
Alternative entry routes
3 years full-time or 4 years part-time: We welcome applications from students on Access to Higher Education Diplomas.
3 years full-time: Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma - DMM
English language requirements
If English is not your first language or you have not previously studied in English, our usual requirement is the equivalent of an International English Language Testing System (IELTS Academic Test) score of 6.5, with not less than 6.0 in each of the sub-tests. We also accept other English language tests.
If you don’t meet the minimum English language requirements, please contact us or see our international study skills page for more details of how we can help.
Visit the International section of our website to find out more about English language entry requirements and relevant requirements by country.
Visa and funding requirements
If you are not from the UK and you do not already have residency here, you may need to apply for a visa.
The visa you apply for varies according to the length of your course:
- Courses of more than six months' duration: Student visa
- Courses of less than six months' duration: Standard Visitor visa
International students who require a Student visa should apply for our full-time courses as these qualify for Student visa sponsorship. If you are living in the UK on a Student visa, you will not be eligible to enrol as a student on Birkbeck's part-time courses (with the exception of some modules).
For full information, read our visa information for international students page.
Please also visit the international section of our website to find out more about relevant visa and funding requirements by country.
Please note students receiving US Federal Aid are only able to apply for in-person, on-campus programmes which will have no elements of online study.
Credits and accredited prior learning (APL)
If you have studied at university (or have an HND or Foundation Degree), you may have accumulated credits through the modules you studied. It may be possible to transfer these credits from your previous study to Birkbeck or another institution.
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Fees
English BA (Hons): 4 years part-time, on campus, starting in academic year 2025-26
Academic year 2025–26, starting October 2025
Part-time home students: £7,145 per year
Part-time international students: £13,545 per yearEnglish BA (Hons): 3 years full-time, on campus, starting in academic year 2025-26
Academic year 2025–26, starting October 2025
Full-time home students: £9,535 per year
Full-time international students: £18,060 per yearEnglish with Foundation Year BA (Hons): 6 years part-time, on campus, starting in academic year 2025-26
Academic year 2025–26, starting October 2025
Part-time home students, Year 1&2: £4,765 per year
Part-time international students, Year 1&2: £9,030 per year
Part-time home students, Year 3+: £7,145 per year
Part-time international students, Year 3+: £13,545 per yearEnglish with Foundation Year BA (Hons): 4 years full-time, on campus, starting in academic year 2025-26
Academic year 2025–26, starting October 2025
Full-time home students: £9,535 per year
Full-time international students: £18,060 per yearStudents are charged a tuition fee in each year of their course. Tuition fees for students continuing on their course in following years may be subject to annual inflationary increases. For more information, please see the College Fees Policy.
If you’ve studied at Birkbeck before and successfully completed an award with us, take advantage of our Lifelong Learning Guarantee to gain a discount on the tuition fee of this course.
Tuition fee and maintenance loans
Eligible full-time and part-time students from the UK don’t have to pay any tuition fees upfront, as government loans are available to cover them.
Maintenance loans are also available for eligible full-time and part-time UK students, to assist with covering living costs, such as accommodation, food, travel, books and study materials. The amount you receive is means-tested and depends on where you live and study and your household income.
Discover the financial support available to you to help with your studies at Birkbeck.
International scholarships
We provide a range of scholarships for eligible international students, including our Global Future Scholarship. Discover if you are eligible for a scholarship.
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Teaching
At Birkbeck, most of our courses are taught in the evening and all of our teaching is designed to support students who are juggling evening study with work and other commitments. We actively encourage innovative and engaging ways of teaching, to ensure our students have the best learning experience.
Teaching may include formal lectures, seminars, and practical classes and tutorials. Formal lectures are used in most degree programmes to give an overview of a particular field of study. They aim to provide the stimulus and the starting point for deeper exploration of the subject during your own personal reading. Seminars give you the chance to explore a specific aspect of your subject in depth and to discuss and exchange ideas with fellow students. They typically require preparatory study.
In addition, you will have access to pastoral support via a named Personal Tutor.
Methods of teaching on this course
Compulsory modules are taught by a mixture of lectures and seminars. Option modules are normally taught as seminars in groups of 10-25 students.
The Foundation Year route is composed mainly of interactive lectures for large groups and tutorial-style classes that support the development of knowledge, skills, confidence and self-awareness.
Teaching hours
Our evening hours are normally between 6pm and 9pm (6-7.30pm and 7.30-9pm). Some programmes also offer teaching during the day and this will be clearly signposted to you where it is available.
On our taught courses, you will have scheduled teaching and study sessions each year. Scheduled teaching sessions may include lectures, seminars, workshops or laboratory work. Depending on the modules you take, you may also have additional scheduled academic activities, such as tutorials, dissertation supervision, practical classes, visits and field trips. On our taught courses, the actual amount of time you spend in the classroom and in contact with your lecturers will depend on your course, the option modules you select and when you undertake your final-year project (if applicable).
Alongside your contact hours, you will also undertake assessment activities and independent learning outside of class. The amount of time you need to allocate to study both for taught sessions (this might include online sessions and/or in-person sessions) and personal study will depend on how much you are studying during the year and whether you are studying full time or part time.
Birkbeck’s courses are made up of modules and allocated ‘credit’. One credit is equivalent to ten hours of learning time. Modules are usually in 15, 30 or 60 credit units. A 15-credit module will mean around 150 hours of learning, including taught sessions and independent study or group work. This is spread out over the whole period of that module and includes the time you spend on any assessments, including in examinations, preparing and writing assessments or engaged in practical work as well as any study support sessions to help you in your learning.
On our distance-learning and blended-learning courses, discussion, collaboration and interaction with your lecturers and fellow students is encouraged and enabled through various learning technologies.
Timetables
Timetables are usually available from September onwards and you can access your personalised timetable via your My Birkbeck Profile online (if you have been invited to enrol).
Indicative class size
Class sizes vary, depending on your course, the module you are undertaking, and the method of teaching. For example, lectures are presented to larger groups, whereas seminars usually consist of small, interactive groups led by a tutor.
Independent learning
On our taught courses, much of your time outside of class will be spent on self-directed, independent learning, including preparing for classes and following up afterwards. This will usually include, but is not limited to, reading books and journal articles, undertaking research, working on coursework and assignments, and preparing for presentations and assessments.
Independent learning is absolutely vital to your success as a student. Everyone is different, and the study time required varies topic by topic, but, as a guide, expect to schedule up to five hours of self-study for each hour of teaching.
Study skills and additional support
Birkbeck offers study and learning support to undergraduate and postgraduate students to help them succeed. Our Learning Development Service can help you in the following areas:
- academic skills (including planning your workload, research, writing, exam preparation and writing a dissertation)
- written English (including structure, punctuation and grammar)
- numerical skills (basic mathematics and statistics).
Our Disability and Dyslexia Service can support you if you have additional learning needs resulting from a disability or from dyslexia.
Our Counselling Service can support you if you are struggling with emotional or psychological difficulties during your studies.
Our Mental Health Advisory Service can support you if you are experiencing short- or long-term mental health difficulties during your studies.
Assessment
Assessment is an integral part of your university studies and usually consists of a combination of coursework and examinations, although this will vary from course to course - on some of our courses, assessment is entirely by coursework. The methods of assessment on this course are specified below under 'Methods of assessment on this course'. You will need to allow time to complete coursework and prepare for exams.
Where a course has unseen written examinations, these may be held termly, but, on the majority of our courses, exams are usually taken in the Summer term, during May to June. Exams may be held at other times of the year as well. In most cases, exams are held during the day on a weekday - if you have daytime commitments, you will need to make arrangements for daytime attendance - but some exams are held in the evening. Exam timetables are published online.
Find out more about assessment at Birkbeck, including guidance on assessment, feedback and our assessment offences policy.
Methods of assessment on this course
Commentaries, essays, examinations and an independent final year dissertation, as well as a wide range of exercises designed to evaluate different abilities and develop essential transferable skills.
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Careers and employability
On successfully graduating from this BA English, you will have gained an array of important transferable skills, including:
- collaboration and group work skills
- cultural understanding and communication skills
- a sophisticated use of written and spoken English
- an ability to understand, critique and defend complex and important ideas
- planning and organisation skills.
Employers highly value the analytical, critical, creative and communication skills of a Birkbeck English graduate. You can find our graduates in a wide range of roles including:
- writing
- publishing
- editing
- education
- journalism
- creative industries
- public relations
- research.
The School of Creative Arts, Culture and Communication's specially designed Careers and Employability provision includes opportunities at all levels to support you in developing your career, including modules, workshops, placements and other resources directly related to employability, in particular in the creative arts and cultural industries.
We offer a comprehensive careers service - Careers and Enterprise - your career partner during your time at Birkbeck and beyond. At every stage of your career journey, we empower you to take ownership of your future, helping you to make the connection between your experience, education and future ambitions.
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How to apply
You apply via UCAS for our full-time undergraduate courses or directly to Birkbeck for our part-time undergraduate courses.
Full-time (UCAS entry)
If you are applying for a full-time undergraduate course at Birkbeck, you have to apply through the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS). To apply, go to the UCAS website and click on ‘Sign in’. You will have to register, giving UCAS a few personal details, including your name, address and date of birth, and then you can start working on your application.
The first UCAS deadline is in January, and the majority of university applications through UCAS are made by then. Find the exact deadline date on the UCAS website. We welcome applications outside of the UCAS deadlines, so you can still apply through UCAS after the January deadline, depending on the availability of places. We also take late applications via the UCAS Clearing system in August.
Part-time
If you are applying for a part-time undergraduate course (4 or 6 year), you apply directly to Birkbeck by using the Apply now button. You will need to prove your identity when you apply - read more about suitable forms of identification.
You apply directly to Birkbeck for this course, using the online application link. Please note that online application will open in September.
When to apply
You are strongly advised to apply now, to ensure there are still places on your chosen course and to give you enough time to complete the admissions process, to arrange funding and to enrol.
You don't need to complete your current programme of study before you apply - Birkbeck can offer you a place that is conditional on your results.
You will also receive information about subject-specific induction sessions over the summer.
Help and advice with your application
Get all the information you need about the application, admission and enrolment process at Birkbeck.
Our online personal statement tool will guide you through every step of writing the personal statement part of your application.
Apply for your course
Apply for your course using the apply now button in the key information section.
Pathways for English (BA (Hons))
- English and Language (French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Spanish) (BA (Hons))
- Creative Writing and English (BA (Hons))
Course structure
Course structure listing
Course structure and modules for English BA (Hons): 4 years part-time, on campus, starting October 2025
You must complete modules worth a total of 360 credits.
- Year 1: four compulsory modules
- Year 2: three compulsory modules
- Year 3: two Level 5 option modules and one Level 6 option module
- Year 3: two Level 6 option modules and a dissertation
Year 1 compulsory modules
- Doing English
- Production of the Human: Decolonising the Canon
- Storytelling: Narrative Archetypes, Forms and Techniques
- Writing London
Year 2 compulsory modules
- Medieval and Renaissance Literatures
- Reading for Writing, Writing for Reading
- The Novel: Writing the Modern World
Indicative Level 5 option modules
- Connecting the Arts
- Ecopoetics
- European Drama and Theatre: Gods, Ideas and Adaptations
- Flight Paths: Migration, Diaspora and Identity
- Literature, Empire and Race
- Narratives of the Body
- Poetry and Power: Text, Voice, Song
- Telling the self
- Tragedy
- Transcultural Encounters: Literature, Empire, Ethnicity
Indicative Level 6 option modules
- America Rewired: US Literature and Culture since the 1960s
- American Centuries: Literatures of Slavery and Freedom
- Critically Queer
- Fin-De-Siecle
- Finding a Leg to Stand On: Clinical, Critical and Creative Approaches to the Human Body
- Imagining the Other: Death, Bereavement and Loss
- Medieval and Renaissance Body, Mind, and Soul
- Modernism and its Others
- Reading 21st Century Fictions
- Romanticism: Reason, Revolution, Imagination
- Science Fiction
- Shakespeare
- The Cultural Production of Space
- The Global Eighteenth Century
- The Victorians and their World
BA English dissertation
Course structure and modules for English BA (Hons): 3 years full-time, on campus, starting October 2025
You must complete modules worth a total of 360 credits.
- Year 1: five compulsory modules
- Year 2: two compulsory modules and two Level 5 option modules
- Year 3: four Level 6 option modules and a dissertation
Year 1 compulsory modules
- Doing English
- Production of the Human: Decolonising the Canon
- Reading for Writing, Writing for Reading
- Storytelling: Narrative Archetypes, Forms and Techniques
- Writing London
Year 2 compulsory modules
Indicative Level 5 option modules
- Connecting the Arts
- Ecopoetics
- European Drama and Theatre: Gods, Ideas and Adaptations
- Flight Paths: Migration, Diaspora and Identity
- Literature, Empire and Race
- Narratives of the Body
- Poetry and Power: Text, Voice, Song
- Telling the self
- Tragedy
- Transcultural Encounters: Literature, Empire, Ethnicity
Indicative Level 6 option modules
- America Rewired: US Literature and Culture since the 1960s
- American Centuries: Literatures of Slavery and Freedom
- Critically Queer
- Fin-De-Siecle
- Finding a Leg to Stand On: Clinical, Critical and Creative Approaches to the Human Body
- Imagining the Other: Death, Bereavement and Loss
- Medieval and Renaissance Body, Mind, and Soul
- Modernism and its Others
- Reading 21st Century Fictions
- Romanticism: Reason, Revolution, Imagination
- Science Fiction
- Shakespeare
- The Cultural Production of Space
- The Global Eighteenth Century
- The Victorians and their World
BA English dissertation
Course structure and modules for English with Foundation Year BA (Hons): 6 years part-time, on campus, starting October 2025
Our part-time Foundation Year degrees allow you to spread out your Foundation Year studies over two years. As the 'Foundation Year' is made up of 120 credits, as a part-time student you can take 60 credits in each of your first and second years before starting the main four-year BA English. This means that you can take six years to complete the part-time degree with Foundation Year.
In Foundation Year 1 you take two core modules and in Foundation Year 2 you take one core module and choose one option module.
If you successfully complete these modules, you will automatically advance on to our four-year, part-time, evening study BA English.
Foundation Year 1 core modules
Foundation Year 2 core module
Foundation Year 2 option modules
- French 1
- French 2
- French 3 (Level 4)
- French 4 (Level 4)
- German 1
- German 2
- German 3 (Level 4)
- German 4 (Level 4)
- Italian 1
- Italian 2
- Italian 3 (Level 4)
- Italian 4 (Level 4)
- Japanese 1
- Japanese 2
- Japanese 3 (Level 4)
- Japanese 4 (Level 4)
- Spanish 1
- Spanish 2
- Spanish 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 4 (Level 4)
- The Arts: Questioning the Contemporary World
Course structure and modules for English with Foundation Year BA (Hons): 4 years full-time, on campus, starting October 2025
For the Foundation Year, you undertake three core modules and choose one option module: either The Arts: Questioning the Contemporary World or a language module.
If you successfully complete these modules, you will automatically advance on to our three-year, full-time, evening study BA English.
Foundation Year core modules
Foundation Year option modules
- French 1
- French 2
- French 3 (Level 4)
- French 4 (Level 4)
- German 1
- German 2
- German 3 (Level 4)
- German 4 (Level 4)
- Italian 1
- Italian 2
- Italian 3 (Level 4)
- Italian 4 (Level 4)
- Japanese 1
- Japanese 2
- Japanese 3 (Level 4)
- Japanese 4 (Level 4)
- Spanish 1
- Spanish 2
- Spanish 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 4 (Level 4)
- The Arts: Questioning the Contemporary World