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Here are some frequently asked questions
about life as an Oxford law student.
For
more detailed and more authoritative answers to all of your questions please
consult the Faculty's undergraduate handbook
(pdf). Some of the answers below are simplified.
For
undergraduate admissions FAQs look here ...
What are the dates for
the beginning and end of the academic year?
An Oxford
academic year is made up of three eight-week 'full terms', generally
beginning early October (Michaelmas Term), mid-January (Hilary Term),
and late April (Trinity Term). Undergraduates must be in residence
during full term. Your college may require you to appear a few days
before the start of full term. Those on our Law with Law Studies
in Europe programme will follow the term dates of their host University
during their year abroad.
Check
the precise term dates for the next few years ...
How
will I be taught?
At the heart of the Oxford undergraduate
law programme is the 'tutorial system'. A tutorial is a meeting
between a single law tutor and (usually) two or three students.
In most of your examinable courses you will have seven or eight
tutorials, which will be paced either weekly (over one term) or
fortnightly (over two terms). Sometimes your tutorials may be supplemented
by preparatory classes, depending on the learning methods favoured
by your tutor. However adequate preparation for tutorials is mainly
your job, and will always require a great deal of independent study.
You will have a reading list to guide you. You will also be able
to take advantage of a wide range of lectures on various aspects
of your courses. You will choose which of these to attend, based
on your current study priorities and interests, tgether with the
recommendations of your tutor. Attendance at lectures is not compulsory.
But attendance at tutorials is compulsory. It is absolutely NOT
acceptable for you to miss tutorials since these have been specially
arranged for you. Those on our Law with Law Studies in Europe programme
will be subject to the teaching methods of their host University
during their year abroad.
Look
at the current Law Faculty lecture list ...
What part does
my college play in the programme, and what part does the Faculty
play?
Your college is responsible - through its law tutors
- for laying on your tutorials and for keeping an eye on your general
academic progress. It also has various administrative, disciplinary,
domestic, and pastoral functions. It is also very likely to be the
place where you live. The Faculty lays on lectures and organises
the degree examinations. Most college law tutors are also lecturers
in the Law Faculty, and vice versa.
How
does the college system work?
More
on the federal organisation of the university ...
Will I be set any written work
apart from degree examinations?
Yes - a great deal,
more than at most universities. This is because of the tutorial
system. Your tutors will usually expect you to write an essay for
each tutorial. On average you will have three tutorials every two
weeks - so that's an essay and a half a week. These essays do not
play a part in your degree result but they do matter to your learning
curve. Your tutors will also set you compulsory practice examinations,
usually at the start of each new term, based on the tutorial work
you did the term before. It follows that you must set aside a good
proportion of every vacation for further study and revision of tutorial
work. Those on our Law with Law Studies in Europe programme will
write essays and sit examinations according to the systems in use
at their host University during their year abroad.
Does everyone
use the same reading list?
Not exactly. The Faculty policy
is that every course has an agreed reading list which sets out the
core material for the course. But your tutor will normally develop
this list in his or her own way to turn it into a coherent and illuminating
basis for tutorials, and then for exam preparation. The Faculty
intranet will give you access to the agreed list should you want
to look at it. Your tutors will give you the more customised reading
lists that you will use from day to day.
Where will I
do my work?
Oxford law requires a great deal of library
work, reading primary sources such as cases and statutes. Your college
will have a law library (or a law section in its general library)
which will usually cover your everyday needs. For a more extensive
collection you will use the Bodleian Law Library, one of the world's
finest, located in the same buidling as the Faculty administration
and the lecture theatres. A growing amount of material is available
online and much of this may be accessed across the University network,
possibly even in your own college room. Your college room will be
set up as a study-bedroom and you may well write essays or do background
reading there. But note that the Bodleian Law Library is not a lending
library and most college law libraries do not allow primary materials
such as law reports to be taken out and used in your room. So you
will inevitably spend much of your working week in the library.
More
on libraries and work facilities ...
How are
the courses assessed?
Your tutor is assessing you
all the time through essays, tutorial discussions, and practice
exams, and may draw attention to your performance in these areas
when writing references for you (e.g. when you apply for jobs or
for postgraduate study). But these tutorial assessments do not count
towards your official degree result. All that counts towards your
official degree result is your performance in the public examinations
organised by the Faculty and regulated centrally by the University.
You sit two sets of public examinations during your programme. The
first set ('Law Mods') is sat at the end of your second term (i.e.
two thirds of the way through your first year). You must pass these
in order to proceed. The second set of examinations ('Schools' or
'Finals') is taken at the end of your final year and cover all the
tutorial courses that you took in the intervening period (i.e. more
than two years' worth of work). Your degree classification is determined
entirely by your performance in Schools. All of the public examinations
- in Mods and Schools - take the form of traditional unseen written
examination papers , lasting two or three hours and requiring you
to answer three or four questions. You are not allowed to take your
notes or books into the examination with you, although you may be
given some reference material to rely upon in some examinations.
On our undergraduate programmes there are no dissertations or similar
types of officially assessed coursework. However those on our Law
with Law Studies in Europe programme will be subject to the assessment
systems of their host University during their year abroad, which
may be radically different. You must pass your year abroad to earn
the Law with Law Studies in Europe degree, but we do not otherwise
count your marks from abroad in the classification of your degree.
Your host university abroad will give you and your college a separate
record of how you performed.
What
degree classifications are used?
There are firsts, upper
seconds, lower seconds, thirds, pass degrees and fails. Everything
above a pass degree counts as an 'honours' degree (technically it
counts as a degree of 'Bachelor of Arts in the Final Honour School
of Jurisprudence').
Will I be
able to do paid work alongside my studies?
Our BAs in
law are intensive full-time programmes. They are designed to occupy
you for about 45 hours per week during term time. And those are
45 efficient hours, with good concentration. All your extra-curricular
life combined will have to fit around this. With that in mind your
college will have rules governing the amount of paid employment
you may take during term time, and more generally about academic
discipline and progress. To thrive as an Oxford law student you
will also have to set aside substantial time during vacations for
further reading, consolidation, and revision. Your college tutors
will monitor this by setting practice examinations at the start
of each term, covering the previous term's work. So even during
vacation the amount of paid work you can do will be limited by the
demands of your studies.
Is
there student representation in Faculty decision-making?
Yes,
there is representation on the Faculty's Undergraduate Studies Committee
and on the Faculty Board. There is also an undergraduate student
representative on the Committee for Library Provision in Law. These
Faculty representatives are chosen by a Joint Consultative Committee
made up of undergraduate representatives from all the colleges.
There is a senior Faculty officer - the Director of Undergraduate
Studies - with whom issues can also be raised. There is also a
Student Administration Office within the Faculty with an officer
dedicated to undergraduate studies.
The
Law Joint Consultative Committee (LJCC)
More
on committees and officers ...
Where can I find the
answer to my other questions?
Try the Faculty's undergraduate
handbook. Or ask the law tutors, or the Senior Tutor, at your college
(or at a college you are thinking of applying to).
Our
undergraduate handbook (pdf) ... College
contact information ... OUSU
Alternative prospectus
Admissions
question? Undergraduate admissions FAQs are here...
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