How will I be taught?
This course shares a common first and second year with the RPM course as both are aligned to the Rural Pathway of the RICS Assessment of Professional Competence. Students will specialise in the final year, post placement, with core modules covering business and residential tenancies, advanced valuation, global agricultural trade policies and farm business management. Optional modules will allow you to consider agricultural trade policies globally, auctioneering, sustainable forestry and forestry products, renewables and infrastructure or international rural property markets.
A typical week in year 1 consists of:
- 8hrs lectures
- 8hrs seminars, site/estate visits, farm walks and surveying practicals
Land and property field trips have included visits to:
- Attingham Park and other local estates
- Earl of Plymouth Estate, Ludlow
- Flax Mill Nr Shrewsbury (the oldest iron framed building in the world)
- Commercial properties
Assessment methods
The course is assessed on a mixture of coursework, examination.
Transfer
Students may transfer between BSc REALM and BSc RPM (and vice versa) at the end of the first two years, before commencing the placement year.
Learning in Higher Education – how is it different?
Whilst a student’s prior experience or qualifications should prepare them for Higher Education, most will find that study at university level is organised differently than they might have experienced at either school or college. Higher Education sets out to prepare students to think and learn independently, so that they are able to continue learning new things beyond their studies and into the workplace, without needing a tutor to guide them. This means that the time spent in classes with tutors provides direction, guidance and support for work that students undertake independently through:
- finding useful information sources and compiling bibliographies of reading material, in paper and online
- reading and making notes to help make fuller sense of subjects
- engaging with online materials and activities found on the College’s own virtual learning environment
- preparing assignments to practise skills and develop new insights and learning
- preparing for future classes so you can participate fully
In order to develop the skills of a graduate (whether at Foundation Degree or Honours Degree levels), students are expected to not only be able to recall and explain what they know but also to be able to:
- apply what they know to new problems or situations
- analyse information and data and make connections between topics to help make sense of a situation
- synthesise, or draw together, the information and understanding gained from a range of sources, to create new plans or ideas
- evaluate their own work and also the work of others, so that they can judge its value and relevance to a particular problem or situation
Tutors will expect students working towards a Degree to be able to use what they know to solve problems and answer meaningful questions about the way in which aspects of the world work and not just rote-learn information that they have been told or read, for later recall. This means using all the bullet-pointed skills and to think critically by questioning information, whilst also being rigorous in checking the value of the evidence used in making one’s own points. Students will be expected to become increasingly responsible for recognising the areas where they themselves need to develop. Taking careful note of tutor feedback can help to identify the skills and abilities on which attention could usefully be focused. To be successful, students need to be self-motivated to study outside of classes, especially since in higher education, these higher level skills need to be practised independently.
At 91ÇÑ×Ó Adams students are gradually supported to become less reliant on class-based learning, so that they are able to spend a greater proportion of their time in their final year working on projects of interest to themselves and in line with their future career aspirations. In the first year of a course, a student has 16 hours contact per week with staff in lectures, seminars, estate/site visits, farm walks etc. In the second years students are given some independent study weeks to enhance their independent learning skills including project work and reading around subject areas.
91ÇÑ×Ó Adams has an extensive estate and great facilities for students to use as a source of information and inspiration, we also have a well-stocked library and access to countless specialist sources of paper-based and online information. Many of the staff at 91ÇÑ×Ó Adams are involved in research work, which helps ensure the content of the courses is at the forefront of the discipline. This also means that amongst the library books and online journals that students use, there may be some familiar names.
The Bamford Library and Faccenda Centre each have spaces in which students can work, either individually or in small groups, using either their own laptop computers or the provided desktop computers, all of which can access the network. Working spaces are zoned to reflect different working conditions, so there is a study space for everybody, whether they need silence or work better in a livelier environment.