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Welcome to the Warwick PPE Open Day. Professor Mark Harrison, March 13, 2013. To watch these slides again, go to http://warwick.ac.uk/ppe/prospective/. Introducing us. Four Professors help run PPE. Andrew Mason (Politics and International Studies) PPE Director of Studies
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Welcome to the Warwick PPE Open Day Professor Mark Harrison, March 13, 2013 To watch these slides again, go to http://warwick.ac.uk/ppe/prospective/
Introducing us • Four Professors help run PPE. • Andrew Mason (Politics and International Studies) • PPE Director of Studies • Began as a philosopher, became a political theorist. • Interested in justice, citizenship, and community. • Andrew Reeve (Politics and International Studies) • PPE senior tutor. • Began with PPE at Oxford, became a political theorist. • Interested in theories of property, exploitation and welfare. • Fabienne Peter (Philosophy). • Will give the taster lecture at 3:00 pm. • Began as an economist, became a political philosopher. • Interested in justice, political legitimacy, and democracy • Mark Harrison (Economics). • That’s me! • Began as an economist, became an economic historian. • Interested in lying, cheating, stealing, and spying. • Maureen Tod (PPE Office) • Katherine Shipton(PPE Society President). • Michael Youlton (Student Admission and Recruitment) – at 4:00 pm.
What is PPE? • Philosophy, Politics, and Economics have been taught together in Britain since the 1920s. • First university to offer this course was Oxford; today PPE is offered by many excellent universities. • From UK, France, and Germany to North America, China, Japan, and Australia. • Among them Warwick.
What is PPE? • Philosophy, Politics, and Economics can all be studied separately. • When you combine them in one programme, there are two models: bridge and pillar. The Oxford PPE follows a pillar model with three separate elements. P E P The Warwick PPE follows a bridge model that seeks to cross the gaps. P P E
What is PPE? • The module Principles of Political Economy illustrates Warwick’s bridge model • Core module of the final year. • Taught by members of staff from all three disciplines. • Integrates study of all three disciplines. • Focuses on the global political economy. • Topics have included global justice, development, globalization and international trade, global governance, and aid and humanitarian interventions.
Who takes PPE? • Across three years of study we currently have 262 undergraduates (one third female) from 30 countries. • PPE is an international experience. • Top Ten by number (after UK): India, Singapore, China, Germany, France, Malaysia, Norway, Sweden, Pakistan, Russia. • Demand for PPE is strong. • Annually we get around 900 applications. • We make around 400 offers. • We fill around 100 places. • Strong demand for places is tough for applicants. • But reflects the fact that Warwick PPE is a valuable qualification when you leave.
Where do they go? • PPE a highly respected degree. • Most posts open to any discipline, so Warwick’s reputation also counts strongly. • At our largest careers fair, 82% of employers recruited from any degree. • Warwick is ranked first for graduate recruiters • Daily Telegraph survey, January 2013 • Warwick is ranked top Russell Group university for careers advice. • International Student Barometer 2013, an independent survey of student opinion
Where do they go? • Employers included: • Babcock International; Bank of America; Bloomberg; Christian Aid; Deloitte; Full Fact (journalism); House of Commons; Liberal Democrats; McKinsey; PwC; Royal Bank of Scotland; Schroders; Solutions for Retail Brands; UBS. • Median salary 2011 (18 respondents): £26k
Where do they go? • Of those going on to further study: • Taught Master's programme: 60% • Postgraduate diploma: 20% • PG diplomas often lead to a taught Master's in a related subject. • Professional qualification: 10%. • Master’s programmes: • Either at highly ranked UK institutions (Imperial College London, London School of Economics, Oxford, University College London, Warwick). • Or overseas, e.g. Sciences-Po (Sciences Politiques de Paris). • Typically in: • Economics, development studies, finance, philosophy, history, management, international security, European or international political economy, political thought or political science, public administration, and public policy.
What does Warwick offer? • Three PPE Departments. • All strong in both research and teaching. • All run their own more specialized programmes too. • All three are large: • Well resourced administratively. • Support a specialized PPE Office. • Scope to cover all main fields of discipline. • All are close neighbours in the Social Sciences building. • We talk to each other a lot.
What does Warwick offer? • Year 1 is a qualifying year: Pass to proceed. • There are core (compulsory) modules. • Introduction to Philosophy. • Introduction to Politics. • Economics 1: micro- and macroeconomics. • Quantitative Techniques: maths and statistics. • Plus: • An optional subject.
What does Warwick offer? • Choose first-year option from a list. • Provided within the three departments: • Philosophy: Introduction to Ancient Philosophy; Ideas of Freedom. • Politics: World Politics + four new modules in 2013 (Contemporary Themes in Comparative Politics; Foundations of Political Economy; Justice, Democracy & Citizenship; Nine International Security Ideas). • Economics: World Economy: History and Theory; The Industrial Economy; Mathematics for Economists. • Others provided by other departments in Social Sciences or Arts, including a language.
What does Warwick offer? • After the first year there are several pathways. • At Foundation (year 1) level, PPE combines all three disciplines. • At Honours level (years 2 and 3), you can focus: • On all three disciplines or, at a first approximation, drop one. • More or less on quantitative methods used in economics. • Six pathways: • Tripartite (all three). • Phil/Pol. • Phil/Econ. • Pol/Econ. • Econ major/Phil. • Econ major/Pol.
What does Warwick offer? • No one drops any discipline altogether. • The final year Principles core has three units: Phil/Pol, Phil/Econ, Pol/Econ. • In Principles, everyone must do two units out of three.
What does Warwick offer? • Academic support: Lectures. • Usually two per week in each module, attended by all students taking the module • Seminars. • Small discussion groups with a tutor, usually once per week or fortnight in each module. • Regular assessment. • Essays, tests, projects, exams, final-year dissertation. • PPE student-staff liaison committee. • Private study and self-motivation are vital. • University services. • Library and library-supported Learning Grids (24/7 space for group work). • Library-supported study space in Leamington. • Excellent careers advice and skills provision.
What does Warwick offer? • Study abroad: PPE students have access to links established by all three three PPE departments. • Erasmus programme: • Adds a year of study abroad between Years 2 and 3. • Graduate after four years in “PPE with study abroad.” • Austria (Salzburg, Vienna), Belgium (UFSI, Antwerp), France (IEP Aix, Bordeaux, Grenoble, Paris; CU Lille; Sciences Po, Paris; Paris-Sorbonne; Dijon); Germany (Humboldt, Berlin; Jena; Koln; Konstanz; Munich), Italy (CU Milan; Pavia; Rome III; Venice); Netherlands (Amsterdam), Norway (Bergen), Spain (Autonoma Barcelona; PompeuFabra, Barcelona; Autonoma Madrid; Carlos III Madrid; UC Madrid). • Exchange programmes (Politics and Philosophy only). • Study abroad during Year 2, mirroring the Warwick Year 2 programme. • Graduate after three years. • Canada (Queen’s University Ontario), China (City University of Hong Kong), USA (Georgetown, Washington DC; University of California; U. of Wisconsin-Madison, U. of North Carolina-Chapel Hill).
What does Warwick offer? • Pastoral support. • See your Personal Tutor at least once a term. • PPE director of studies and senior tutor also available. • PPE Society organizes student mentors. • University services. • Senior Tutor. • Student Counsellors. • Student Union advice service.
What qualities do you need? • A capacity for self-discipline and perseverance. • Set your own goals and work towards them. • Willing to take on new subjects. • Manage discomfort of unfamiliar ways of thinking. • If you’re not confused, you’re not learning. • Versatility: • Solving an economic model for equilibrium one week. • Parsing moral dilemmas the next. • Conceptualizing democracy the week after that. • Willingness to ignore intellectual boundaries. • Ultimately all knowledge is one. • Why Warwick is a university, not a multiversity.
What qualities do you need? • Numeracy as well as literacy. • No one takes pride in illiteracy. • But there are already lots of clever people that “don’t do maths.” • Why is maths useful in PPE? • Simplification. • Abstract thinking. • Logical proof. • What data do and do not show. • The compulsory maths is generally simple and we don’t require A-level. • But you do need to be comfortable with it. • Not to see solving simple problems as drudgery. • If maths is a drag or a barrier, PPE may not be for you.
How much will it cost? • Tuition fees: New full time Home and EU students currently pay £9,000 per year. • Fees are payable for each year of your course. • Partial fees for an intercalated year or year abroad. • New International students: £18,390 per year. • Home and EU students do not have to find this money “up front.” • Eligible for a tuition fee loan for each year of your course from Student Finance England . • Repayable once you earn £21,000 or more. • Written off after 30 years. • If your studies do not lead to the income stream you hope for, the government bears the risk.
How much will it cost? • Living costs: We estimate £156 to £250 a week for 39 week academic year ≈ £6,000 to £10,000. • Exactly how much depends on you! • All Home students are eligible for loans towards living costs, available from the Government. • Repayable once you earn £21,000 or more. • Some Home students will be eligible for means-tested non-repayable grants, available from both the Government and the University. • Non-repayable Warwick bursaries are based on annual family income: • £25,000 or less → £2,500 • £25,001 to £36,000 → £1,500 • £36,001 to £42,600 → £500
How much will it cost? Summary of support for Home students’ living costs:
How much will it cost? • Further information: • From the university http://warwick.ac.uk/ugfunding • From the government http://www.direct.gov.uk/studentfinance
Questions only you can answer • Do you want to study PPE? • If so, do you want to come to Warwick? • Some things to consider: • Numeracy as well as literacy. • PPE versus more specialized courses. • Campus university versus city university. • Midlands versus other regions. • Now I’m going to pass the baton to Katherine Shipton (PPE Society).
BALL MENTORING SOCIALS TOUR FORUM AND TALKS