Learning materials are accessed online through recorded lectures, electronic reading and an array of additional content, providing flexibility as to when, where and at what pace you learn.
This innovative model is particularly valuable for international students who do not have English as a first language, while the distance-learning format offers a cost-effective opportunity for students unable to re-locate or who need to continue in part-time or full-time paid employment.
This distance-learning approach facilitates study in any location and time zone, enhancing your employability while enriching the course through collaboration with peers from diverse cultures and backgrounds worldwide.
Four teaching modules cover core aspects of collections care and professional preventive conservation practice (e.g. environment, material deterioration processes, display, transit, surveying collections, and disaster planning and recovery), together with global issues in heritage conservation (eg. the impact of climate
change and conflict, handling of contested objects) and the science of preventive conservation.
Your research-led learning
is supported by a wealth of recorded lectures from heritage professionals from
high profile institutions from around the world, created especially for the course.
In your second year you will carry out a professional placement module where you will have the opportunity to contextualise your studies within a heritage institution of your choosing, gaining important professional skills and experience.
Your final dissertation, submitted in the September following the end
of your second year will be supported by a dissertation and academic research skills module culminating in a written Project-Dissertation, where you will conceptualise, theorise, and undertake a piece of original research that aims to be a significant and original contribution to the heritage field.