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Education (Research Design and Methodology) (Taught)

Course details
  • 2 Study options
  • Postgraduate
Course location
University of Oxford

Course summary

The information provided on this page was correct at the time of publication (November 2025). For complete and up-to-date information about this course, please visit the relevant University of Oxford course page via www.graduate.ox.ac.uk/ucas.

The MSc Education (Research Design and Methodology) introduces you to the range of tools and concepts in educational research and aims to provide you with the knowledge and skills to undertake your own research and to evaluate the research of others.

This course covers a range of quantitative and qualitative methods of data collection and data analysis, and introduces you to the challenges of carrying out social research in the field of education.

Course structure
Students will normally complete six taught modules consisting of five core modules and one optional module.

Each module meets once a week. The teaching methods include lectures, small group work, student presentations, seminars, workshops, one-to-one dissertation supervision, and individual research projects. Some modules run on a seminar model with one longer meeting per week. Others run on a model that includes a lecture of about one hour followed by a smaller-group workshop of about an hour and a half, usually later the same day.

You will participate in classes on research design, quantitative and qualitative data collection and analysis techniques used to yield research findings, and philosophical and ethical considerations in research. Supervision sessions will support you in identifying and honing research questions towards dissertation research, selecting areas for literature review, carrying out fieldwork, and reviewing drafts of the dissertation.

Supported ICT sessions on literature access skills (including electronic searches) will be provided by the department's library staff.

Research in the department is organised around three major themes:

  • Language, Cognition and Development

  • Policy, Economy and Society

  • Pedagogy, Learning and Knowledge.

Within each of these themes there are several research groups and centres. All staff and doctoral students belong to one or more of these research groups, each of which has its own seminar programme to which graduate students often contribute.

In addition, the department as a whole sponsors regular seminars and public lectures which attract distinguished national and international speakers. Masters students are encouraged to attend these research group events.

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Fees and funding

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