Metadata
Title
Guide to Masters study
Category
graduate
UUID
77e5a0f5585e4eb895edf14113ed6f59
Source URL
https://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/masters/guide-to-masters-study
Parent URL
https://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/masters
Crawl Time
2026-03-20T04:23:52+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Guide to Masters study

Source: https://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/masters/guide-to-masters-study Parent: https://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/masters

Find out how you'll learn and be assessed as part of your Masters degree, as well as how to get extra support with your study or English language skills.

Masters Open Day

Come along to our Masters virtual Open Day on Saturday 29 November from 10.30am to 2.30pm.  Attend live subject sessions, meet our teaching staff and find out what postgraduate life is really like from current students.

Register for a place

What is a Masters degree?

Masters degrees are taught postgraduate courses, for example:

You'll study the subject of your first degree at an advanced level, or expand your study by taking a different subject.

Masters degree duration

A Masters is usually one year if you study full time, or two years if you study part time.

Some Masters are only available for full- or part-time study.

Help with English language and academic skills

If you don’t have the qualifications for a Masters, you may be interested in our English language and academic preparation courses:

Pre-sessional English for academic purposes course

This course is for you if you:

Pre-sessional English for academic purposes is based in the on-campus Department of Language Studies.

It runs full time (21 hours per week), with entry in September, January, April, June and July.

When you start depends on your English level and the English language entry requirement for your Masters.

As long as you pass the course, you will:

Pre-Masters Programmes

Pre-Masters Programmes are preparation courses for international students, provided by the University of Sussex International Study Centre. These courses are for you if you:\

The Pre-Masters Programmes are based on the Sussex campus and taught by Study Group, specialists in university preparation for international students. Students can choose from either the Pre-Masters Programme in Business, Media and Social Sciences, or the Pre-Masters Programme in Science and Engineering.

You can start in September, January and May, depending on your English language level. If you need to improve your English to meet your Masters entry requirements, you can study an English for Pre-Masters course, starting in September and June.

Upon successful completion, you can receive an unconditional offer for a place on one of our Masters degrees at Sussex.

Masters degree structure

Our academic year starts in September, and includes the autumn, spring and summer terms.

You study modules in each term. A module may include a mix of lecture, seminars or lab sessions, and you’ll have a timetable with the modules for each week of your course.

Some modules are core, which means all students on the course study them. Others are options, which means you can choose the topics that interest you most.

You'll spend around 50% to 70% of your time on your modules, and the rest of your time on your supervised dissertation or project.

If you are an international student, our English Language for Academic Study service can provide support throughout your studies.

Credits

To successfully complete a Masters course, for example, you’ll need 180 credits.

Each module carries a multiple of 15 credits (15, 30, 45, 60 or 90), which you get when you successfully pass your assessments.

Teaching methods

Our teaching methods include:

Find out more about how you’ll learn on your Masters course

Assessment methods

You’re assessed using methods including:

Find out more about assessment on your Masters course


Postgraduate visits

in-person and online events

visit us


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