ࡱ> 9 0Nvbjbj 7hhsm*, , OOOccc8tc/:+++%& &X/Z/Z/Z/Z/Z/Z/$2;5b~/O&%"%&&~/++/P*P*P*&^8+O+X/P*&X/P*P*:.,7/+2I|r&/ D//0// 5(5/5O/,&&P*&&&&&~/~/n)&&&/&&&&5&&&&&&&&&, :  1Programme TitleUrban and Regional Planning with Advanced Study in Practice2Programme CodeTRPT1163JACS CodeK4004Level of StudyPostgraduate5aFinal QualificationMaster of Science (MSc)5bQAA FHEQ LevelMasters6Intermediate QualificationsPostgraduate Certificate (PGCert), Postgraduate Diploma (PGDip)7Teaching Institution (if not 91̽)Not applicable8FacultySocial Sciences9DepartmentUrban Studies and Planning10Other Departments involved in teaching the programmeNone11Mode of AttendanceFull-time12Duration of the Programme2 years13Accrediting Professional or Statutory BodyRoyal Town Planning Institute14Date of production/revisionMarch 2016, March 2019, February 2020, March 2021, January 2022, December 202215. Background to the programme and subject area The MSc in Urban and Regional Planning with Advanced Study in Practice will provide students with a professionally focused education in planning. The programme reflects a new approach to planning education, reflecting the changing demand for different skills and knowledge of practising planners and the increasing need for creative and adaptable practitioners. The programme provides a distinctive opportunity for students to develop and apply their academic understanding of planning through a supported placement in practice year. The programme provides the opportunity to view planning in its broad context and to engage with the increasingly globalised nature of spatial planning as a professional activity responding to key societal challenges. Reflecting this, the programme aims to develop knowledge and skills which can be used in the diverse settings in which planners work. As such, the programme does not solely focus its attention on the physical production of the built environment or provide training in how this might be accomplished, although this is an element of the programme. Instead, it views planning as an activity deeply embedded in diverse political, economic, social, cultural and physical contexts. It is oriented to the broad focus of spatial planning, with its concerns for understanding the diverse social, political, economic, cultural and environmental impacts of the mediation of land-use change. A key focus of the programme is the development of knowledge of the political, economic, social and environmental consequences of managing spatial change. In developing this knowledge, this programme aims to engender a critical understanding of the diverse processes which make places and the different spaces in which this is done. The MSc will therefore provide students with a broad range of skills and sets of knowledge which will allow them to become creative, adaptable, critical professionals, who will be able to work in diverse contexts and make balanced, informed planning decisions. The Department of Urban Studies and Planning is well placed to provide a programme of this nature. 91̽ has been at the forefront of planning education, particularly at postgraduate level since the 1960s. The Department of Town and Regional Planning was established in 1965 and an MA programme started in 1967. The Department rapidly established a reputation for excellence in both teaching and research, and was rated one of the UKs top planning schools in the Research Assessment Exercises in 2008 and Research Excellence Framework in 2014 and 2021. The Royal Town Planning Institute has accredited Masters level provision offered by the Department since 1980, and the Department has therefore built-up strong links with the Institute. The Department has also operated student placements since the 1980s and is in a good position to build on its expertise in this field. Distinctive features of the Masters in Urban and Regional Planning with Advanced Study in Practice include: One-year, supported placement activity in agencies working in the broad fields of planning, regeneration or public administration. Structured progression of learning from initial understanding of core knowledge and skills, through their application (including in the placement year) and onto specialist study. Integration of learning between modules to develop understanding of linkages between fields of knowledge and how they might be drawn together in practice. Education oriented towards a broad understanding of planning practice as the mediation not only of physical change in the built environment, but also mediating and operating in diverse social, political, economic and cultural contexts. Continuous assessment as the only form of assessment during the taught elements of the programme, thus allowing students progress to be structured and monitored closely. A variety of teaching techniques, with seminars, workshops, project-work and site visits an essential part of the teaching and learning strategy. Understanding of actual planning problems and how they might be solved through the use of real-life cases, work with planners and most particularly the year-long practice placement.16. Programme aims The overall aims of the MSc in Urban and Regional Planning with Advanced Study in Practice reflect the Departments overall teaching and learning aims: To use teaching informed by research to provide a stimulating culture of learning, enthusiasm for the subject and opportunities for students to develop research skills. To educate able and well-motivated students from a wide range of backgrounds. To support students in developing intellectual curiosity, critical thinking and independent judgement. To prepare students for professional planning practice by offering a course which meets accreditation requirements and which provides teaching and learning informed by professional experience. To maximise student employability by progressively developing competencies in a wide range of transferable and professional skills. To instil an appreciation of the diversity of cultures and values in society and develop a commitment to self-improvement and the development of life skills. To emphasise informed applicant choice and equal opportunities in the admission process. To provide a supportive environment for students and to involve them in quality assurance. More specifically, the MSc in Urban and Regional Planning with Advanced Study in Practice has the following additional aims. Develop students professional skills and knowledge through a one-year placement in practice. Develop students critical understanding of the nature of planning and its practice, including its administrative, institutional and legal framework. Develop students critical skills in understanding the different contexts and environments relevant to the practice of planning, including the political and economic environments in which planners work. Provide students with research skills, the ability to analyse and synthesise knowledge and an understanding of the role of research in planning practice. Develop professional and policy making skills needed to analyse complex planning problems, recommend appropriate courses of action, take decisions and communicate effectively to diverse audiences. Develop through specialised studies, a deeper knowledge of a selected aspect or aspects of planning. 17. Programme learning outcomes Knowledge and understanding - Students achieving the award of either PG Dip or Masters will have developed:K1Critical understanding of the theoretical and conceptual justifications for planning intervention, the role and ethical obligations of the professional within this field and an awareness of the interdisciplinary dimensions to this work.K2Knowledge of the economic, social, historic and environmental factors which shape places and an ability to identify the links between these factors.K3Detailed understanding of the political basis for planning and the surrounding administrative, institutional and legal framework.K4Understanding of plans and policies, the techniques, methodologies and forms of research which inform policy and plan making.K5Critical understanding of the concept of sustainability and how it might shape responses to planning problems.K6Substantive knowledge of specialised areas of planning.In addition, students achieving the award of Masters will have developed:K6aDetailed research-based knowledge of specialised areas of planning.Students achieving the award of PG Cert in Town and Regional Planning will have developed well-grounded knowledge and understanding defined by that combination of K1 K6 above matching the open selection of modules to the value of 60 credits to which they relate. Skills and other attributes - Students achieving the award of either PG Dip or Masters will have developed:S1Ability to make links between theoretical positions and planning problems and to learn how theory may inform planning practice.S2Ability to analyse and evaluate the economic, social, historic and environmental factors which shape places and influence planning responses.S3Ability to identify the impact of planning decisions at different scales.S4Ability to formulate policy responses to defined problems in a creative manner through the use of different sources of information and the employment of different techniques.S5Ability to communicate policy and planning decisions through the development of oral, written and graphic skills.S6Professional skills in teamwork, including team leadership as well as the ability of the student to gain knowledge for themselves, critically assess this knowledge and relate this knowledge to practical action.S7Skills in a specialist area of planning and relate specialist knowledge to the wider contexts in which knowledge and skills sit.In addition, students achieving the award of Masters will have developed:S8Ability to identify a research problem or problems, design research, carry it out and reflect on the effectiveness of research.Students achieving the award of PG Cert in Town and Regional Planning will have developed to a high degree the skills and attributes defined by that combination of S1 S7 above matching the open selection of modules to the value of 60 credits to which they relate.18. Teaching, learning and assessment Development of the learning outcomes is promoted through the following teaching and learning methods: The development of learning outcomes is structured through a variety of methods, which are designed to be complementary. Lectures will be largely used for imparting essential knowledge (K1 to K5). They are an important means of efficiently ensuring that students from a wide range of backgrounds develop core knowledge of planning and its contexts. However, no module is solely taught through lectures. Seminars are an important means of developing students critical understanding of core issues in planning, developing theoretical knowledge and exploring relationships between seemingly discrete bodies of knowledge. They are particularly important in developing learning outcomes K1, K2, K5, K6, S1 and S5. Seminar groups contain small numbers of students providing an effective environment for students to get involved in discussing core issues, themes and linkages in planning. Project work and group work forms an important part of the programme. Project work is used throughout the first two semesters as an important means for students to develop their core knowledge and skills and apply it to particular situations. This form of working is particularly important in planning education, as many of the skills of analysis, team-working, decision-making and communication used in planning practice are developed through project work. Project work in the first semester will be used to develop students understanding of economic, social, historic and environmental factors which shape places and potential planning responses in these places. As such this project work will be important in developing learning outcomes K2, S2, S3 and S6. Project work in the second semester will include a focus on the application of core knowledge and skills, particularly through work on plan-making. This work will develop knowledge gained in the first semester (K1 to K5) and enhance skills to apply this knowledge to particular situations (often where complete information is not available). The learning outcomes S2, S3 and S4 are most importantly developed through this project work. Project work undertaken with the aid of outside professionals will develop awareness of the role of professionals within planning practice and their relationship with other professions (K1). Workshops are particularly used to develop skills and apply knowledge to practical examples as well as research and analysis skills (S4), particularly using quantitative methodologies and associated techniques. They are also used to develop skills in making decisions and recommendations as well as communication and analytical techniques and are used in conjunction with project-work to develop skills necessary for the completion of projects. Independent study is seen as an essential part of our postgraduate teaching, especially in developing skills which are essential in professional life. Staff will give guidance on project work and dissertation study, will meet with students in tutorials and will be available for more informal consultation. One of the key learning outcomes for the whole programme is development of not only team-working, but also independent working (S6) and this becomes increasingly important through the programme, culminating in the dissertation. A year of planning practice engagement activities in agencies working in the fields of planning, regeneration or public administration will provide a key means of students developing their professional skills (S6) and knowledge (K1). It will allow students to understand how knowledge is applied in practical situations. The placement will also provide a means by which students will gain a critical understanding of how theoretical knowledge is applied in practical situations (K1, S1). Site visits in connection with some modules are essential in developing students understanding of how knowledge might be applied in given situations. Opportunities to demonstrate achievement of the learning outcomes are provided through the following assessment methods: The programme uses a wide variety of continuous assessment methods, organised as a structured mechanism by which skills and knowledge are developed by students. The programme has been designed so that assessments required by different modules fit within the overall structure and progression of the programme. Whilst assessments are used to develop all key areas of understanding and skills, there is an expectation that students will also develop and demonstrate some skills and understanding outside formal assessment mechanisms, for example, skills in time management and self-motivation as well as self-development. The year-long placement will allow students to demonstrate and apply a wide-range of skills and knowledge acquired during the first two semesters. Whilst not formally assessed, the placement will also help develop specialist understandings of practice which may be drawn upon in student dissertations. Essays are used particularly where there is a need to evaluate the students basic comprehension of planning mechanisms, systems and their contexts (K1-K3, K5). Essays also help to develop the students ability to communicate clearly through fluent writing and the construction of well-developed arguments (S5). Essays and papers are also used by some modules in the demonstration of students specialist knowledge and skills. Reports are used to test students skills in applying their knowledge to particular situations and contexts. They are particularly important in assessing skills in analysis (S2, S3), formulation of responses and making decisions (S4) and the ability to communicate findings and recommendations in a clear manner (S5). They also provide a means of checking students ability to work as teams as well as independently (S6). Two types of report will be used in this programme. Firstly, group reports will demonstrate the work carried out by groups. Secondly, individual reports will assess work carried out by individuals, as well as allowing individuals to draw on group work. Graphic presentation will be used as a means of assessment to test the ability of students to communicate the results of analysis, research and make recommendations in a graphical form (S5). This is an important skill for planners to acquire. It will particularly be developed through the Urban Design: Principles and Processes module in the spring semester. Presentation of numerical data and analysis will be used to evaluate the students knowledge and skills in different techniques of analysis (S4, S5). Much of this work will require the application of computer skills which have been developed throughout the programme. For Masters students, the dissertation is the culmination of the programme. Whilst it allows the expression of core and particularly specialist knowledge and skills to be demonstrated, it is not intended as a summative assessment for the whole programme. Instead the dissertation is intended to demonstrate particular understandings and skills. In particular, the dissertation is seen as a key expression of specialist knowledge and skills (K6a, S7) and the ability to identify research problems and formulate and carry out a programme of research (S8). It does however also allow other forms of knowledge (K1-K5) and skills (S1 to S4) to be demonstrated, including such skills as the ability to formulate policy responses to defined problems (S4). Study in Practice An integral part of this course is a series of engagements and interactions with policy makers and planning professionals from July in the first year until March in the second year. There is also a possibility of work placement subject to availability and suitability to the ASP students professional background. These periods of study in practice will be with agencies working in the fields of planning, regeneration and/or public administration. This experience is intended to develop a students understanding of how knowledge and skills are applied in UK/European planning, regeneration or public administration practice. It is also intended to allow you to implement the skills and knowledge developed during the first two semesters and to reflect on this process. Personal Development Portfolios may be used to help develop students self-learning and evaluation skills and aid in identifying their needs for Continuing Professional Development. Whilst the Portfolios will not be assessed, they will be used as a means of structuring regular personal tutorials with the Programme Director. Finally, the Final Placement Report and Reflective Diary will provide a key means for students to reflect on the development and application of their skills and knowledge in practice. They will allow students to identify key areas in which they have strengthened their knowledge and skills and provide an opportunity to situate the placement within their wider professional development.19. Reference points The learning outcomes have been developed to reflect the following points of reference: Learning outcomes have been derived from a combination of factors both external and internal to the Department. Externally there is the need for highly skilled practitioners in the field of planning who have both generic and profession-specific skills. The types of skills and forms and levels of understanding relevant to the current context of planning have been the subject of much discussion within the profession (especially the Royal Town Planning Institute (RTPI)). The Department has been actively involved in these discussions. This has included the RTPIs A New Vision for Planning statement (2001) which emphasises the view of planning as spatial, sustainable, integrative, inclusive, action-oriented and value-driven. This reshaped vision of planning has profound consequences for the education of planners, and has led to a re-assessment of the forms and types of training and education provided to planners. Key elements of this re-assessment include the Report of the RTPIs Education Commission (in which the department was actively involved), the RTPI Policy Statement on Initial Planning Education (2004) and documents arising from the RTPI Education Review (2008), including the Policy Statement on Initial Planning Education (2012). These documents emphasise the need for planners to be adept at critical thinking, have the ability to understand spatial relationships and places and have an orientation to action and intervention. These needs have informed this programme to a significant extent. The RTPI Policy Statement on Initial Planning Education (2012) has also translated these needs into a set of learning outcomes for generic spatial planning education and specialist planning education. These learning outcomes have also been useful in developing this programme, which provides both generic spatial and specialist planning education. Many of these new skills and knowledge required by planners to respond to current challenges in cities and rural areas are also reflected in the QAA Subject Benchmark Statement for Town and Country Planning (2015). In particular, the defining principles set out in the Benchmark Statement reflect the understanding of planning on which this programme was developed. Internally, the Department has a strong orientation to teaching informed by research and a commitment to providing students with the critical knowledge and skills required to be highly regarded professionals with the ability to work in a variety of contexts. The Department has a number of principles upon which its approach to education is founded, and which have helped influence the learning outcomes detailed above: Collegiality: All staff are expected to be research active and research permeates all teaching. Social scientific approach, which nevertheless also has links to the design professions. Knowledge and understanding are viewed as transitory and therefore intellectual curiosity, critical thinking and independent judgement are viewed as especially important. Theoretical and analytical rigour are emphasised. Planning is seen as concerned with fitting action to circumstances, not routinely fitting rules to standard situations. Theory is viewed as critical to the practice and development of planning. The learning outcomes for this programme reflect these principles in their emphasis on critical understanding, the development of theoretical knowledge and practical action.20. Programme structure and regulations The programme is structured to provide core knowledge and understanding in the first semester, moving towards the application and start of specialised study in the second semester. This is achieved through a combination of compulsory modules, option module and individual study. This is then followed by a year of placement activities with agencies working in the fields of planning, regeneration or public administration. The culmination of the programme is the completion of a research-led dissertation. All modules in the first semester develop core knowledge and skills, with the one element of choice being between Planning, Politics and the State or Urban Development in the Global South. In the spring semester further core knowledge and skills in plan-making, design and real estate are developed alongside a focus on applying learning from the Autumn semester through project work. Students also choose one option module from a list. The option module forms part of a structured progression from core knowledge, through the placement to the culmination of specialised study in the dissertation. The dissertation is a compulsory and major element of the programme and accounts for 60 credits. Students successfully completing 60 credits are eligible for the award of the PG Cert in Urban and Regional Planning whilst those successfully completing 120 credits are eligible for the award of the PG Dip in urban and Regional Planning. Students successfully completing 180 credits are eligible for the award of the MSc in Urban and Regional Planning with Advanced Study in Practice. For those students who fail to satisfy the requirement of a Final Placement Report, but pass all other 180 credits may be considered for the award of MSc in Urban and Regional Planning.Detailed information about the structure of programmes, regulations concerning assessment and progression and descriptions of individual modules are published in the University Calendar available on-line at  HYPERLINK "http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/calendar/" \h http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/calendar/.21. Student development over the course of study The programme is structured so that understanding of core knowledge and skills (learning outcomes K1 to K5, S1, S2, S6) provides the underlying rationale for studies in the first semester. This is supplemented by a focus on applying core knowledge and skills (K4, S1 to S6) in the second semester. Specialising study (K6, K6a, S5 to S8) is achieved through option modules in year one. The application of core skills and knowledge and development of professional skills is further developed through the year-long placement. Finally, specialist skills and knowledge and research skills are achieved through the dissertation process. The learning outcomes are therefore developed through a structured progression, which guides students with a limited substantive knowledge of the field of planning at the start of the programme towards a substantive and coherent body of knowledge, understandings and skills in planning practice. Whilst specific learning outcomes have been associated with this three-stage process, it is important to note that we view the development of knowledge and skills as continuous rather than separated into discrete stages. Therefore, students are expected to continue developing their core knowledge throughout the programme, and are also expected to develop skills from the start of the programme.  22. Criteria for admission to the programme Detailed information on criteria for admission to the programme is set out in the Departmental Website ( HYPERLINK "http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/usp" \h http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/usp)23. Additional information Students will be expected to undertake a year of supervised placement activities Students will be expected to undertake a year of supervised placement activities in their second academic year. Placements will take place in agencies working in planning, regeneration or public administration. The placement activities themselves will not be assessed. The Department will work to ensure that suitable placements are found for students. Students will be allocated a tutor to support them through the placement period and will meet with them at least every three months during the placement. An unassessed Reflective Diary will be used as a focus for these meetings. The costs of travel and subsistence required to attend the placement are expected to be met by the student. The Department has long experience in arranging student placements both for undergraduate and postgraduate students.This specification represents a concise statement about the main features of the programme and should be considered alongside other sources of information provided by the teaching department(s) and the University. In addition to programme specific information, further information about studying at 91̽ can be accessed via our Student Services web site at  HYPERLINK "http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/ssid" \h http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/ssid.     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