Friday 12 October 2012

The Open University

One of my current time sinks and the reason I haven't been the world's most prolific blogger is that I have been doing an MA in Social Sciences via the Open University. The OU, as it's known, is a rather wonderful institution which was set up to enable those who missed out on higher education first time round a chance to study at home. It was immortalised in the film Educating Rita and one of its famous alumni is the British comedian Lenny Henry. In the early years, it used a mix of printed materials and middle of the night TV  broadcasts. The latter have largely been replaced by DVDs and online resources but their TV and radio presence remains in the many excellent programmes they co-produce for BBC TV and radio.

 Having had a fairly directionless experience of higher education (three and a half years of study, mostly in Scandinavian Studies, at three different universities and an FE College), I enrolled as an OU student in 2002 and started my first course in early 2003. Five years on, I graduated with BSc in Social Sciences with Social Policy with first class honours. It was a turbulent five years - my older son was born and then died that first year and the small Scottish boy came along in my third year.  Here we are at my graduation in 2008.   He'd just recovered from chicken pox and we both needed haircuts.

I'd caught the OU bug and 18 months later I signed up for the MA in Social Sciences.  It's been a bit tougher than the BSc  The work is more challenging, of course and life through some more curve-balls at me (in a case of history does repeat, my mother died, four months into the first course), but here I am, something approximating two-thirds of the way through.  Perhaps a bit more.  I've passed three courses and have the exam for the fourth on Monday.

My last course is a double credit one, so it will complete the MA.  It's Understanding Children's Development and Learning - officially part of the MA in Education and a bit of a new topic but the materials I have so far look very interesting and hopefully it will be useful to me at work.  My current course has been a bit of a hectic one - three assessments due within 8 weeks over the summer holidays, so the slightly slower pace of an 11 month long course (6 assessments including the final one - no exam) is a bit of a relief.

One of the things that I like about the OU is that there are intermediate qualifications along the way.  I've already gathered up a Post Graduate Certificate and if I pass the exam on Monday I'll have the Post Graduate Diploma in Social Sciences.  I can't quite figure out if the last course will give me a PG Cert in Education (as well as counting towards the MA) but if I do one more course, I will definitely qualify for a PG Diploma in Education.

But I won't be doing that.  No, I won't.  This is it.  No more studying.  I'll be glad to get my life back.

Although, some undergrad modules, just for fun, might appeal.  Maybe some French.  Or history.

Be warned.  The OU is addictive.

Now, I'd better get on with studying and stop procrastinating!

6 comments:

  1. My parents did OU courses when we were kids. We loved all the equipment and experiments. Dad had a laser for one of his courses. And they went on Summer School, which we thought was like grown up Scout & Guide camp, but without the tents.

    I keep wondering about doing something, but whenever I look, I can't see anything I fancy. I want it to be interesting, rather than work related.

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  2. Bravo to you, M. You show determination and focus even through the hard times.

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  3. Do Spanish. French won't help when you come to visit me!

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  4. I did some distance education in Canada while I was living in the USA. I didn't continue though as it wasn't structured enough to keep me focused on handing in my assignments ontime. Even with 6months for a 4month course I didn't complete it. I'm very proud of your accomplishments it really does take a lot of stick-to-it-ness.

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  5. Hi Megan,

    Would you mind dropping me a quick email when you have a spare moment?

    kieron.hughes@open.ac.uk

    Many thanks,
    Kieron
    The Open University

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  6. Hi Megan!

    Just wondering if you received my previous message please?

    If you could send me a quick email when you have a moment, that would be great
    kieron.hughes@open.ac.uk

    Thanks, and have a great weekend!
    Kieron

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