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Undergraduate Course

Drama: Education and Community BA (Hons)

Use your passion for performance to transform the lives of people in our communities.

Community really matters to us. On this course you will have a unique opportunity to engage in applied drama and theatre through placements and collaboration with our partners across the city and the region. Through this you will develop your understanding of theatre, while also exploring how it can be applied across community and educational settings to make a real difference to people's lives.

94% Music and Theatre students responded with a 94% positivity score for how good teaching staff are at explaining things. (National Student Survey 2023)

91% Music and Theatre students responded with a 91% positivity score for how much they had the chance to explore ideas and concepts in depth. (National Student Survey 2023)

York campus

  • UCAS code – W4T6
  • Duration – 3 years full time, 6 years part time
  • Start date – September 2024, September 2025
  • School – School of the Arts

Minimum entry requirements

    104 UCAS Tariff points

    3 GCSEs at grade C/4 (or equivalent) including English Language.

Tuition fees

    UK 2024 entry £9,250 per year full time

    International 2024 entry £11,500 per year full time

Discover Acting, Dance and Theatre

Dr Sarah O'Brien, Associate Head of Performance, introduces us to Acting, Dance and Theatre at York St John University.

Course overview

On this practical and creative course you will discover how drama and performance can help marginalised groups in our community. You will work on placements in local community settings, facilitating others to engage with drama and create their own works. Working alongside specialists, including drama teachers and youth theatre practitioners, you will learn how to plan, develop and deliver your theatre practice in community set.

You will benefit from our long-standing relationships with organisations across York and the wider region. We work with diverse groups of all ages in settings such as schools, prisons and care homes.

Some of the partnerships we have across the region include:

  • York Theatre Royal Youth Theatre – you will have the opportunity to work on weekly youth theatre workshops and performances.
  • Connaught Course Care Home – our students regularly visit care homes that provide support to older people with dementia and make reminiscence theatre for the residents.
  • Changing Lives – this charity provides accommodation and support to homeless men and women in York. Your work here might include working with these groups and offering drama workshops.
  • Mind the Gap – this is one of Europe’s leading disability theatre company specialising in working alongside artists with learning disabilities. You could work alongside these artists to deliver exciting theatre performances.

Through collaborating in settings such as these, you will learn how to design and facilitate workshops and performances suited to people with a wide range of needs and abilities. You will become an expert in how drama can be made accessible and impactful for all.

York St John University Partnerships

You will also have opportunities to work with us on our nationally acclaimed projects, unique to York St John University. These include:

The York St John University Prison Partnership Project

Work with students and staff from the University to collaborate with female prisoners. The intention of the project is for it to be part of a transformative and educational learning experience that emphasises creative collaboration and addresses issues of social concern.

Prison Partnership Project

Converge

Converge is a partnership between the University and mental health service providers in the York region. Work with us to provide arts educational opportunities on campus to mental health service users.

Converge

Moving Minds

This project explores dance and creative movement sessions for those affected by dementia.

Moving Minds

On the Out

On this project you will facilitate a series of workshops with groups of women who have experience of the criminal justice system.

Course structure

Year 1

Our academic year is split into 2 semesters. How many modules you study each semester will depend on whether you are a full time or part time student. 

In your first year, if you are a full time student, you will study: 

  • 3 compulsory modules in semester 1
  • 2 compulsory modules and 1 optional module in semester 2

If you are a part time student, the modules above will be split over 2 years.

You can find out which modules are available in each semester on the Course Specifications.

Optional modules will run if they receive enough interest. It is not guaranteed that all modules will run every year.

Modules

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

On this module you will take part in practical exercises to develop your understanding of acting techniques and training. You will draw on the methods outlined by practitioners such as Stanislavski and Chekhov, as well as contemporary techniques used by companies including the Wooster Group and Forced Entertainment. You will consider the contested role of the actor and acting training in the 21st century.

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

On this module you will work with your classmates to create original ideas and bring them to life. You will work from a dramatic text to inspire your ideas as a collaborative group, sharing ideas and working together. This module will give you a whole new perspective on performance.

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

On this module you will contemplate what performance means to you. You will also consider how various interpretations of performance are rooted in our history and culture, and how they have influenced society. You will study key movements, ideas and practices in 20th and 21st century performance, theatre and dance. Topics will include:

  • Space and place in performance
  • The body, including movement, gesture and voice
  • Ritual and play

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

On this module you will work together with your classmates on a devised performance, using a political 'text' as inspiration. This could be a photograph, painting, written document, or even a costume. You will develop a range of creative, compositional and performance strategies to help you understand the complex political times we live in.

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

Learn the valuable skill of planning, leading and evaluating workshops. On this module you will have the opportunity to participate, observe and lead dance and drama workshops on campus with other students on your course. Topics you cover will include:

  • Principles of effective facilitation
  • Structuring a workshop
  • Ethical and political issues related to facilitation

This work will not only prepare you for years 2 and 3, but for a career as a professional dance or theatre practitioner.

Credits: 20

Optional module

On this module you will explore how movement is an essential part of performance, considering movement as an expression of emotion and energy. By participating in regular workshops you will practise dance technique, somatic practices, and movement invention methods. You will learn about the intelligence of the body and develop an understanding of how movement is used to communicate in dance and theatre making.

Credits: 20

Optional module

On this module you will investigate the relationship between writing and performance. You will study theatrical language for both the page and performance space, as you develop the skills you need to become a successful practitioner. You will explore the works of the anti-naturalist movement from the Dada and Surrealist periods, and experience a range of modernist and postmodernist movements. You will learn how language can be a great tool to imagine and embody your own ideas.

Credits: 20

Optional module

On this module you will address the social responsibilities of artists and theatre makers. You will engage in both academic research and practical workshops to explore the theory and practice of using theatre for social change. You will also study influential theatre practitioners who have explicitly focused their work on social change, including Joan Littlewood, Brecht and Augusto Boal. Through a series of Theatre Laboratory workshops, micro lectures and peer to peer performance lectures, you will investigate the societal responsibly of the theatre practitioner, and the powerful social impact these practices can have.

Year 2

In your second year, if you are a full time student, you will study:

  • 4 compulsory modules across semesters 1 and 2
  • 2 optional modules across semesters 1 and 2

If you are a part time student, the modules above will be split over 2 years.

You can find out which modules are available in each semester on the Course Specifications.

Optional modules will run if they receive enough interest. It is not guaranteed that all modules will run every year.

Modules

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

This is the first of 2 modules that will introduce you to different politically engaged performance practices from the 20th and 21st centuries. Lectures will chart key events in modernist and postmodern performance.

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

Take what you have learnt in Politically Engaged Practice 1 and deepen your understanding of performance as a political act. On this module you will explore the relationship between arts practice and political activism, considering your own art as a form of political activism and exploring the potential effects of art as politics.

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

On this module you will develop and facilitate workshop and performance activities for children and young people. You will then deliver these activities in both formal and informal youth settings, and gain valuable experience for your future. Through this you will explore drama in education techniques and develop the creative skills needed for workshop design and project planning.

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

On this module you will explore a range of practices and theories relating to social performance. You will work on a community project engaging with people in the criminal justice system, older people, those with dementia, or people who use mental health services. The topics we will cover include:

  • Dramatherapy
  • Arts and health
  • Community dance
  • Facilitation skills

Credits: 20

Optional module

On this module you will explore how, as an actor, you can also direct your own short film production for the screen. You will have the opportunity to act in a film while also engaging with your own artistic vision for the production. Taught workshop practices will guide you through the practical and technical aspects of acting for camera and making short film sequences. You will also work on interpreting screenplays and learn to grasp the language of a writer’s material. On this module you will become both the performer and the visionary.

Credits: 20

Optional module

Through a series of workshops you will examine key practitioners in the practice of witnessing. You will develop an understanding of the societal responsibility of the artist when representing lived and non-lived experiences. You will also continue to develop your understanding of collaboration and its relationship with cultural and social practices.

Credits: 20

Optional module

On this module you will learn about key autobiographical performers, and develop a practical understanding of autobiographical performance. You will learn to create autobiographical work that not only tells stories about yourself, but uses the details of your life to explore universal issue.

Credits: 20

Optional module

On this module we will introduce you to physical theatre; a genre used by many contemporary performance companies. You will start by examining the history of the genre and go on to explore a range of techniques used by physical theatre practitioners. Dance and drama students work together on this module, so you can share knowledge and broaden your skills.

Credits: 20

Optional module

This module gives you the skills and understanding needed to create performances that use theatre to address political and social issues. As part of this you will explore existing play texts and performance practices that have stimulated political or social change. You will investigate key practitioners to develop your understanding of social responsibility and the impact you can have as a theatre maker.

Credits: 20

Optional module

There is currently a demand on dance professionals to use a range of styles and techniques to re-imagine and re-create dances in new contexts. On this module you will deconstruct and experiment with the style of a chosen influential choreographer such as Jerome Bell, William Forsythe or Pina Bausch. Through dance classes and workshops you will develop a range of technical and performance skills as well as the ability to critically evaluate dance repertoire.

Credits: 20

Optional module

On this module you will learn about the growing trend of taking dance and theatre out of traditional spaces and into unusual sites and public spaces. You will explore what happens when the moving body engages with site, place and environment through a combination of personal practice and critical investigation.

Credits: 20

Optional module

On this module you will explore how the works of Samuel Beckett have influenced theatre writers and key practitioners of contemporary theatre. Your workshops will be experimental and will encourage you to interpret the material as a method of finding your own strategies of creative writing. After engaging the works of Beckett and other 20th and 21st Century playwrights, you will write your own creative material, as well as considering ways to stage and perform this material.

Credits: 20

Optional module

The re-emergence of the vignette, a short or one act play, has encouraged new formats for performance in independent theatres across the UK. This module provides you with the opportunity to specialise in a training method called The View Points. This is a contemporary method for actor training which encourages you to work spontaneously and intuitively. You will participate in weekly workshops in which you will explore contrasting forms and styles of performing vignettes.

Year 3

In your third year, if you are a full time student, you will study:

  • 2 compulsory modules across semester 1 and 2
  • 1 compulsory module in semester 1
  • 1 compulsory module in semester 2

If you are a part time student, the modules above will be split over 2 years.

You can find out which modules are available in each semester on the Course Specifications.

Modules

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

This is your chance to conduct independent critical research on an area that interests you. You can choose an element of your performance practice to focus on and explore it through analysis, theory and reflection. A dissertation tutor will be assigned to you and they will support you through this module, meeting with you regularly to discuss your progress.

Credits: 20

Compulsory module

On this module you will have the opportunity to work as a theatre or dance company with your peers. You will work together to develop collaborative skills and expand your ability to create original performance work. The project you undertake within your company can be decided by yourselves, and can be negotiated with your module tutors.

Credits: 40

Compulsory module

Continuing from your previous modules, you will further develop the work you created with your ensemble. You will continue to work with the same group and the content of this module will support your creative collaboration. In addition to your performance, we will also assess you on producing promotional materials appropriate for a professional theatre company.

Credits: 40

Compulsory module

This module is an opportunity to demonstrate autonomy as an actor, and as an actor and as analytical thinker. The module focuses on your own personal creation and/or interpretation, situating your work within professional contexts of its creative production. Through this you will:

  • Showcase your individual style and approach to making new work
  • Develop an understanding of how your work can respond to an engage with contemporary society and culture
  • Build your self-confidence in reflecting upon work, pitching and presenting work

Teaching and assessment

Teaching and learning

The focus of our teaching is you, as a maker, performer and facilitator. We will help you develop your skills so that you can make a real change in the world. You will learn through:

  • Workshops
  • Seminars
  • Lectures
  • Field trips
  • Technical demonstrations
  • Peer-to-peer collaborative learning
  • Visiting guest artists

Our teaching draws on both our research and professional experience. This means your learning is informed by the most current thinking in the subject area. You can find out more about our research and backgrounds by visiting our staff pages

Assessment

We are committed to authentic and relevant assessment methods, meaning your assessments reflects the kinds of work you may carry out in your future professional career. You will be assessed through:

  • Group and solo live performances
  • Workshops
  • Reflective documents
  • Reports, articles and essays
  • Performance lectures
  • Placements

Throughout this course there are plenty of opportunities to gain professional experience through work placements. There are optional modules in which you will be able to attend work placements with guest artists and our community partners.

Professional Skills

Building your CV and gaining valuable experience and technique is central to the course. There will be frequent opportunities for you to assist with your tutor's professional practice or research. You will also have the opportunity to publish your own written work in our publication, Theatre Pages, which is distributed across the UK. We encourage festival and competition entries, and have professional technicians who can support you with this. You will showcase all of your skills in your final projects, which will be presented in the professional standard theatre in our new Creative Centre.

Career outcomes

Your future with a degree in Drama: Education and Community

Through this degree you will develop a unique portfolio of skills based on your individual aspirations. Your tutors will help to build your contacts and practice within your chosen area of education and community practice.

This degree could be the first step toward your career as a:

  • Drama teacher
  • Theatre director
  • Children and young persons practitioner
  • Community arts worker
  • Community theatre practitioner
  • Dramatherapist

Discover more career options on Prospects careers advice pages.

PGCE at York St John University

Further your education and work towards a rewarding career in teaching by studying for a Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) after you graduate. For over 180 years, we have worked with enthusiastic individuals who want to shape the future of young people across both primary and secondary school settings. You'll spend a lot of time in schools, developing your practice by teaching. You will graduate with Qualified Teacher Status and become part of the well respected alumni of York St John educators.

Discover more about PGCE

 

Whatever your ambitions, we can help you get there.

Our careers service, LaunchPad, provides career support tailored to your ambitions. Through this service you can access:

  • Employer events
  • LinkedIn, CV and cover letter sessions
  • Workshops on application writing and interview skills
  • Work experience and volunteering opportunities
  • Personalised career advice

This support does not end when you graduate. You can access our expert career advice for the rest of your life. We will help you gain experience and confidence to succeed.

Entry requirements

Qualifications

Minimum entry requirements

    104 UCAS Tariff points

    3 GCSEs at grade C/4 (or equivalent) including English Language.

Calculate your UCAS Tariff points

International students

If you are an international student you will need to show that your qualifications match our entry requirements.

Information about international qualifications and entry requirements can be found on our International pages.

If English is not your first language you will need to show that you have English Language competence at IELTS level 6.0 (with no skill below 5.5) or equivalent.

International entry requirements

Mature Learners Entry Scheme

If you have been out of education for 3 years or more and have a grade C GCSE in English Language or equivalent, you are eligible for our entry scheme for mature learners. It's a scheme that recognises non-traditional entry qualifications and experience for entry onto this course. Information on how to apply can be found on our dedicated page.

Mature entry offer scheme

Terms and conditions

Our terms and conditions, policies and procedures contain important information about studying at York St John University. You can read them on our Admissions page.

Fees and funding

To study for an undergraduate degree with us, you will need to pay tuition fees for your course. How much you pay depends on whether you live inside the UK, or internationally (outside the UK). Tuition fees may be subject to inflation in future years.

UK 2024 entry

The tuition fee for 2024 entry onto this course is:

  • £9,250 per year for full time study
  • £6,935 per year for the first 4 years if you study part time

These prices apply to all UK, Jersey, Guernsey and Isle of Man students

You can find out more about funding your degree by visiting our funding opportunities page:

Funding Opportunities

Placement year funding

If you choose to take a placement year, and your course offers it, you can apply for the Tuition Fee and Maintenance Loan for your placement year. How much you are awarded is based on the type of placement being undertaken and whether it is a paid or unpaid placement. The tuition fee for your placement year will be reduced.

Tuition fees

    UK 2024 entry £9,250 per year full time

    International 2024 entry £11,500 per year full time

International 2024 entry

The tuition fee for 2024 entry to this course is £11,500 per year for full time study.

This price applies to all students living outside the UK.

Due to immigration laws, if you are an international student on a Student Visa, you must study full time. For more information about visa requirements and short-term study visas, please visit the International Visa and Immigration pages.

Find out more about funding your degree:

International fees and funding

Additional costs and financial support

There may also be some additional costs to take into account throughout your studies, including the cost of accommodation.

Course-related costs

While studying for your degree, there may be additional costs related to your course. This may include purchasing personal equipment and stationery, books and optional field trips.

Study Abroad

For more information on tuition fee reductions and additional costs for studying abroad, please visit our study abroad pages.

Accommodation and living costs

For detailed information on accommodation and living costs, visit our Accommodation pages.

Financial help and support

Our Funding Advice team are here to help you with your finances throughout your degree. They offer a personal service that can help you with funding your studies and budgeting for living expenses. 

For advice on everything from applying for scholarships to finding additional financial support email fundingadvice@yorksj.ac.uk.

Course highlights

Acting, Dance and Theatre projects

Co-Create Festival

Co-Create festival is a project between our staff, students and local school children culminating in a 1 day festival.

Takeover Festival

Hear from those involved in our annual Takeover project with York Theatre Royal, where our students get to run a festival at this prestigious venue.

Dance for Wellbeing

Staff and students talk about our Dance for Wellbeing project, and how it benefits both our local community and students.

Moving Minds

Hear from our staff and students who work on our Moving Minds project, where our students use dance and movement to help people with dementia.

More to explore

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Join us in 2024

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What makes us different

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