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What is the workload like for psychology at Oxford?

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Reply 20

Original post
by EntityR
@thrivingfrog told me you were awesome at Psychology

I'm sorry, you're probably mixing me up with someone else

Reply 21

Original post
by eeeli
I did Psychology at Oxford - I just graduated and they have since changed the course from a 3 year BA to a 4 year integrated masters so it will probably be a little different to my experience for you! From what I can tell from the website it looks like the content is now more spread out than it was in the old 3 year course so I would assume it might be slightly less intense.
The week-to-week workload is fairly hefty but not as bad as a lot of other Oxford subjects. For Prelims (first year) I had a 1000ish word Psychology essay and a Statistics problem sheet that took about an hour or two every week, and some weeks I also had a Neurophysiology essay although these were usually short. I had three tutorials per week and a variable number of lectures - usually a couple of Psychology, one Stats and a few Neurophys lectures. The weekly workload sounds like a lot but I could get it done with about 3 days of work - the hard part was revising for the exams since they started literally 3 days after we finished the content, but from the looks of the new course structure that might not be a problem anymore. People at my college who were less comfortable with the more hardcore biology involved in Neurophys also had an extra tutorial each week but I didn't go to those, I don't think there was any extra work for them though. Neurophys can be a lot of work to understand if you don't have a background in Biology and to some extent Chemistry but people almost never fail it so everyone gets there in the end.
In second year, I studied 2 modules per term, and had 6 tutorials per term for each (so usually 2 tutorials a week with not as much at the start/end of term). Each also set 3 essays around 1500 words (as this was the limit for the exam essays) so it was roughly an essay a week, but when there was no tutorial essay you were obviously expected to do the reading to be able to come to the tutorial ready to discuss, and usually do some kind of presentation on a topic or a paper. There were 6 Psychology lectures per week (3 for each module) and one stats lecture, an hour each. There was also a 3hr lab once a week, though usually they didn't take up the entire 3 hours timetabled unless you stuck around after the practical part finished to work on the assignment. Labs were associated with official assignments (as opposed to weekly essays which were just for tutorials and didn't count to your degree) - usually around 2000 word report, two per term. The number of lectures meant there was a MASSIVE amount of content to revise and the way one of the exams works means to do really well you need to have quite specific memory for literally all of it so revising for the Part 1 exams covering the second year content was a bit horrible and I worked for the whole vacation before the exams. But if you keep up with making revision material as you go it's not so bad! Exams were a mix of a multiple choice Psychology paper, a statistics paper and one exam essay per Psychology module.
In third year I did 3 advanced options and a research project, from the looks of the new course you would only do 2 plus the project, or just 3 AOs, so probably less work than my experience. My RP was very complicated and required a lot of lab time where I spent half my week for one term sat there supervising participants and unable to divide my attention and get anything else done. Not every RP is like that and a lot of people get data collection done in vacations so the RP workload varies and I think mine was probably a rather intense outlier! The advanced options have one lecture a week and 6 tutorials, and officially 6 essays per term but some of my tutors set fewer than that. There is a lot more reading though, the lecture is just a jumping off point and to fully understand things for essays and tutorials you have to do a lot more independent reading than other modules. The essays were around 1500-1800 words (again, this was the rough target for exam essays). There were also lab options which were 4 weekly 3 hour sessions per option and you had to take 4 - each was associated with a roughly 3000 word submission. I took one AO per term and one lab at a time so I had no overlap but some people took 2 AOs in one term or 2 labs at the same time so the workload can vary wildly - some people had a term where they were writing 2 essays a week followed by a term where they had nothing to do. I don't know if they would standardise this in the new course. All the third year modules were based on your choice of what you wanted to do and when the lecturer was available to teach it rather than everyone going to everything like in first and second year. When revising for exams I spent about 8 weeks revising 5-7 hours a day and having at least one day a week off, this was after my teaching ended and my RP was finished. The exam was 3 essays for each advanced option.
I cant say anything re the 4th year because I didn't have one!
In terms of how much I personally worked - I usually worked 5-8 hours a day on weekdays including teaching hours depending on how much I had to do and my other commitments. I usually had weekends off unless it was a very busy time or I had weekday commitments that meant I had to make up lost days at the weekend. It was intense because it is a lot of reading and essay writing to get done but I always found it manageable. Having exams each year meant they were more manageable rather than having everything at the end like a lot of other Oxford degrees do.
Apologies as this got a bit long, and obviously take with a pinch of salt regarding the specifics of timetables and exams since the course structure has changed somewhat, but I think the modules and content remain mostly the same from what I can tell and I don't think the workload will be wildly different. You will be busier than people at most other unis, but on the flip side terms are much shorter (8 weeks as opposed to 10-12 at other unis) and psychology never had too much vacation work unless there were exams coming up, so you get a good break in between each term.

Hi! I’m like a year late to the conversation, but I hope you can answer my question. So I’m going to start psychology this year, and the only prep work I was advised to do by my college was this short course on Python basics and some libraries for statistics. I’m wondering what books I could read in advance to also be prepared for other aspects, like the neurophys material you mentioned, but I also don’t want to read a book that I’m going to cover throughout the course anyway.

Also, how “prepared” am I supposed to be to not freak out too much when the course starts? haha

Thanks in advance!!

Reply 22

Original post
by marinad_s
Hi! I’m like a year late to the conversation, but I hope you can answer my question. So I’m going to start psychology this year, and the only prep work I was advised to do by my college was this short course on Python basics and some libraries for statistics. I’m wondering what books I could read in advance to also be prepared for other aspects, like the neurophys material you mentioned, but I also don’t want to read a book that I’m going to cover throughout the course anyway.
Also, how “prepared” am I supposed to be to not freak out too much when the course starts? haha
Thanks in advance!!

hey! all of this is with the caveat that i graduated 2 years ago so i don't know how similar the course is now to when i was in first year but i dont think there's like a load of prep reading you need to do. i didn't do any extra aside from what was set by my college and it was fine (and I had never studied psychology at school).

recapping/going over a level biology stuff like cell biology and neurobiology will probs help you get a running start at any neurophysiology content but you don't Need to do that as the tutors are well aware that many people start the course having not done any biology since GCSEs. the course will cover everything you need to know. if there's something you're interested in specifically then by all means start reading about it now but I wouldn't give yourself too much work to do over the next month. have a break and relax if you can, your first term will be busy and intense and new (and very fun hopefully!) so don't overwork yourself before you've even begun.

to be honest I don't think there is a way to prepare yourself that will completely avoid any freak out when the course starts - studying at university level is a totally new way of working, you'll be expected to study a lot more independently, think critically and read scientific articles rather than only learning from textbooks. i think what is important to remember is that you will get the hang of it eventually. your first (and second, third etc.) tutorial essay will probably suck you'll probably find some aspects of the content horrible and challenging and that is normal and fine. just don't let it stop you. ask for help - thats what your tutor is there for - and try and connect with the other psych students at your college. ppl in the same year as you are in the same boat so you can help eachother understand things (studying together really helps!!!) and people in the years above you have already done it so they'll have advice for you too. the best preparation is having an open mind and a willingness to learn and be challenged rather than reading a particular book!

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