England
Where do you live?
Understanding criminology
| Start | End |
|---|---|
| 03 Oct 2026 | Jun 2027 |
| 23 Jan 2027 | Sept 2027 |
What you will study
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What is crime? What defines 'crime', and why are some harmful behaviours labelled 'crimes' while others are not? -
Who is a victim? What is criminal justice? -
Why do certain behaviours come to be defined as ‘criminal’? -
What are the limitations of criminology for explaining things that are unjust or harmful, and what other ways are there of thinking about crime, criminal justice and the things that cause us harm?
Entry requirements
Preparatory work
Teaching and assessment
Support from your tutor
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marking your assignments and offering detailed feedback to help you improve -
providing individual guidance, whether that’s for general study skills or specific module content -
guiding you to additional learning resources -
facilitating online discussions between your fellow students in the dedicated forums.
Assessment
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4 Tutor-marked assignments (TMAs) -
1 Interactive computer-marked assignment (iCMA) -
End-of-module assessment
What's included
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a week-by-week study planner -
module materials -
audio and video content -
assignment details and submission section -
online tutorial access.
Computing requirements
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Primary device – A desktop or laptop computer with at least 8 GB of RAM and a quad-core processor (2.4 GHz minimum speed). It’s possible to access some materials on a mobile phone, tablet or Chromebook; however, they will not be suitable as your primary device. -
Peripheral device – Headphones/earphones with a built-in microphone for online tutorials. -
Operating systems – Windows 11 or the latest supported macOS. -
Internet access – Broadband or mobile connection. -
Browser – Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge are recommended; Mozilla Firefox and Safari may be suitable. -
Our OU Study app operates on supported versions of Android and iOS. -
Software – Any additional software will be provided or is generally available for free.