Children’s Health and Development in a Global World, 7.5 credits

Children’s Health and Development in a Global World, 7.5 hp

736A37

Main field of study

Child Studies

Course level

Second cycle

Course type

Single subject and programme course

Examiner

Peter Holmqvist

Course coordinator

Peter Holmqvist

Director of studies or equivalent

Mats Andrén
ECV = Elective / Compulsory / Voluntary
Course offered for Semester Weeks Language Campus ECV
F7MCH Child Studies, master's programme 4 (Spring 2021) 202109-202113 English Linköping, Valla C

Main field of study

Child Studies

Course level

Second cycle

Advancement level

A1X

Course offered for

  • Master´s Programme in Child Studies

Entry requirements

A bachelor’s degree in the humanities, social sciences or the behavioural sciences with a major (or its equivalent) in a field relevant to the programme, e.g. anthropology, communication studies, education, history, language studies, media studies, political science, psychology, social work and sociology.

Successfully completed at least 75 credits on the master´s program in Child studies (F7MCH), 15 of which must be the master’s thesis in term two.

Documented knowledge of English equivalent to "Engelska B"/”Engelska 6”.

Intended learning outcomes

After completion of the course, the student should on an advanced level be able to:

  • account for different definitions of the concept “health”;
  • account for the basic perspectives in developmental psychology;
  • critically discuss the meaning of the key concepts in child health discourses, such as “development”, “normality”, and “deviancy”; 
  • identify and analyze the dilemmas of comparing children’s health and development in a global perspective; 
  • analyze and discuss the application of the Convention on the Rights of the Child in the development of child health politics and policies.

 

Course content

The content of the course is divided into three overarching themes:

Children’s health and development in a historical and sociological perspective

  • Theoretical perspectives in child health discourses
  • The developing child
  • Normality and deviance

Children’s health in a global perspective

  • Child health policies and interventions 
  • Moral and ethical dilemmas in the transmission of health norms between different cultural contexts

Child health and the UN Convention of the Rights of the Child (UNCRC)

  • The significance of the UNCRC in the development of national and international health politics.

 

Teaching and working methods

Lectures and related discussions take place on campus as well as online on an interactive learning platform. In addition to lectures there are seminars and group work online as well as on campus. Between the lectures and the seminars the students independently study the course literature, complete the assignments, and communicate with other students online. Examining seminars, workshops and group exercises are compulsory.

The student must have access to e-mail and Internet. The course is presented in various multi-media formats. In order to guarantee a positive learning situation online, and, in order for the student to be able to actively participate in the course and communicate with fellow students and the teacher, it is therefore important that the student have access to the correct hard- and software. Information concerning the specifications of the equipment necessary for the course can be found in the study guide.

English is the language of instruction. 

Examination

The examinations consist of active participation in seminars, workshops and group assignments on campus and online, as well as through individual written assignments submitted online. Detailed information on the examinations can be found in the study guide.

If the LiU coordinator for students with disabilities has granted a student the right to an adapted examination for a written examination in an examination hall, the student has the right to it. If the coordinator has instead recommended for the student an adapted examination or alternative form of examination, the examiner may grant this if the examiner assesses that it is possible, based on consideration of the course objectives.

Students failing an exam covering either the entire course or part of the course twice are entitled to have a new examiner appointed for the reexamination.

Students who have passed an examination may not retake it in order to improve their grades.

Grades

ECTS, EC

Other information

Planning and implementation of a course must take its starting point in the wording of the syllabus. The course evaluation included in each course must therefore take up the question how well the course agrees with the syllabus. 

The course is carried out in such a way that both men´s and women´s experience and knowledge is made visible and developed.

Department

Institutionen för Tema
Code Name Scope Grading scale
EXA2 Portfolio assignment 5.5 credits EC
EXA1 Workshop assignment 2 credits U, G

Other

Reading list with compulsory literature can be found under the tab “Additional documents”. A complete Reading list including reference literature will be available in LISAM (LiU:s e-learning platform) at the start of the course.

This tab contains public material from the course room in Lisam. The information published here is not legally binding, such material can be found under the other tabs on this page. Click on a file to download and open it.