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Image from Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice
Image from Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice
Image from Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice
Image from Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice
Image from Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice

Bachelor of Arts (with Honours) - BA (Hons)

Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice

Entry requirements

Here's what you will need to get a place on the Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice course at Goldsmiths, University of London.

Select a qualification to see required grades

A level

C,C,C

Course summary

What this course is about

UCAS code: L6P3

Here's what Goldsmiths, University of London says about its Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice course.

In an increasingly media-based world, this programme will equip you with the digital media production skills required to create contemporary anthropologically and socially informed work.

  • Anthropology is the study of humans, culture and society. On this programme, you will be developing your theoretical knowledge of anthropology, while honing your digital media production skills to produce creatively challenging work and alternatives to contemporary media representations

  • You will explore creative approaches to digital media, including approaches from contemporary art practice, photojournalism, and many other kinds of media production – as well as more traditional documentary approaches

  • You will receive hands-on training in the use of industry-standard editing software such as Adobe Premiere and Audition. Goldsmiths is an official Adobe Creative Campus, meaning you will also be able to access and download the Adobe Creative Cloud suite for free on your own devices

  • You will be actively encouraged to draw from your own experiences to produce audiovisual work that addresses issues that directly affect your own life, from racial injustices to climate change

  • You will explore ideas of multimodality (the combination of different audiovisual media, such as photography, film, audio recording and others, alongside text to engage with social process) and how this has shifted the discipline of anthropology as a whole

  • On completion of the programme, you will have produced a coherent portfolio of visual and digital creative work, which demonstrates cross-disciplinary skills to potential employers, or for further postgraduate study

Source: Goldsmiths, University of London

Course details

Qualification

Bachelor of Arts (with Honours) - BA (Hons)

Department

Anthropology

Location

Main Site | London

Duration

3 Years

Study mode

Full-time

Subjects

• Anthropology

Start date

21 September 2026

Application deadline

14 January 2026

The modules you will study

Year 1 In your first year, you will study the following compulsory modules: Introduction to Digital Research Practices Approaches to Contemporary Anthropology Anthropological Methods Ethnographic Film Academic Skills for Anthropology Anthropological Ideas Today

Year 2 In your second year, you will study the following compulsory modules: Digital and Image-based Storytelling: (Counter) Cartographies Digital Ethnographic Filmmaking Critical Ecologies: black, indigenous, queer and transnational feminist approaches Anthropology and Political Economy Thinking Anthropologically Thinking Through Race The Goldsmiths Elective

You will also choose one of the following optional modules: Anthropology and Public Policy Indigenous Cosmopolitics, Anthropology and Global Justice Anthropology of Religion The Goldsmiths Project

Year 3 In your final year, you will choose to study one of the following compulsory modules: Individual Studies with Practice or Extended Individual Studies with Practice

Option modules You will also choose 75 - 90 credits of option modules from a list of approved options available annually from the Department of Anthropology.

  • Please note that due to staff research commitments not all of these modules may be available every year.

How you will be assessed

You’ll be assessed by a variety of methods, depending on your module choices. These may include coursework, examinations, group work and projects.

All assessed work is accompanied by some form of feedback to ensure that your work is on the right track. It may come in a variety of forms ranging from written comments on a marked essay to oral and written feedback on developing projects and practice as you attend workshops.

Goldsmiths, University of London student reviews

(3.4)
Based on 35 reviews from Goldsmiths, University of London's students and alumni
5 star
17%
4 star
37%
3 star
23%
2 star
17%
1 star
7%
All reviews

Showing 30 reviews

Graduate

1 year ago

Clubs and societies were not very varied and difficult to join. Otherwise the SU was good.

(2)
Student Union

Graduate

1 year ago

On the whole the area was good and had lots of events going on to attend, however the daytime campus life was not very exciting and at night the area sometimes felt dangerous with lots of fights happening on the streets.

(2)
University life

Graduate

1 year ago

Accommodation costs were extortionate in proportion to the quality of the halls.

(1)
Finance

Graduate

1 year ago

My experience of support at university was terrible. I booked an appointment with a counselor when I was struggling with mental health and they never followed up after my appointment, didn't offer me any useful advice and wanted doctor's proof with I needed extenuating circumstances due to issues in...

(1)
Support

Graduate

1 year ago

On the whole the library and campus facilities were good, however the food was so expensive and my accommodation was not good. Even though I was given early acceptance I didn't get my first choice of halls, and the place I did live was run down and the fire alarm was set off by students every night ...

(2)
Facilities

Graduate

1 year ago

I enjoyed a lot of the course content and lectures, however I found some of the seminars were not useful. I also felt that it was not very personalised, I don't think any lecturers or seminar leaders knew me by name and rarely gave detailed feedback on my work.

(3)
Course

National Student Survey (NSS) scores at Goldsmiths, University of London

The NSS is an annual survey where final-year students are asked to rate different aspects of their course and university experience.

Here you can see ratings from Goldsmiths, University of London students who took the Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice course - or another course in the same subject area.

Anthropology

Select an option to see a detailed breakdown

How often does your course challenge you to achieve your best work?

75%

low

How good are teaching staff at explaining things?

100%

high

How often do teaching staff make the subject engaging?

98%

high

How often is the course intellectually stimulating?

95%

med

To what extent have you had the chance to bring together information and ideas from different topics?

91%

med

How well does your course introduce subjects and skills in a way that builds on what you have already learned?

91%

med

How well has your course developed your knowledge and skills that you think you will need for your future?

86%

high

To what extent have you had the chance to explore ideas and concepts in depth?

100%

high

To what extent does your course have the right balance of directed and independent study?

82%

med

How well have assessments allowed you to demonstrate what you have learned?

89%

high

How fair has the marking and assessment been on your course?

91%

high

How often does feedback help you to improve your work?

80%

med

How often have you received assessment feedback on time?

66%

low

How clear were the marking criteria used to assess your work?

91%

high

How easy was it to contact teaching staff when you needed to?

77%

low

How well have teaching staff supported your learning?

82%

low

How well were any changes to teaching on your course communicated?

49%

low

How well organised is your course?

66%

low

How well have the IT resources and facilities supported your learning?

55%

low

How well have the library resources (e.g., books, online services and learning spaces) supported your learning?

86%

low

How easy is it to access subject specific resources (e.g., equipment, facilities, software) when you need them?

85%

med

How clear is it that students' feedback on the course is acted on?

47%

low

To what extent do you get the right opportunities to give feedback on your course?

84%

low

To what extent are students' opinions about the course valued by staff?

93%

high

How well does the students' union (association or guild) represent students' academic interests?

71%

med

During your studies, how free did you feel to express your ideas, opinions, and beliefs?

85%

med

How well communicated was information about your university/college's mental wellbeing support services?

61%

low

Student information

See who's studying at Goldsmiths, University of London. These students are taking Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice or another course from the same subject area.

Anthropology
Mode of study
Full-time98%Part-time2%
Gender ratio
Female76%Male22%Other2%
Where students come from
International14%UK86%
Number of students165
Most popular A-levels studied
SubjectGrade
SociologyB
PsychologyC
Religious StudiesA
HistoryA
English LiteratureB
Source: HESA

Graduate prospects

What graduates do next

The Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice course includes content from more than one subject area. Choose an option below for information about Goldsmiths, University of London graduates across each of those subject areas.

Social sciences
Anthropology

Graduate statistics

57%

In a job where degree was essential or beneficial

86%

In work, study or other activity

49%

Say it fits with future plans

31%

Are utilising studies

Top job areas

19%

Business and public service associate professionals

9%

Elementary occupations

7%

Welfare Professionals

6%

Administrative occupations

Graduate statistics

40%

In a job where degree was essential or beneficial

95%

In work, study or other activity

30%

Say it fits with future plans

10%

Are utilising studies

Top job areas

20%

Elementary occupations

15%

Artistic, literary and media occupations

10%

Business and public service associate professionals

10%

Customer service occupations

Graduate statistics percentages are determined 15 months after a student graduates

Earnings after graduation

Earnings from Goldsmiths, University of London graduates who took Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice - or another course in the same subject area.

Sociology, social policy and anthropology

Earnings

£23.7k

First year after graduation

£28.1k

Third year after graduation

£30.3k

Fifth year after graduation

Shown here are the median earnings of graduates at one, three and five years after they completed a course related to Anthropology, Media and Digital Practice.

Source: LEO

Note: this data only looks at employees (and not those who are self-employed or also studying) and covers a broad sample of graduates and the various paths they've taken, which might not always be a direct result of their degree

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