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Research Seminar in Music

A number of research problems in music and performance studies will be addressed in this course. Specific issues involved in expository writing about music will

also be discussed. The course highlights current research topics and issues in the musicological literature and will deepen students’ skills in comparative music analysis. 

Course Code: 
MUD 429
No. of Credits: 
3
Level: 
Level 400
Course Semester: 
First Semester
Select Programme(s): 
Music

Exchange Students

Overview

UCC believes that educational exchange opportunities enhance learning, build understanding amongst people of different cultures, and changes lives. Students enroll in the University of Cape Coast for a semester or two from partner and non-partner institutions across the globe.

Over the years, the University of Cape Coast has hosted a large number of students from institutions all across the world. Students from countries such as the USA, Germany, Sweden, Turkey, Kenya, Senegal, have participated in this programme.


The University
The University is a secular institution and it seeks to provide all students the opportunity to join a variety of sports and amalgamated clubs to enrich their social and extra-curricular experience. Among the many resources available to students of the University include access to Wi-Fi hotspots all over campus, an ultra-modern library complex with a capacity of stocking 750,000 volumes, a well-resourced hospital, an ICT Centre, expansive counselling system, sports facilities, banking services, restaurants, and many more.

Cape Coast

UCC is situated in the historical town of Cape Coast, the citadel of education in Ghana. Cape Coast (‘Oguaa’ in the local Fanti dialect) was the first capital of the former Gold Coast, now Ghana, until it was moved to Accra in 1877. It is the capital of the central region of Ghana and situated along the Atlantic Ocean. Cape Coast is the cradle of education in Ghana as it houses some of the oldest and best-performing schools in the country.

The Chiefs and people of Cape Coast celebrate Fetu Afahye, an annual festival, every first week of September, and it is one of the popular tourist attractions in the country too. With its rich history and monuments, Cape Coast is a tourist destination with numerous beaches and resorts.  It is an amazing experience to visit the Kakum National Rainforest with its famous Canopy Walkway and World Heritage sites such as Cape Coast and Elmina Slave Castles.


  • What You Need to Do
  • Dates
  • After Applying

Download the study abroad application form to get started. Upon completion, send a scanned copy of the form along with other required documents, through your study abroad coordinator, to us via email and mail the original copies to:

The Dean,
Centre for International Education
University of Cape Coast
Cape Coast
Ghana, West Africa
FIRST SEMESTER (FALL 2019) SECOND SEMESTER (SPRING 2020)
7th June, 2019 11th October, 2019

The dates for each semester can be found here

  1. Download the arrival form to submit after receiving your admission documents, visa, and made your flight arrangements. Please communicate with the Centre on the expected dates for arrival before making flight arrangements.
  2. Download the Bio-data form and submit via email once you are certain of travelling to Ghana to participate in the Exchange Programme. Submission of the form should be done, at least, two weeks to expected date of arrival.
  3. Visit Guides on the webpage for guidelines on what to expect of your stay here.
  4. Checkout this policy sheet to know what is expected of you, sign and submit.
  5. Download, complete and submit the pre-arrival assessment form before your arrival.
  6. You can check out available courses here. Note that courses from most schools/faculties are available except courses from the School of Medical Sciences and Faculty of Law 

 

Extramural Activities

Exchange students at the University of Cape Coast have the opportunity to engage in all sorts of extramural activities. Students may join any of the many amalgamated clubs and associations on campus. They may also choose to volunteer at places such as the hospital, crèche, kindergarten, orphanages, and others.

Click here for information on Visas

Study Abroad Coordinators can contact us for our factsheet

Shelby WoodbySHELBY WOODBY (GVSU, USA) I chose to study abroad in Cape Coast, Ghana, because I was looking to go someplace completely different from home. I wanted to learn as much about the culture as I could while I was there, including trying all the foods, exploring different places, shopping in the markets, and traveling with friends. I loved it. The five months I was in Ghana was challenging, but it was an incredible adventure that I wouldn't trade for any other. I made lifetime friends and carry my memories with me every day. It's made me who I am today, and it will continue to shape my thoughts, beliefs, and actions for the rest of my life.

Advanced Music Theory and Analysis

In this advanced music theory course, students will concentrate on the study of post-tonal practices and concepts for twentieth-century music analysis,

such as the Hanson system, Persichetti system, and Hindemith syst

Course Code: 
MUD 423
No. of Credits: 
3
Level: 
Level 400
Course Semester: 
First Semester
Select Programme(s): 
Music
Degree Type: 
Bachelor of ArtsDepartment of History
Programme Duration: 
4 years (Standard Entry)
About Programme: 

Not Published

Goal / Objectives: 

Not Published

Career Opportunities: 

Not Published

Entry Requirements: 

Applications are welcomed from holders of WASSCE/SSSCE as well as Mature Candidates. WASSCE/SSSCE candidates must have six (6) passes with an overall aggregate of not more than twenty (20). Three of the six passes must be in core subjects (including English Language, Integrated Science and Mathematics). The other three passes must be in any of the following: History, Literature-in-English, French, Ghanaian Language (Akan, Ewe or Ga), Government, Christian or Islamic Religious or African Traditional Religion. A good pass in Social Studies core will be an added advantage. Mature students applying for admission must be at least 30 years old by 31st December of the year immediately preceding that of the application. They must also pass the University’s Mature Students’ Examination and interview.


Candidates admitted to read history at the Department shall combine it with two other subject areas for four (4) semesters. These subjects are: Classics & Philosophy, English, Economics, Ghanaian Language, Religion and Human Values, and Sociology. Based on performance at the end of the fourth semester, a student may be invited to read for a single honours degree in History from the fifth semester. Students are also allowed to opt for double honours, where they combine History with the aforementioned subjects. Students reading for a degree in Education and taking History as well are deemed to be automatic double honours candidates and shall therefore combine the subject with another one.

Semantics and Pragmatics

The course commences with a definition of the goals of a theory of meaning and theories of word meaning. The course is devoted to the concepts

and constituents of word meaning and gradually moves to larger constructions, sentence meaning and utterance meaning (that is, meaning in actual communication).

The remaining part of the course will cover the area of pragmatics. Examples of concepts to be covered in pragmatics include politeness, implicature, speech acts, deixis,

and presupposition.

Course Code: 
ENG 826S
No. of Credits: 
3
Level: 
Level 500
Course Semester: 
Second Semester
Select Programme(s): 
Literature-in-English)

Contemporary Ghanaian Literature

Not Published

Course Code: 
ENG 823S
No. of Credits: 
3
Level: 
Level 500
Course Semester: 
Second Semester
Select Programme(s): 
Literature-in-English)

Modern African Poetry

Not Published

Course Code: 
ENG 821S
No. of Credits: 
3
Level: 
Level 500
Course Semester: 
Second Semester
Select Programme(s): 
Literature-in-English)

The Novel in Africa

This course undertakes a study of the rise in modern African novel from the beginning of the twentieth century to the present.

Appropriate attention will be paid to regional peculiarities, authorial idiosyncrasies, popular fiction, literary characteristics of the African novel,

and the historical and cultural factors impinging on the growth of the novel. Issues of criticism will be examined to discover the relevance of the

African writer to modern society.

Course Code: 
ENG 831S
No. of Credits: 
3
Level: 
Level 500
Course Semester: 
Second Semester
Select Programme(s): 
Literature-in-English)
14 Aug

Department of Chemistry

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14 Aug

Department of Chemistry

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  • +233 [03321]32440, +233 [03321] 32480-9
  • registrar@ucc.edu.gh

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