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This programme is mainly taught in Dutch.
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In order to obtain the degree of Master of Science in Culture Management the student
- should be enrolled for the programme in question under a diploma contract or under an exam contract to obtain a diploma
- should have taken all the exams that the programme encompasses
- should previously have registered for the programme with the examination board.
- should have acquired at least 60 ECTS-credits
The programme consists of 60 ECTS-credits. In a model academic year, the student takes between 54 and 66 ECTS-credits.
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Direct: academic bachelor of applied economics, economic sciences, social and economic sciences; all masters.
With preparatory programme: other academic bachelors
With bridging programme: professional bachelor in commercial sciences and in business administration, social work (majors social and cultural work and art and culture mediation), pop and rock music (major music management) (PHL), advanced business management (option culture management) (KHL).
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The following core competencies are pursued in the Master’s degree programme in Culture Management:
- CM-CM-1 | Masters Culture Management will have insight into current scientific knowledge in the area of culture management, understand its relevance within cultural organisations and be able to apply this insight where necessary.
- CM-CM-2 | Masters Culture Management will be able to select critically, process and synthesise information sources and scientific literature on specific management issues in a systematic manner.
- CM-CM-3 | Masters Culture Management will be able to detect, analyse and offer creative solutions to complex problems of culture management from within an open, critical attitude , in a scientific manner and from within an interdisciplinary conceptual framework.
- CM-CM-4 | Masters Culture Management will take advantage of social and cultural developments (e.g. interculturality, population ageing), and they will be able to assess and/or take decisions within uncertain local or international contexts, with an eye for creativity and originality.
- CM-CM-5 | Masters Culture Management will be competent in the methodology of management research (e.g. participation research, audience research and performance analysis), and they will be able to use it independently for management issues within the cultural sector.
- CM-CM-6 | Masters Culture Management will be able to adapt their knowledge in an independent and synthetic manner, and they will be able to apply it to the preparation, taking and follow-up of management and policy decisions within the cultural sector.
- CM-CM-7 | Masters Culture Management will be able to work efficiently and effectively in teams, demonstrate entrepreneurship and deploy their skills actively within networks.
- CM-CM-8 | Masters Culture Management will be able to evaluate their analysis of and solutions to problems, and they will be able to communicate about these solutions with colleagues and laypeople in a creative and inspiring manner.
- CM-CM-9 | Masters Culture Management will be able to examine the institutional and policy contexts of culture, taking them into account in the analysis of management problems and the solutions to be proposed for them.
- CM-CM-10 | Masters Culture Management will reflect critically about culture and society, based on cultural-sociological and philosophical insights, having an eye for the diversity of cultural expressions within local and international environments.
- CM-CM-11 | Masters Culture Management will be able to reflect upon their own thoughts and actions, and they will be able to translate these reflections into constructive activities and proposals for more appropriate solutions.
The alignment of the specific core competencies in the professional roles of the Faculty of Applied Economics is as follows:- Analyzer: CM-CM-1, CM-CM-2
- Coordinator: CM-CM-5, CM-CM-6, CM-CM-7
- Creator: CM-CM-3, CM-CM-4
- Communicator: CM-CM-7
- Inspirer: CM-CM-8
- Strategist: CM-CM-9, CM-CM-10, CM-CM-11
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Further studies with direct access
None Further studies with conditional access None
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A student’s final result is a weighted average of the exam results the student has obtained for all the programme components of his/her training programme. In calculating the final result, the credits corresponding to the various programme components are used for weighting the results obtained for those components.
The final result is expressed as an integer out of 100.
A student whose final result is less than 50 out of 100 can never be declared successful.
A student is successful for the training programme if he/she has obtained credits for all the programme components in his/her training programme. For more information see the Education and Examination regulation.
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