Admissions
Full details available on the main University site. Here is background information on graduate and undergraduate admissions in the School.
Human Sciences Admissions
- There are no mandatory subject requirements for pre-selection for Human Sciences; however, for non-native English speakers, evidence of proficiency is required. See English Language requirements on the University website.
- Maths and Biology A levels are useful but not essential.
- Candidates with Scottish Highers, Baccalaureate or its equivalent are welcome.
- Willingness to approach analysis of problems with numbers as well as words is important.
- Students from purely arts backgrounds have successfully undertaken the course.
1. Decisions about admission to undergraduate courses at Oxford, including Human Sciences, are made by colleges.
Candidates are invited to name a first-choice college or make an open application. Oxford aims to ensure that candidates’ chances of obtaining a place are not affected by an applicant’s choice of college.
2. Candidates should submit their application form as described in the Application Procedures below.
What will I need to show in order to be considered?
Tutors responsible for admitting undergraduates in Human Sciences will be looking at all the available information from past and predicted examination results. Colleges normally require grades of AAA in A-levels or the equivalent in other exams such as Scottish Higher, national or international baccalaureate etc. The potential to achieve these grades will need to be clear from your application. School reports, personal reports and interviews are also used with a view to assessing the individual candidate's potential to benefit from the academic courses provided by Oxford in Human Sciences. Evidence of your ability to cope successfully with both the quantitative and the essay-based components of the course will be an advantage.
3. Written Work and Tests
All candidates for Human Sciences must take the Thinking Skills Assessment (TSA) normally at their own school or college, in early November. Separate registration for this test is required and the final deadline for entries is in mid-October. It is the responsibility of the candidate to ensure that they are registered for this test. See the Information on tests on the University's website for further details.
4. Short-listed Candidates are then invited for an interview.
Candidates who come to Oxford for interview will be interviewed by their college of first choice and at least one other college, and/or by the Human Sciences Admissions Panel - an interdisciplinary body constituted to ensure that as many promising candidates as possible are offered places.
All interviews will broadly follow the pattern outlined in the Interview Booklet available from the Admissions Office, or see the Interviews Section of the Admissions Website. The interview is an important component in the selection process. Shortlisted applicants who hold a passport from the UK or European Economic Area will be invited to interview in Oxford and must attend if they wish their application to be considered. Shortlisted applicants from other regions of the world who are unable to travel to Oxford due to visa requirements may be interviewed by telephone, video conference or over the internet through Skype (see 'Interview Arrangements for International Students' on the University's website)
Oxford aims to ensure that candidates’ chances of obtaining a place are not affected by an applicant’s choice of college.
What are the Interviewers looking for?
The interview is aimed primarily at assessing the candidate's potential for independent thinking, ability to follow an argument, skill in communication and listening. It is not a test of knowledge in isolation from context, or of verbal facility. Interviewers will be looking for evidence of ability to respond in a thoughtful way to unpredictable questions and ideas, intellectual curiosity, openness of mind and independent thinking. They will be looking for enthusiasm for their current studies or activities, but also evidence that the candidate's interest goes beyond their current academic training, and that they are able to deploy their knowledge in ways that show initiative.
5. Places are offered as soon as possible after the interviews. . Offers are conditional on the results of A-levels or equivalent qualifications, except that definitive offers are made to candidates who have already obtained such qualifications.
Can I defer my entry?
If a candidate wishes to defer entry to the year after the intake being interview for, they need to state this on the application form. However only a very limited number of deferred places are offered, and successful deferred entry candidates will generally be among the strongest of the cohort for Human Sciences. Some deferred applicants may be offered a non-deferred place instead.
You make your application through UCAS by 15 October
see the UCAS website
You may select ONE college from the list of colleges (to the top right) or you can leave the choice of college to the University Admissions Office.
To contact the Institute of Human Sciences, e-mail: admissions@ihs.ox.ac.uk
- Hertford
- Keble
- Magdalen
- Mansfield
- St Benet's Hall
- St Catherine's
- St Hugh's
- St John's
- Wadham
- Harris Manchester (Mature Students only)
Enquiries: to the Tutor for Admissions
Graduate Admissions
Application Guide 2017-18 for entry in 2018-19
Applications are considered in accordance with the submission deadlines set down by the University. The deadlines for anthropology for entry in the 2018-19 academic year are 12 noon (i.e. midday UK time) on 17 November 2017 and 19 January 2018.
For the latest information on fees charged by the University.
Who to contact for more information
For information regarding the Masters courses you should contact the Course Coordinator. For 2017-2018 these are:
MSc/MPhil Social Anthropology: Dr Ramon Sarro
MSc/MPhil in Visual, Material and Museum Ethnography: Professor Marcus Banks
MSc/MPhil in Medical Anthropology: Professor Elisabeth Hsu
MSc in Migration Studies: Dr Dace Dzenovska
MSc in Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology: Dr Susana Carvalho
Professor Stanley Ulijaszek is the Doctoral Admissions and Research Convenor
For admissions questions please contact the Graduate Studies Administrator: Mrs Vicky Dean