Programplaner og emneplaner - Student
SOS3910 Bachelor Thesis Course description
- Course name in Norwegian
- Bacheloroppgave
- Study programme
-
Bachelor Programme in Social Work
- Weight
- 20.0 ECTS
- Year of study
- 2025/2026
- Curriculum
-
SPRING 2026
- Schedule
- Programme description
- Course history
-
Introduction
The Bachelor's thesis is an independent academic and individual project based on a self-chosen topic related to core areas within social work. In the thesis, the student formulates a research question that is relevant to the field of social work. The aim is to place social work-related issues within a theoretical framework and to demonstrate analytical competence and ethical reflection.
The student is expected to apply relevant academic and research literature related to the chosen topic. The research question should be addressed through the collection, processing, and analysis of empirical data, and presented in written form in a thesis that meets the requirements for scientific argumentation and presentation at bachelor's level.
The thesis should demonstrate proficiency in academic writing, including research methodology, use and critique of sources, independence, analytical skills, and critical discussion. A key objective is for the student to master the formal and methodological requirements expected of academic work of this scope.
Language of instruction is Norwegian.
Required preliminary courses
The student must have completed and passed the second year of the bachelor’s degree programme in social work and completed and passed the practical training in the third year of the programme.
Learning outcomes
After completing the course, the student should have the following overall learning outcomes defined in terms of knowledge, skills and general competence:
Knowledge
The student has
- in-depth multidisciplinary knowledge of a self-chosen topic with relevance to the field of social work
- knowledge of the importance of the philosophy of science in scientific activitie
- knowledge of research ethics, basic social science research methods and their possibilities and limitations
- knowledge of different theoretical perspectives relevant to the topic and problem in the bachelor's thesis
- broad knowledge of academic assignment design, including academic writing and integrity, use of sources, and source criticism
Skills
The student
- is able to reflect on the mandate and scope of responsibility of social work
- can develop issues relevant to the subject area and apply new professional knowledge in a methodical and scientific manner
- can find, assess and refer to research and practice-based knowledge that sheds relevant light on the research question
- can conduct advanced literature searches in various databases and apply social work knowledge in major written works
- can reflect critically on theory of science perspectives and different sources of knowledge in their own work
- can exercise source criticism when assessing and selecting literature and obtaining information online and in databases
General competence
The student
- can analyse and critically reflect on research ethics issues related to social work practice
- masters the formal and methodology requirements that apply to academic writing
- has broad knowledge of research and development work in social workers’ main areas of work
- can document and communicate professional assessments in writing
- can update their knowledge of the field of social work
Teaching and learning methods
Teaching relevant to the work on the bachelor's thesis will be provided. Each student will be offered three supervision sessions of 45 minutes each, either individually or in a group. No supervision will be given during the final week before submission.
Course requirements
The following required coursework/compulsory activities must have been approved in order for the student to take the exam:
- Coursework 1: INTERACT - INTER1300
Students must submit an individual log. Scope: 500 words (+/- 10%). The log requires participation at the two-day seminar. An individual assignment may compensate for absence.
Read more about INTERACT and INTER1300 here: https://www.oslomet.no/en/research/research-projects/interact
- Coursework 2: Submission of an outline with the chosen topic and tentative research question for the Bachelor's thesis. The scope must be up to 1 page.
Compulsory activities and coursework requirements must be completed and approved by the given deadline in order for the student to take the exam.
Assessment
The exam in the course is an individual bachelor's thesis.
The assignment must must have a scope of 7500 words (+/- 10 %). The cover page, table of contents and reference list come in addition to this. All the pages, apart from the cover page, must be numbered and state the candidate number. The cover page must also include the necessary information about which examination it concerns, as well as the examination code and the word count of the assignment.
Font and font size: Calibri 12-point. Line spacing 1.5. The approved citation style APA for assignments must be complied with.
Students who fail the exam or who were absent from the ordinary exam for a valid reason can take a resit/rescheduled exam. Students can submit a reworked version of the thesis once, and can receive one hour of additional individual supervision in connection with improving the thesis. Students must contact the person responsible for the course to organise a supervision session. No supervision will be given in July.
Students who fail the bachelor`s thesis twice must submit a new thesis based on a new research question at the next exam. The student must also have the outline, including the topic and research question, approved again. It is the students’ responsibility to contact the person responsible for the course to schedule three supervision sessions well before the start of the course.
Permitted exam materials and equipment
All aids are permitted, as long as the rules for source referencing are complied with.
Grading scale
Grade scale A-F.
Examiners
All exam papers are assessed by one internal and one external examiner. A student's supervisor may not be the examiner for this student.
Course contact person
Siri Fjeldheim and Susana Vilhena