Sun outside the Bodleian Library
Sun on Oxford University buildings
Credit: Amanda Thomas

Foundation Year in Humanities

Course overview

UCAS code: See course options
Entrance requirements: BBB
Course duration: 4/5 years (BA)

Application deadline

29 January 2025

Subject requirements

Required subjects: B in your most relevant subject
Recommended subjects: Not applicable
Helpful subjects: Not applicable

Interviews

March 2025

Written work

You may be asked to submit a piece of written work.

Admissions statistics

Places for Astrophoria Foundation Year: Up to 50

Places for Humanities Foundation: Up to 18.

Contact

Email: [email protected]

About the course

Are you a student from the UK interested in studying Classics, English, History or Theology & Religion? Have your personal or educational circumstances meant you are unlikely to achieve the grades typically required for Oxford courses? If so, then choosing to apply for your course with a Foundation Year might be the right option for you. 

The Foundation Year is free for students and is designed to be a one-year intensive academic course which will bridge any gaps between school and our academically challenging undergraduate courses. The programme is carefully designed to build and develop your study skills, subject knowledge and academic confidence.

Students that pass the course will be awarded a nationally recognised Certificate in Higher Education (CertHE) qualification. If you pass the course at the required level, you will be automatically admitted into Oxford as an undergraduate student if you wish to be, without the need to re-apply.

The Foundation Year in Humanities course begins with an introduction to the Humanities which will allow you to explore the similarities and differences between the Humanities subjects before moving to more subject specific study. It will also give you an understanding of what it means to study your subject at undergraduate level. Alongside your subject you will also have the option to take either one language course or one maths course.

Alongside your academic subject programme, you will take the Preparation for Undergraduate Studies course. This will help you develop the core skills that will enable you to thrive on a course at undergraduate level, whether at Oxford or another university. These modules will provide support in building general academic skills including:

  • academic writing
  • communication skills to support verbal discussion
  • and broader personal development through a society and culture course and academic mentoring.

Visit the Astrophoria Foundation Year website for further insights into this course and the programme. 

Visit the undergraduate course pages for Classics, English, History or Theology & Religion to find out more about the undergraduate course you'll study after your foundation year.

A typical week

During your foundation year you will be expected to attend around five hours of classes per week, participate in regular meetings with tutors to discuss work, carry out independent research and you are likely to write at least one essay every two weeks.

Your time will be spent both on academic work for your Humanities programme and work related to the Preparation for Undergraduate Studies course.

In each term there will be modules which will lead to your degree pathway. In your final term you will complete an extended essay on a subject related topic of your choice, deepening your subject interest and building your skills in independent study.

You may also have the opportunity to learn a language or enhance your maths skills during the foundation year.

Tutorials are usually for around two students and a tutor. Classes are slightly bigger, and class sizes may vary depending on the modules that you choose. There are likely to be around four students in a class, however when the whole Humanities cohort is together, this may include up to 18 students. Lectures are a larger format again, and are likely to be delivered to the foundation year cohort (up to 50 students) as a whole.

Most tutorials, classes, and lectures are delivered by staff who are tutors in their subject. Some teaching may also be delivered by postgraduate students.

To find out more about how Oxford's teaching year is structured, visit our Academic Year page.

Course structure

Term 1

Courses

Assessment

Two courses are taken:

  • Foundations in Humanities 1: Fame
  • Preparation for Undergraduate Studies (including General Academic Skills, Communication Skills, Society and Culture)

Coursework: four essays

Term 2

Courses

Assessment

Three courses are taken:

  • Foundations in Humanities 2: Inequalities
  • Methods in Humanities (options depend on your chosen degree)
  • Preparation for Undergraduate Studies (including general academic skills, communication skills, society and culture)

Assessment will vary between Humanities courses but is likely to include:

Examination: Written papers

Coursework: Portfolio of submitted essays, presentations, commentaries on text or images

Term 3

Courses

Assessment

Three courses are taken:

  • Subject specific options (choice of around 20 dependent on your chosen degree
  • Extended Essay
  • Preparation for Undergraduate Studies (including general academic skills, communication skills, society and culture)

Assessment will vary between Humanities courses but is likely to include:

Examination: Written papers

Coursework: Extended Essay of 5,000 words.

Academic requirements

Qualification

Requirements

A-levels: 

BBB

Advanced Highers:

BB/BBC

International Baccalaureate (IB):

35 (including core points) with 555 at Higher Level, with at least a 5 at Higher Level in the most relevant subject(s) to chosen course.

BTECs:

BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma: MMM

BTEC Level 3 National Diploma: MM plus B at A level.

BTEC Level 3 National Subsidiary Diploma: M plus BB at A level.

Access to HE Diploma:

Completion of Access to HE Diploma with all the level 3 credits taken at Merit, and B grades in any A levels taken.

Any other equivalent qualification:

 View information on other UK qualifications, and international qualifications.

Wherever possible, your grades are considered in the context in which they have been achieved.

Read further information on how we use contextual data.

If you meet the eligibility requirements for the Astrophoria Foundation Year, you may wish to apply for a foundation year course when the grades you are likely to achieve fall below the academic entry requirements for your chosen undergraduate course but they meet or exceed the academic entry requirements for your chosen foundation year course.

Subject requirements

 Essential:  

Candidates are expected to have their degree subject to A-level, Advanced Higher, Higher Level in the IB or any other equivalent (with the exception of the Theology and Classics options which request any essay writing subject to the same level).

Applying

All candidates for the foundation year must apply via UCAS. The deadline for applications for the foundation year is in January 2025.

Please note this is different from the undergraduate course deadline in October 2024. The following information gives specific details for students applying for this course.

Written work

Candidates may be required to submit a recent example of writing. Normally we’d prefer to read an analytical discussion of a topic or topics related to the subject you wish to study.

Applicants will be notified if any written work is required. 

Admissions steps

Date

Step 

Now

Check you are on track to meet the academic entry requirements above

September 2024

Check you are eligible to apply

Jan 2025

Submit your UCAS application - apply for your chosen degree course with a foundation year (e.g. Theology with Foundation Year)

February 2025

Submit the Foundation Year Additional Application Questionnaire (FYAAQ)

March 2025

Shortlisted applicants will be invited for interview

April 2025

Offers sent to candidates

May 2025

Respond to offers

Eligibility Criteria

Offers for Oxford's Astrophoria Foundation Year courses are awarded on academic suitability, and applicants must also meet the eligibility criteria relating to socio-economic and educational disadvantage.

The foundation year is designed to address the education attainment gap associated with factors relating to socio-economic and educational disadvantage experienced by eligible applicants.

The Astrophoria Foundation Year will make academic offers specific to this one year of intensive study, and the offers will take into account the educational disruption experienced by these students. The courses aim to provide a year of academic study that will help support successful students transition to their chosen undergraduate course.

Currently the programme is open to UK state school students who are ordinarily resident in the UK (home fees status) and meet the academic and eligibility criteria.

Evidence of meeting the eligibility criteria is required during the application process and can be supplied by applicants via the Foundation Year Additional Application Questionnaire. This will be accessible through the foundation year webpages in due course. There will also be a full guide to assist in the completion of the questionnaire.

Checking your eligibility

Please note the following eligibility criteria is currently under review and any changes will be confirmed on this page before applications open again in September 2024.  

Applicants should be a state school educated student who is ordinarily resident in the UK (with home fees status) and would usually:

  • meet either the criteria outlined in categories 1,2 and 3
  • or meet the criterion of category 4

Category 1: Socio-Economic indicators

You must meet at least one of the criteria in Category 1.

  • Your home postcode (where you live the majority of the time) should fall into POLAR4 Quintile 1
  • Your home postcode (where you live the majority of the time) should fall into ACORN Category 4, 5 or 6
  • Being eligible for Free School Meals (FSM) at any point in the last six years (also known as Ever 6 FSM)

Category 2: School/College Characteristics

You must meet the criterion in Category 2.

  • You will have attended, normally for all compulsory education (usually between the ages of 11-18), non-selective state-funded UK secondary schools/colleges.

Category 3: Individual experience

You must meet at least one of the criteria in Category 3.

A verified individual level measure of socio-economic disadvantaged background and/or experienced a disrupted education which may include:

  • being eligible for FSM any point in the last six years (also known as Ever 6 FSM)
  • having refugee status or humanitarian protection
  • having been on a child in need and/or having had a child protection plan
  • having care responsibilities for a sustained period of time
  • being pregnant or having parental responsibilities whilst in education
  • having a medical or health issue that has resulted in long absences from school or college (more than six months)
  • being from a Gypsy, Traveller, Roma, Showman or Boater background
  • being a child of a military family
  • being a service leaver or veteran
  • being from a household with an income of less than £25,000
  • experiencing bereavement of a close family member during secondary education
  • being an estranged student
  • becoming homeless whilst in education
  • having experienced time out of secondary school or college education (over one year)
  • having a late diagnosis of Special Educational Needs (within the past two years).

Category 4: Care Experience

If you meet this criterion in category 4 you are automatically eligible.

  • You have spent any length of time in local authority care and have been at UK state schools

State educated applicants with experience of being in care are automatically eligible. You do not need to meet the criteria in categories 1, 2 or 3, but you may wish to provide us with information in those other categories so that we have a comprehensive understanding of your educational experiences.

Further details

Visit the 2024 Eligibility Guide for Applicants for further details about the eligibility criteria for 2024 entry and how it was verified.

The 2025 Eligibility Guide for Applicants will be made available after the eligibility criteria has been reviewed and before applications can be submitted in September 2024. 

Fees and Funding for the Foundation Year

Our Foundation Year courses are free of charge and there are no course fees. All tuition and accommodation costs are covered by the University of Oxford. Students admitted to the Foundation Year courses will also receive a bursary for other living costs.

Due to this financial support, we would typically encourage you not to take out student finance for the Foundation Year (however you will need to apply during your Foundation Year for student finance if you continue to study at Oxford by progressing to a degree course).

Some students may be encouraged to apply for a student loan of £0 during their Foundation Year to enable them to receive additional financial support in the form of a Disabled Students’ Allowance (DSA) (which also means they do not need to reapply in year 1). Applicants who may be in receipt of a DSA and secure a place on the programme will be contacted by the Foundation Year Team to discuss this.

Fees and Funding for the undergraduate course

If you continue to study at Oxford by progressing to a degree course you will need to pay the course fees and cover your living costs (in most cases this is paid by taking out student loans). Visit the undergraduate course pages or the fees and funding webpages for more information about undergraduate fees and funding.

Contextual information

Course data from Discover Uni provides applicants with statistics about undergraduate life at Oxford. But there is so much more to an Oxford degree that the numbers can’t convey.

The Oxford tutorial

College tutorials are central to teaching at Oxford. Typically, they take place in your college and are led by your academic tutor(s) who teach as well as do their own research. Students will also receive teaching in a variety of other ways, depending on the course. This will include lectures and classes, and may include laboratory work and fieldwork. However, tutorials offer a level of personalised attention from academic experts unavailable at most universities.

During tutorials (normally lasting an hour), college subject tutors will give you and one or two tutorial partners feedback on prepared work and cover a topic in depth.

The other student(s) in your college tutorials will be from your year group, doing the same course as you and will normally be at your college. Such regular and rigorous academic discussion develops and facilitates learning in a way that isn’t possible through lectures alone. Tutorials also allow for close progress monitoring so tutors can quickly provide additional support if necessary.

Read more about tutorials and an Oxford education

College life

Our colleges are at the heart of Oxford’s reputation as one of the best universities in the world.

  • At Oxford, everyone is a member of a college as well as their subject department(s) and the University. Students therefore have both the benefits of belonging to a large, renowned institution and to a small and friendly academic community. Each college or hall is made up of academic and support staff, and students. Colleges provide a safe, supportive environment leaving you free to focus on your studies, enjoy time with friends and make the most of the huge variety of opportunities.
  • Each college has a unique character, but generally their facilities are similar. Each one, large or small, will have the following essential facilities:
    • Porters’ lodge (a staffed entrance and reception)
    • Dining hall
    • Lending library (often open 24/7 in term time)
    • Student accommodation
    • Tutors’ teaching rooms
    • Chapel and/or music rooms
    • Laundry
    • Green spaces
    • Common room (known as the JCR).
  • All foundation year and first year students are offered college accommodation either on the main site of their college or in a nearby college annexe. This means that your neighbours will also be ‘freshers’ and new to life at Oxford. This accommodation is guaranteed, so you don’t need to worry about finding somewhere to live after accepting a place here, all of this is organised for you before you arrive.
  • All colleges offer at least one further year of accommodation and some offer it for the entire duration of your degree. You may choose to take up the option to live in your college for the whole of your time at Oxford, or you might decide to arrange your own accommodation after your first year – perhaps because you want to live with friends from other colleges.
  • While college academic tutors primarily support your academic development, you can also ask their advice on other things. Lots of other college staff including welfare officers help students settle in and are available to offer guidance on practical or health matters. Current students also actively support students in earlier years, sometimes as part of a college ‘family’ or as peer supporters trained by the University’s Counselling Service.
  • Astrophoria Foundation Year students are currently allocated to a college. They do not apply for a specific one.