Overview
Education is evolving. Digital learning, curriculum reform, and social injustice are major factors shaping education today. (University Business, July 2025).
Our Masters in Education equips you with the knowledge to play your part in addressing these challenges. The course is suitable whether you’re already working in education or looking to switch careers to a non-teaching role in the sector.
Develop impactful skills
As you study our Education Masters degree you’ll learn about:
- different approaches to education around the world, and the philosophies that underpin them;
- the relationship between education and social justice, and how to approach it in your specific area of education;
- conducting research projects that get meaningful results;
- the impact of education policy and how policies can be developed to ensure better outcomes.
Specialise in key areas
On our MSC Education you will study education philosophy, policy, social justice and research methods. You'll tailor your experience to specialise in digital education, climate change education, curriculum, or educational leadership. You can also combine modules from our different specialisms to focus in on the areas best suited to you. The course is completed with an in-depth original dissertation.
A reputable leader in education
Our Education Masters degree is delivered by experts with a reputation for excellence. Education at Stirling ranks top 15 in the UK by the Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2025. Our research in Education is also recognised as being in the top 20 in the UK for impact and research environment (REF 2021).
Our staff contribute to global conversations about Education policy and practice, and will bring the latest ideas from the field into the classroom. We draw on case studies from contemporary education practice and policy from around the world. This ensures when you graduate with a Masters degree in Education from Stirling, you’re fully prepared for the next exciting step in your career.
Each module also includes guest lectures from professionals in the field, visiting academics and key authors.
Top reasons to study with us
Flexible learning
If you’re interested in studying a module from this course, the Postgraduate Certificate or the Postgraduate Diploma then please email Graduate Admissions to discuss your course of study.
Research overview
Our staff routinely keep abreast of changing cultural and education climates, and the ongoing development of pedagogies, to meet the developing needs of the student body. In the most recent Research Excellence Framework (REF 2021), our Education research rated in the top 20 in the UK for impact and research environment. 100% of our research impact and environment in Education is classed as world leading or internationally excellent.
Entry requirements
Academic requirements
A minimum of a second class honours degree or equivalent. Applicants without these formal qualifications but with significant appropriate/relevant work experience are encouraged to apply.
One reference required as standard.
Permission to study in the UK.
International entry requirements
English language requirements
If English is not your first language you must have one of the following qualifications as evidence of your English language skills:
- IELTS Academic or UKVI 6.5 with a minimum of 6.0 in each sub-skill.
- Pearson Test of English (Academic) 62 overall with 60 in each sub-skill.
- IBT TOEFL 80 overall with 18 in reading, 23 in writing, 19 in listening and 21 in speaking.
See our information on English language requirements for more details on the language tests we accept and options to waive these requirements.
Pre-sessional English language courses
If you need to improve your English language skills before you enter this course, University of Stirling International Study Centre offers a range of English language courses. These intensive and flexible courses are designed to improve your English ability for entry to this degree.
Find out more about our pre-sessional English language courses.
Course details
You will learn via blended learning opportunities, including face-to-face seminars and lectures, digital platforms which will help you to progress your learning online and you will also receive online and face-to-face lecturer support and feedback throughout the course.
The Masters in Education aims to:
- develop innovative, critical thinking, subject specialists and informed, innovative, critical and contemporary thinkers. You will be able to make an impact in the field of education, with a particular focus on Digital Learning, Leadership and Curriculum;
- equip you to become a digitally literate leader, with social justice at the centre of your knowledge production and education practice;
- create partnership and knowledge exchange opportunities for the university, students and staff, through creating links with potential partnership institutions, international learning hubs and knowledge transfer initiatives.
Modules
Teaching
The Masters in Education is taught via a blended learning approach, including face-to-face seminars and lectures, digital platforms and online lecturer support and feedback throughout the course.
You will benefit from specific learning opportunities, created to encourage development in teamwork, communication, interpersonal skills, creativity and problem-solving, skills that employers value. These quality learning experiences are underpinned by international scholarly perspectives and approaches that enable you to facilitate and assimilate knowledge via your own and others’ cultural lenses and language practices.
The innovative pedagogies employed in the Education Subject Group at Stirling, critically engage with Universal Design for Learning methodologies, suggested to be particularly effective for language learners and students with diverse needs, diagnosed or not.
Specifically, said pedagogical approaches include:
- encouraging students to adopt translanguaging practices for learning, where students will be encouraged to learn in their own language(s), whilst reporting back in English. Specifically, students will be encouraged to draw from sources derived from their country of origin, in order to support deep learning, consolidation of course content and intercultural lenses in learning;
- encouragement of non-anglo-centric approaches to knowledge exchange, including sharing of international scholarly knowledge and cultural experiences, to enhance and develop further international perspectives on education;
- explicit guidelines and expectations around academic writing, assessment and plagiarism;
- clear expectations for engagement (turn-taking for all, for example);
- SLS induction event and use of SLS resources specifically for OS students;
- flexible approaches to assessment, including critical approaches to ‘authentic assessment’, enabling students to produce written / oral pieces and digital artefacts that create learning outcomes that are applicable to the workplace;
- drop-in / Q+A sessions to enable students to gain face-to-face formative feedback and guidance;
- recorded lectures with worksheets, points for recap, consolidation and progression;
- online lectures in headlined sections, to enable iterative learning opportunities;
- routine chunking of all materials and delivery, where structure of seminar / lecture / workshop delivery is designed to include regular plenary and mini-plenaries;
- Peer mentoring and buddy schemes, to support learning and consolidation.
Assessment
Assessment will be both formative and summative, with summative assessments taking the form of written reports, enquiry-based projects, presentations and digital artefacts. There are no formal exams associated with this course
There are varied summative, multi-modal assignments across modules, including written, verbal and digital outputs, incorporating presentations, enquiry-based projects, written assignments and digital artefacts, alongside formative assessment to scaffold learning and outcome.
Classroom hours
All modules within the course are run face to face, with blended elements, apart from two modules, designed to be run online due to their content:
- Pedagogies of Technology
- Learn, Work and Lead Critically with AI & Data
Most modules will include 24 scheduled hours and 176 independent study hours, totalling 200 hours overall. The Dissertation module includes 15 scheduled hours, 10 hours supervised and 575 independent study hours: a total of 600 hours.
Course director
Key staff
Module Lead, What is Education?: Dr. John I’Anson
John is currently Principal Investigator for a Scottish Government research project (2018-21) that inquires into how teachers promote equity in schools through translating theory into practice and supporting colleagues in mentoring relations. He currently lectures on the Initial Teacher Education (ITE), Professional Education Masters, and Master of Education Research programmes within the Faculty of Social Sciences. His book, Schooling Indifference (Routledge, 2017), written with Alison Jasper, explores ways in which cultural difference might be engaged within education. He has also written on educational theory, inclusion, and children's rights. John was until recently Convenor of the Research in Children's Rights network for the European Conference on Educational Research. He is currently Depute Director of the Centre for Child Wellbeing and Protection at the University of Stirling.
Module Lead, Education and Social Justice and Curriculum Pathway Lead: Dr Kay Sidebottom
Kay is a Lecturer in Education and Director for the MSc Education. She also supervises Masters and doctoral students across a range of childhood and education-related topics. Kay’s current research explores how teachers can work with posthuman ideas to facilitate meaningful and disruptive education spaces for our complex times. With a background in community and adult education, her pedagogical specialisms include critical, radical and anarchist education, arts-based practice and community philosophy.
Digital Modular Pathway Lead: Dr Terrie-Lynn Thompson
Terrie-Lynn is a Senior Lecturer in Digital Media at the School of Education, University of Stirling. She holds a PhD from the University of Alberta in Canada and completed a SSHRC-funded post-doctoral fellowship at Athabasca University (Canada’s open university). Her program of research focuses on how professional work-learning practices and pedagogical spaces are changing globally, as new web and mobile technologies are increasingly integrated into work and everyday life routines.
Education Leadership Pathway Lead: Dr Aileen Ireland
Aileen is a Research Assistant based at the University of Stirling. She also works as a Lecturer and researcher in the field of professional education. Aileen’s own research relates to the use of technology in teaching and learning practices, adopting a posthuman perspective to her work.
Fees and funding
Fees and costs
University of Stirling alumni will automatically be awarded a fee waiver for the first year of Masters studies through our Stirling Alumni Scholarship.
Applicants from the UK or Republic of Ireland who hold a first-class honours degree or equivalent will automatically be awarded a £2,000 scholarship through our Postgraduate Merit Scholarship.
If you need to extend your period of study, you may be liable for additional fees.
If you are studying part time, the total course fee will be split over the years that you study. The total fee will remain the same and will be held at the rate set in your year of entry.
For more information on courses invoiced on an annual fee basis, please read our tuition fee policy.
Eligible students could receive a scholarship worth between £4,000-£7,000. See our range of generous scholarships for international postgraduate students.
If you need to extend your period of study, you may be liable for additional fees.
If you are studying part time, the total course fee will be split over the years that you study. The total fee will remain the same and will be held at the rate set in your year of entry.
For more information on courses invoiced on an annual fee basis, please read our tuition fee policy.
Additional costs
There are some instances where additional fees may apply. Depending on your chosen course, you may need to pay additional costs, for example for field trips. Learn more about additional fees.
Scholarships and funding
Funding
If you have the talent, ability and drive to study with us, we want to make sure you make the most of the opportunity – regardless of your financial circumstances.
Learn more about available funding opportunities or use our scholarship finder to explore our range of scholarships.
Postgraduate tuition fee loans
Scottish students may be eligible to apply to the Students Award Agency for Scotland (SAAS) for loans of up to £13,900 to cover tuition fees and associated living costs.
English students can apply for a loan of up to £12,858 each year as part of the Postgraduate Masters Loan Scheme.
Welsh students can apply for financial support of up to £19,255 as a combination of grant and loan from Student Finance Wales.
Northern Irish students can apply for a postgraduate tuition fee loan of up to £6,500 from Student Finance NI.
International students may be able to gain additional funding from loan providers.
Commonwealth Shared Scholarships
These scholarships are for candidates from developing Commonwealth countries, looking to study selected postgraduate Masters courses. Find out if you could be eligible for a Commonwealth Shared Scholarship.
Cost of living
If you’re domiciled in the UK, you can typically apply to your relevant funding body for help with living costs. This usually takes the form of student loans, grants or bursaries, and the amount awarded depends upon your personal circumstances and household income.
International (including EU) students won’t normally be able to claim living support through SAAS or other UK public funding bodies. You should contact the relevant authority in your country to find out if you’re eligible to receive support.
Payment options
We aim to be as flexible as possible, and offer a wide range of payment methods - including the option to pay fees by instalments. Learn more about how to pay
After you graduate
Our Masters in Education prepares you for a wide range of educational roles. You’ll graduate equipped with cutting-edge knowledge around policy, curriculum, digital learning and more.
These skills open up job opportunities in areas such as:
- education research
- education and government – policy/administration
- education consultancy
- education in the arts and heritage industries
- activist organisations
- private and community education providers
- school inspector for organisations like OFSTED
- curriculum development
You’ll also be well prepared for further study. Stirling offers a range of doctoral-level Education options, including our Doctor of Education (EdD) course or PhD Education study.
Recent graduates from the course are now working for employers that include:
- Schools
- Teacher training programmes
- Youth work organisations
- Charities
Other graduates have gone on to undertake PhDs or start their own education consultancies.
Example salaries
With an Education Masters degree, you can advance your career in a wide range of educational settings. Estimated salaries for some of the roles listed above include:
- Education consultant salaries range from £30,000 to £50,000 (Prospects).
- Salaries for OFSTED inspectors start at around £52,000 (National Careers Service).
- Curriculum developer salaries range from £29,000 to £44,000 (Glassdoor).