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Archaeoinformatics
The new branch of study "Archaeoinformatics" aims at introducing the field in breadth and depth. It is designed to equip students with practical, theoretical and critical skills in established and emerging digital technologies in Archaeology, and support a career in academia, cultural resource management, museums, as well as public and private cultural heritage organisations. Students will have the opportunity to use the facilities of the Cologne Digital Archaeology Lab (CoDArchLab), which is equipped with teaching and study spaces, numerous workstations (PCs and Macs), commercial and open source software, as well as specialised computational imaging equipment. Some modules of the degree are taught in German and some in English.
Students will have the opportunity to:
Within the MA Archäologie students that wish to specialise in Archaeoinformatics have the option to choose between study profile A and B:
| Studienprofil A | Studienprofil B |
|---|---|
| includes 4 compulsory modules in Archaeoinformatics | includes 2 compulsory modules in Archaeoinformatics |
| SM 1: Core computing module | SM 1: Core computing module |
| SM 2: 3D documentation, modelling and reconstruction | SM 3a: 3D documentation modelling and reconstruction or |
| SM 4: GIS and spatial analysis | SM 3b: GIS and spatial analysis |
| SM 5: Placements and independent study | SM 1 and SM 3 modules of another subject: Classical Archaeology, Prehistoric Archaeology, Archaeology of the Roman Provinces, or Egyptology |
BM: Foundation module (Basismodul) in Archaeological Theory
AM*: Advanced module (Aufbaumodul)
EM*: Supplementary module (Ergänzungsmodul)
*These modules include further optional courses in Archaeology, Digital Humanities, Natural Sciences (incl. archaeological prospection) or Archaeoinformatics.
Nowadays the use of digital and computational methods pervades every aspect of archaeological knowledge production, especially data capture, documentation, visualisation and analysis. Graduates with a specialisation in Archaeoinformatics will be offered a wide range of opportunities for an academic career in Archaeology and Digital Humanities, and will be well-suited for positions in cultural resource management, museums, and public and private cultural heritage organisations. Furthermore, they will have completed relevant work placements and gained valuable real life working experience, which is very much appreciated by employers. The skills acquired in this study programme are highly transferrable to fields outside Archaeology, including the public and private sector.
Because of a limited number of places students who apply at the University to Cologne with the aim to study Archaeoinformatics are asked to also inform Anja Wutte about their preferred study profile in advance