The Master of Letters degree is a postgraduate degree awarded by a few select British, predominantly within the ancient English and Scottish universities.
England Within the English University system MLitt degrees are not offered in all institutions, nor in all disciplines. An M.Litt. may be awarded as an alternative to the
Master of Philosophy research degree and is usually placed higher in the hierarchy; starting with degrees such as the postgraduate
Master of Arts (MA) and
Master of Science (MSc), then Master of Philosophy, and finally Master of Letters. Note that this varies from the position in Scotland. Students attending English Universities may apply for an MLitt in the first instance; for others who have completed two years of a Doctorate (such as a
PhD or
DPhil) and who do not wish to, or cannot, continue with the final year(s), there is the option to write up their completed research so far and graduate with an MLitt degree.
Scotland The MLitt is awarded within Scottish Universities on its own merit on the basis of a one-year taught, or two-year research course of postgraduate study rather than as a sub-PhD compensatory alternative as in the English model. This designation also distinguishes postgraduate degrees from the award of the
undergraduate degree of Master of Arts by the
ancient universities of Scotland (St Andrews, Aberdeen, Glasgow, Edinburgh). Postgraduate study for both taught and research degrees at this level may be undertaken on campus or by distance learning, depending on the university. For example, the
University of the Highlands and Islands and the
University of Aberdeen both offer full MLitt courses by distance learning. The taught MLitt requires study of 90
ECTS credits, including a research-led dissertation (often 30 credits) usually of 15,000-18,000 words in length. The MLitt (Research) may be awarded to a student whose postgraduate course of special study and research represents a significant contribution to knowledge. The period of full-time study is two years and the thesis is normally 40,000–70,000 words. In all cases, the MLitt is usually awarded in
Arts,
Divinity,
Fine Art,
Humanities, or
Social Sciences. The
University of Edinburgh does not designate degrees as MLitt, normally offering the degree of MSc for a one-year taught postgraduate degree. It offers research degrees as either a one-year Masters by Research, two-year Master of Philosophy, or a PhD. == United States ==