Undergraduate courses search
Displaying 41-53 of 53 undergraduate courses
Returning to education? Lifelong learning runs degrees with a foundation year for people who don't have the usual qualifications.
Our flexible MBiolSci lets you tailor your degree to the areas of biological science you’re passionate about, linked to your career goals. If you're thinking about a career in research, this course involves a major research project in your fourth year.
Lead the tech revolution by creating, coding, and controlling the future of robotics. Combine mechanics, electronics, coding, control, and AI to design and build intelligent machines, automate systems, and shape tomorrow’s innovations.
Study mathematics, control, embedded systems and programming, then advance to system design, security and intelligent systems. Learn to design optimised hardware/software for computing, sensing, IoT, AI, telecoms and autonomous systems, with applied projects building career-ready skills.
Learn to understand emerging global challenges through the lens of social justice and environmental sustainability. Gain the skills to apply strategies that create real-world impact. This course prepares you for careers in NGOs, international organisations, policy, and sustainability and development consultancy.
This combination of linguistics and modern languages and cultures will deepen your understanding of how language works, how it changes, and how it shapes societies.
Explore the basis of life at the molecular level, from cells, proteins and DNA, to how these molecules interact to sustain life, before putting your knowledge and skills into practice in the lab.
Explore the basis of life at the molecular level, from cells, proteins and DNA, to how these molecules interact to sustain life. If you're thinking about a career in research, this course involves a major research project in your fourth year.
Develop your language skills and historical awareness while deepening your understanding of cultures and societies in Europe and beyond. Both disciplines involve imagination and empathy - interpreting the past, or other languages, requires us to appreciate and understand many points of view.
Sociology focuses on the relationships between individuals and society. It revolves around examining how personal attitudes and experiences relate to wider issues, understanding how group phenomena can give collective meaning to an individual's actions, and on social change and the ways forces, like globalisation, impact upon society.
This is the perfect course if you’re looking to understand how personal attitudes and experiences relate to wider issues in politics. You'll be able to explore modules from both disciplines, which means you can analyse key topics such as globalisation, migration and gender from a political perspective and then examine how issues such as these impact our society.
Contribute to our understanding of the human body and our ability to control it during health and disease. Learn about everything from genes to whole-body systems, before putting your knowledge and skills into practice in the lab.
Contribute to our understanding of the human body and our ability to control it during health and disease. If you're thinking about a career in research, this course involves a major research project in your fourth year.
This course is unique in offering you the opportunity to develop a broad understanding of the relationship between digital media and society from a social science perspective. You will use innovative digital methods to research digital media in society, and learn to make digital media products that focus on the needs of the user.