Active learning
Real-world experience
Earn professional recognition
 
     
     
     
    Details
Year 1
 
    Core modules
  
  
          CRM4002
          
          
            Introduction to Criminological Theory
              20 credits
          
        
This module introduces students to criminological theory. The module addresses the importance of theory in criminology, critically examines a range of criminological theories, and applies criminological thought to a variety of practical concerns throughout history, including contemporary social life.
100% Coursework
          CRM4005
          
          
            Responses to Crime: An Introduction
              20 credits
          
        
This module provides an overview of responses to crime in contemporary Britain. It examines responses to crime primarily in England & Wales, drawing upon comparative examples to explore similarities and differences. Its main focus is upon the criminal justice process, but the focus is also extended to approaches to crime founded upon different rationalities, such as restorative justice and risk management. This module will include two 2-hour talks that introduce our School and programme level employability related opportunities and support, including details of the optional placement year.
100% Coursework
          PSYC421
          
          
            Cognitive Psychology
              20 credits
          
        
This module introduces some of our fundamental mental processes, such as learning, memory, attention and reasoning. Across a series of lectures and practical workshops you’ll explore some of the core concepts in cognition – designing and testing your own experiments to build skills and experience in basic research skills, such as problem solving, hypothesis testing, data collection and the communication of your findings
100% Coursework
          PSYC422
          
          
            Clinical and Developmental Psychology
              20 credits
          
        
This module will establish an understanding of clinical and developmental psychology. You will learn about contemporary issues relating to mental health and neurodiversity, as well as the history of how conditions are classified, diagnosed, and treated. You also examine how cognitive, social and emotional abilities develop and change over childhood, informing our understanding of their origins and limitations on maturation.
100% Examinations
          PSYC424
          
          
            Social Psychology
              20 credits
          
        
Introducing fundamental topics forming the basis of social psychology you will learn about the formation of personality, relationships and our perceptions and prejudices of others, as well as our understanding of how particular social situations affect our thoughts and behaviours. Embedded workshops provide practical training on the research skills and techniques specific to the study of social psychology.
100% Coursework
          PSYC425
          
          
            Perception and the Brain
              20 credits
          
        
In this module you will learn about the biological bases of behaviour and the mechanisms of sensory perception. One strand of lectures focuses on the fundamentals of neuroscience, brain anatomy and function, and research methods in neuroscience including studies of disorders of the mind and brain. Another lecture strand concerns perception, with a particular focus on the mechanisms of human vision and hearing.
100% Examinations
          HIPL400
          
          
            Interprofessional Learning 1
          
        
Year 2
 
    Core modules
  
  
          CPIE202
          
          
            Career and Placement Planning
          
        
          CRM5002
          
          
            Theorising Crime and Harm
              20 credits
          
        
This module takes recent developments in criminological theory and analyses the potential for criminology as a discipline to contribute to understanding, contextualising and countering some of the greatest challenges facing society and the planet today. The emphasis on harm tests the boundaries of mainstream criminology, and encourages students to think beyond social and legal constructions of crime.
100% Coursework
          CRM5004
          
          
            Critical Perspectives on Crime Control
              20 credits
          
        
This module examines a range of critical social scientific perspectives which have sought to make sense of crime control within its wider social context and in terms of its wider social significance. It considers the contributions of key social science theorists such as Stanley Cohen, David Garland, and Loic Wacquant and others whose work has focused upon crime control, and it seeks to apply their core ideas in order to illuminate our understanding of contemporary features of policy and practice.
100% Coursework
          HIPL500
          
          
            Interprofessional Learning 2
          
        
          PSYC523
          
          
            Designing and Conducting Research
          
        
          PSYC524
          
          
            Qualitative and Mixed Methods for Research
          
        
Here you will develop your understanding of both qualitative and quantitative research methods through practical experience. Across a series of workshops, you will formulate a research question, design a study, collect data, and learn about a range of qualitative and statistical techniques to analyse your findings. This will provide increasing confidence with the research process, project management, and ethics.
          PSYC525
          
          
            Individual Differences, Social, and Developmental Psychology
          
        
This module provides an in-depth and critical understanding of research in individual differences, social and developmental psychology. Here you will critically examine the leading theories that compete to explain our social behaviour and underlying psychological processes, how they developed, and why they can lead to such different outcomes.
          PSYC526
          
          
            Cognition and Biological Psychology
          
        
This module provides a comprehensive examination of the core topics in cognitive and biological psychology. Here you will learn about the key phenomena, theories and biological mechanisms that underpin our cognitive processes and emergent behaviour in learning, memory, reasoning, and language.
Year 3
 
    Core modules
  
  
          CPIE501
          
          
            Placement: Psychology
              0 credits
          
        
In this professional placement you will develop and apply your psychological knowledge in the workplace, gaining invaluable working experience and connections in a psychological discipline. Our placement team will help you to secure a placement in a vocation of your choosing and, alongside your personal tutor, will guide and support you to achieve your desired learning outcomes and vocational experiences.
Final year
How does it work?
 
    Core modules
  
  
          PSYC600
          
          
            Careers Planning
              0 credits
          
        
This zero-credit module is home to careers talks.
          PSYC601
          
          
            Current Topics in Psychology 1
              20 credits
          
        
In this module you have a free choice of two topics drawn from across the breadth of the psychology, delivered by specialist academic or practitioner from that field. This choice will allow you to focus and develop an in-depth critical appreciation, knowledge, and skill base in areas of particular interest and utility to you and your future vocation.
50% Coursework
50% Examinations
          PSYC603
          
          
            Current Topics in Psychology 3
              20 credits
          
        
In this module you have a free choice of two topics drawn from across the breadth of the psychology, delivered by specialist academic or practitioner from that field. This choice will allow you to focus and develop an in-depth critical appreciation, knowledge, and skill base in areas of particular interest and utility to you and your future vocation.
50% Coursework
50% Examinations
          PSYC605
          
          
            Research Project
              40 credits
          
        
In this module you will undertake a comprehensive research project to investigate an original psychological research question in an area of your own choosing. Research training is provided across a wide range of workshops such that, with close support from your research supervisor, you will design and conduct an experiment or study to address your question, analyse data and communicate your findings verbally and in writing.
80% Coursework
20% Practicals
          HIPL600
          
          
            Interprofessional Learning 3
          
        
    Optional modules
  
  
          CRM6003
          
          
            Social Change and Justice
              20 credits
          
        
This module examines how attitudes towards crime and justice have changed and developed over time. It will demonstrate the importance of historically and socially contextualising specific crimes in order to increase the understanding of their contemporary relevance, alongside examining the political and economic context.
100% Coursework
          CRM6008
          
          
            Leisure, Consumerism and Harm
              20 credits
          
        
This module explores contemporary developments within the study of leisure and consumerism, offering a theoretically informed understanding of key issues at the forefront of the discipline. Students will have the opportunity to study the changing nature of criminology’s engagement with leisure against a backdrop of global consumer capitalism.
100% Coursework
          CRM6015
          
          
            Global Conflict, Genocide and Crimes of the State 
          
        
This module explores the issue of global (in)security in the context of state and non-state conflict. Theoretical and conceptual understandings of crime, violence, victimisation and justice will be used to interrogate acts such as war crimes and terrorism. The module will address the history of such crimes and will critically explore State and international responses.
          CRM6016MX
          
          
            Green Criminology: Climate Justice and the Planetary Crisis
          
        
This module will address theoretical perspectives, methodological issues, and empirical research related to the field of green criminology, including applied concerns, such as policy and social/political praxis, through a range of concepts, topics, and themes that are central to green criminology.
          CRM6009
          
          
            Fear, Crime and Control in the City
              20 credits
          
        
This module critically examines steadfast and emergent social issues at the interplay between social control and the social, providing students with a critical understanding of how the social is regulated socially, culturally and legally. We will do this by looking as social issues in urban space. We will explore meanings, cultural significance, and political consequences from a criminological perspective.
100% Coursework
- MPsych (Hons) Psychology
- MPsych (Hons) Psychology with Clinical Psychology
- MPsych (Hons) Psychology with Human Neuroscience
- BSc (Hons) Psychology
- BSc (Hons) Psychology with Early Childhood Studies
- BSc (Hons) Psychology with Education
- BSc (Hons) Psychology with Human Biology
- BSc (Hons) Psychology with Sociology
Experience
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A world of opportunity
 
        My eyes have been opened to so many areas of psychology that I love, psychology graduates can go into so many areas – if something involves people, then at some level psychology is involved.
 
        A great lecturer once said that psychology is the subject of everything. It is a topic that does not restrict your interests, but it allows them to grow. What I also love about the course is it not only provides you with the content, but it also equips you with skills that you can take into the real world. You learn to problem solve, analyse data, work as a team, and build a bank of knowledge for many future careers.
Psychology Research Apprenticeship Scheme
 
      Experiential learning
 
        Real-world experience
 
The University is really good at preparing you for placement, running you through skills courses and teaching how to do interviews, how to go out and get placements and the etiquettes of being in different workplaces.
 
A placement year is a great way to bridge the gap between academic study and professional life. Dr Jon Rhodes and I have been working with ҹèÊÓÆµ Argyle youth academy squad developing workshops that aim to help players use Functional Imagery Training (FIT) to develop skills using vivid mental imagery to build resilience and emotional regulation.
Shape the psychologist you want to become
- 
                    ÆClinical psychology 
- 
                    ÆForensic psychology 
- 
                    ÆDevelopmental psychology 
- 
                    ÆHealth psychology 
- 
                    ÆOccupational psycholgy 
- 
                    ÆCognitive psychology 
- 
                    ÆSocial psychology 
- 
                    ÆNeuro psychology 
 
Throughout first and second year, I developed an understanding of what topics I was interested in, so customising what I studied in my final year allowed me to build on these interests further. Personally, this was focused around clinical psychology and mental health.
Taught by experts
Meet your lecturers
 
                  
                      
                        Professor Jeremy Goslin
                      
                      Head of School of Psychology
                    
 
                  
                      
                        Dr Gustav Kuhn
                      
                      Associate Head of School for Marketing, Recruitment and Strategic Growth
                    
 
                  
                      
                        Dr Chris Longmore
                      
                      Lecturer in Psychology
                    
Join our psychology society 'PsySoc'
 
      Life in ҹèÊÓÆµ
The overall vibe of the city is perfect. You are by the sea so it is still laid back, but you have all the conveniences of living in a city.
Current student
 
 
Careers
Being a mum of three sometimes can be challenging but with the support of the academic staff and university I am now graduating and looking forward to starting my Masters in Advanced Psychology at ҹèÊÓÆµ.
 
        Fees and funding
Tuition fees
£9,535 per year
£795 per 10 credits
    Tuition fee price changes
  
  £18,650 per year
£19,200 per year
    Tuition fee price changes
  
  Additional costs
Fund your studies
Supporting students with the cost of living
 
      Apply
Entry requirements
112 UCAS points
You may be eligible for a contextual offer
    GCSE
  
  
    A levels
  
  
    BTEC
  
  If you hold a BTEC qualification it is vital that you provide our Admissions team with details of the exact modules you have studied as part of the BTEC. Without this information we may be unable to process your application quickly and you could experience significant delays in the progress of your application to study with us. Please explicitly state the full list of modules within your qualification at the time of application.
    All Access courses
  
  
    T level
  
  
    International Baccalaureate
  
  Extended entry requirements
- English language requirements .
- We welcome applicants with international qualifications. To view other accepted qualifications please refer to our tariff glossary .
- Students under the age of 18 at the start of the programme are eligible to apply for this programme.
Ready to apply?
CL86
P60
3 years 
 (+ optional placement)
Full-time
ҹèÊÓÆµ
Entry requirements
112 UCAS points
BSearch entry requirements for your country
English language requirements
Ready to apply?
Need support with your application?
- Personal statement guidance
- student visa support
- travel and arrival information
- and more.
CL86
P60
3 years 
 (+ optional placement)
Full-time
ҹèÊÓÆµ
Other routes to this course
Visit us at an undergraduate on-campus open day
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       Championing and supporting a culture of participation and inclusivity
            Championing and supporting a culture of participation and inclusivity
 
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
                  