Criminology
Entry requirements
A level
Excluding General Studies
Access to HE Diploma
Pass Diploma (60 credits) with 45 credits at Level 3 including 15 credits at Distinction and 30 credits at Merit
GCSE/National 4/National 5
GCSE Grade 4/C In English Language
International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme
Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma (first teaching from September 2016)
Scottish Advanced Higher
Scottish Higher
T Level
UCAS Tariff
From 3 A-levels or equivalent Please note that not all qualifications within the tariff can be used to reach the required tariff entry criteria. For example AS Levels, Extended Project (EPQ), BTEC National Certificate and WJEC Applied Certificate are some of the qualifications we do not accept.
About this course
The course is a 3 year BA in Criminology. The course is aimed at students who may be critical of current criminal justice policies and who are seeking employment in either the criminal justice sector or associated fields. This course benefits from both a theoretical basis as well as a vocational and applied nature. There is a high level of face-to-face tuition delivered by practicing criminologists who are currently active in this field of study. Students will develop a comprehensive understanding of criminological theorising and will be able to apply this to current socio-economic policies and conditions. In order to achieve this, students will develop a critical understanding of the law in relation to current issues such as migration, terrorism, trafficking, drugs and mass incarceration. Criminology will be considered from a variety of different perspectives including feminist, critical, cultural, and race.
This course will be delivered over a 3 year period, with students undertaking 6 modules per year across 2 semesters. Students will be taught using a variety of digital media and resources. The final year will include a dissertation or research project and a research methods module. Students will have practical issues raised and develop relevant skills of analysis, research, problem-solving, and communication skills so as to resolve those issues but also the relevant skills to be able to communicate them.
Modules
There are two semesters per academic year. Each semester is 15 weeks long; 12 weeks face-to-face tuition, one week consolidation/revision and two weeks to complete the assessments. Students study three modules per semester. All modules are worth 20 credits. The course starts with a one week freshers/induction week.
Year 1:
Semester One:
• Foundations of Criminology
• Society and Punishment
• Media Crime and Control
Semester Two:
• Drugs in the Criminal Justice System
• Criminal Justice in Modern Britain
• Contemporary Criminology
Year 2:
Semester One:
• Gender Sexuality and Crime
• The Evolution of the Prison System
• Research Methods
Semester Two:
• Cybercrime
• Zemiology - Social Harms
• Youth, Crime and Media
Year 3:
Semester One
• Urban Criminology - The City and Globalisation
• Migration
Semester Two:
• Two options from; The Politics of Policing /Race Ethnicity and Religion/Terrorism
• Dissertation (40)
Assessment methods
A range of assessment methods will be used. Some will be by examination (two hours, 10 multiple choice questions and a choice of two from six long form questions). Some will be by coursework and some may be by way of oral or digital media presentation. This range of assessment methods reflects the learning outcomes of the programme.
Tuition fees
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The Uni
Birmingham
London Bloomsbury
Leeds
Manchester
The University of Law
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Sociology
Teaching and learning
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After graduation
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