51ºÚÁÏÉçÇø

Key facts

Entry requirements

112 or DMM

Full entry requirements

UCAS code

C8L3

Institution code

D26

Duration

3 yrs full-time

Three years full-time

Fees

2025/26 UK tuition fees:
£9,535*

2025/26 international tuition:
£16,750

Entry requirements

UCAS code

C8L3

Institution code

D26

Duration

3 yrs full-time

Three years full-time

Fees

2025/26 UK tuition fees:
£9,535*

2025/26 international tuition:
£16,750

BPS accredited and blending psychology and criminology, this course prepares you for a variety of roles in the criminal justice system.

This course combines psychology with criminology, exploring how the mind shapes behaviour and how psychological theories apply to criminal behaviour and societal reactions to crime. You’ll study human behaviour using scientific methods—observation, measurement, and testing—to understand how and why people act the way they do.

You’ll also develop key skills in critical thinking, communication, and scientific research, including data analysis and presentation, preparing you for careers where understanding societal issues is essential.

Graduates succeed in fields such as criminal justice, education, social work, research, advertising, human resources, and healthcare.

You’ll study core areas of psychology including biological, cognitive, developmental, and social psychology, with topics such as personality, intelligence, research methods, and historical perspectives. In your second and third years, you’ll have the opportunity to tailor your learning with elective modules in psychology and criminology.

  • BPS accredited: This course is accredited by the British Psychological Society (BPS), providing eligibility for Graduate Basis for Chartered Membership, a key step towards becoming a chartered psychologist.
  • Focused learning: Modules are delivered through our block teaching approach, so you can concentrate on one subject at a time.
  • Personalise your learning: Choose from a wide range of optional modules in Year 3 to align your studies with your interests and career goals.
  • Authentic facilities: Access dedicated psychology labs, research spaces, interview rooms, and observation suites, all supported by expert technicians.
  • Research-informed teaching: Learn from a team of academics with expertise in Health Psychology, Cognition, Neuroscience, and Criminology.
  • Global experience: Enrich your studies with 51ºÚÁÏÉçÇø Global, offering international opportunities like exploring mental health history in Paris or cross-cultural psychology in Kuala Lumpur.

Scholarships

51ºÚÁÏÉçÇø offers a range of undergraduate and postgraduate scholarships and bursaries to help you realise your academic ambitions.

International student scholarships

Find out about available international scholarships or visit our fees and funding page for more information.

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Saturday 29 March

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What you will study

Block 1: Professional Skills for Psychologists

Focuses on important academic and professional skills to help students transition to higher education studies and beyond.

Block 2: Core Areas and Research Methods 1

Provides a concise overview of the core paradigms in psychology, namely biological, cognitive and developmental psychology, while embedding quantitative research methods.

Block 3: Contemporary Issues in Criminology

This module engages you with a range of issues pertinent to complex problems in crime, harm and justice. You will be able to describe the characteristics of these phenomena and identify the links between crime, politics and society. Lastly, you will explore how power inequality and exclusion link with crime harm and victimisation drawing on issues such as race, class gender and sexuality.

Block 4: Psychology, Core Areas and Research Methods 2

Provides a concise overview of the core paradigms in psychology, namely social, personality and intelligence, and international perspectives, while embedding qualitative research methods.

Block 1: Mind, Brain and Behaviour

Builds on the core areas of the BPS guidelines to give students in-depth coverage of topics in biological and cognitive psychology. Practical sessions will enable students to develop their knowledge of more advanced research designs and quantitative research skills.

Block 2: Psychology Across the Lifespan

Applies the lifespan perspective to studying human development, emphasising the importance of all developmental stages and the interconnectivity between domains of change.

Block 3: Choice of modules

  • Psychology and Mental Health explores how we define, classify and explain psychological problems.
  • Psychology of Social Problems applies psychological theory and research to topics that cover current important debates and issues, directly informed by local, national and global priorities such as 51ºÚÁÏÉçÇø’s commitment to decolonization and net zero, and the United Nations’ Sustainable Developmental Goals.
  • Domestic Violence and Abuse considers the changing social, political and legal recognition of abuse and violence in intimate relationships and its impact.
  • Children and the Criminal Justice System explores contemporary issues for children and the criminal justice system, across community and custody contexts.
  • Animals and Criminology covers the different ways in which animals are the topic of criminological examination.
  • Introduction to Probation explores what is probation and where it sits within the wider criminal justice system and justice journeys.
  • Genocide explores a range of genocides and mass atrocities (where genocidal type actions have taken place but have not been legally defined as genocide, or where killings have taken place along with identity-based cleavages).
  • Restorative Justice explores the various origins and applications of Restorative Justice and the critical theoretical analysis which has followed.
  • Drugs and Crime focuses on exploring the social context of drugs, alcohol and substance use (primarily but not exclusively) in the UK and how it is controlled and managed in various settings with a focus on the criminal justice system.

Block 4: Personality and Social Psychology

Builds on the core areas of the BPS guidelines to give students in-depth coverage of topics in social psychology and personality and intelligence, and developing a research project on one of these topics.

Block 1, Part 1: Conceptual and Historical Issues in Psychology

Students will learn to contrast perspectives within significant conceptual debates in psychology, which are placed within their historical context.

Block 2: Module choice

  • Counselling Psychology
    Introduces the basic principles of counselling psychology and practice
  • Cognitive Neuropsychology
    Provides an overview of modern cognitive neuropsychological approaches to dysfunction following head injury and how theory is applied to case histories
  • Wellbeing and Positive Psychology
    Introduces the scientific study of optimal human functioning within areas such as happiness, wellbeing, personal strengths, positive emotions, optimism, hope and flow
  • Introduction to Data Science for Psychologists
    Introduces basic skills in computer programming and computational data processing, which are essential employability skills in data science and related fields.
  • Loss, Grief and Bereavement: Cultural, Social, and Therapeutic Perspectives
    Enables students to develop understanding of loss, grief and bereavement from theoretical, cultural, social and therapeutic perspectives
  • Psychology of Addiction
    Provides students an opportunity to critically explore addiction to licit and illicit substances and is theoretically grounded within a neuropsychosocial approach.
  • Psychology of Human Rights, Activism and Social Justice
    Provides students an opportunity to explore perspectives on local, regional, national, and transnational activism and protest and resistance; together with related issues such as prejudice, discrimination and stigma.
  • Psychology and Culture: Global Issues and International Perspectives
    Provides students with up-to-date knowledge about cross-cultural theories and models as they relate to the study of human behaviour to consider how and why behaviour differs across cultures.

Block 3: Emerging Issues in Criminology

This module aims to promote a culture of curious and continuous enquires as part of a lifelong learning mindset. You will explore immediate issues that emerge within society and examine these using knowledge and understanding from their undergraduate degree programme. 

Block 4: Psychology project

Gives you the opportunity to design and conduct an empirical study showing originality and expertise in methodological and data handling techniques.

Note: All modules are indicative and based on the current academic session. Course information is correct at the time of publication and is subject to review. Exact modules may, therefore, vary for your intake in order to keep content current. If there are changes to your course we will, where reasonable, take steps to inform you as appropriate.

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Our facilities

Hawthorn Building

Home to students and staff from Health and Life Sciences courses spanning pharmaceutical, healthcare, lab based and social science disciplines.

The facilities and spaces in the Hawthorn Building are designed to replicate current practice in health and life sciences, including contemporary analytical chemistry and formulation laboratories, audiology booths and nursing and midwifery clinical skills suites.

Purpose-built clinical skills areas allow you to practice in a safe environment. You will receive guidance and support from expert academic and technical staff.

Recently renovated, the Undercroft offers dedicated break out spaces and study spaces allowing for collaborative and interprofessional learning beyond the classroom.

Accreditations, awards or memberships

This course confers eligibility for the Graduate Basis for Chartered Membership of the British Psychological Society, provided the minimum standard of a second-class honours is achieved. This is your first step towards becoming a chartered psychologist.

BPS logo

British Psychological Society (BPS)

This course is accredited by the ).

What makes us special

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51ºÚÁÏÉçÇø Global

This is our innovative international experience programme which aims to enrich your studies and expand your cultural horizons – helping you to become a global graduate, equipped to meet the needs of employers across the world. Through , we offer a wide range of opportunities including on-campus and UK activities, overseas study, internships, faculty-led field trips and volunteering, as well as Erasmus+ and international exchanges.

Students on this course have undertaken 51ºÚÁÏÉçÇø Global trips to places such as Paris, where they explored the history of mental health and neuropsychology, and New York, which provided opportunities to consider inequality and segregation in the city. Students have travelled to Berlin to help support and assist refugees.

Where we could take you

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Placements

As part of this course you will have the opportunity to complete a self-sourced work experience placement, which helps you apply your knowledge of academic theory to practical applications. Students are encouraged to source opportunities in line with their own career ambitions from different schemes and providers both inside and outside of the university.

Our Careers Team can help you secure a placement through activities such as mock interviews and practice aptitude tests, and you will be assigned a personal tutor to support you throughout your placement. 

Students at a table at the Careers Hub

Graduate careers

Graduates from this course have gone on to work in a variety of roles across a range of well-respected sectors including the police service, criminal justice, education, teaching, social work, human resources, healthcare, research, and advertising.

Psychology graduate Shanley Lewis is now working as an assistant psychologist for the NHS, after she was inspired to pursue a career helping others when her dad suffered a stroke.

"Studying at 51ºÚÁÏÉçÇø was exceptional,” she explained. “It was challenging and I learned a lot about myself and had to develop skills such as time management, which still helps me today."

Many of our graduates progress into further postgraduate study, including courses such as Health Psychology MSc and Psychological Well-being MSc.

Course specifications

Course title

Psychology with Criminology

Award

BSc (Hons)

UCAS code

C8L3

Institution code

D26

Study level

Undergraduate

Study mode

Full-time

Start date

September

Duration

Three years full-time

Fees

2025/26 UK tuition fees:
£9,535*

2025/26 international tuition:
£16,750

*subject to the government, as is expected, passing legislation to formalise the increase.

Entry requirements

GCSEs

  • Five GCSEs at grade 4 or above including English and Maths

Plus one of the following:

A levels

  • A minimum of 112 points from at least two A levels

T Levels

  • Merit

BTEC

  • BTEC National Diploma - Distinction/Merit/Merit
  • BTEC Extended Diploma - Distinction/Merit/Merit

Alternative qualifications include:

  • Pass in the QAA accredited Access to HE overall 112 UCAS tariff with at least 30 L3 credits at Merit.
  • English GCSE required as separate qualification. Equivalency not accepted within the Access qualification. We will normally require students to have had a break from full-time education before undertaking the Access course.
  • International Baccalaureate: 30+ points

English language requirements

If English is not your first language an IELTS score of 6.5 overall is essential.

English language tuition, delivered by our British Council-accredited Centre for English Language Learning, is available both before and throughout the course if you need it.