Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The University of Liverpool is a teaching and research university in the city of Liverpool in England

Liverpool University

University of Liverpool

Coat of Arms of the University of Liverpool
Motto "These days of peace foster learning"
Established 1903 – University of Liverpool
1884 – gained University Status as part of Victoria University
1882 – University College Liverpool
Type Public
Endowment £121 million
Chancellor Professor Sir David King
Vice-Chancellor Sir Howard Newby
Visitor The Lord President of the Council ex officio
Students 20,655
Undergraduates 16,805
Postgraduates 3,860
Location Liverpool, England, UK
Coordinates: 53°24′22″N 2°58′01″W / 53.406°N 2.967°W / 53.406; -2.967
Campus Urban
Affiliations Russell Group, EUA, N8 Group, NWUA
Website www.liv.ac.uk
University of Liverpool official logo
Official Logo of the University of Liverpool

The University of Liverpool is a teaching and research university in the city of Liverpool, England. It is a member of the Russell Group of large research-intensive universities and the N8 Group for research collaboration. Founded in 1881 (as a university college), it is also one of the six original "red brick" civic universities. The university has produced nine Nobel Prize winners and offers more than 230 first degree courses across 103 subjects. It has an annual turnover of £340 million, including £123 million for research.

History


"Red brick" Victoria Building
The University was established in 1881 as University College Liverpool, admitting its first students in 1882. In 1884, it became part of the federal Victoria University. In 1894 Oliver Lodge, a professor at the University, made the world's first public radio transmission and two years later took the first surgical X-ray in the United Kingdom. The Liverpool University Press was founded in 1899, making it the third oldest university press in England. Students in this period were awarded external degrees by the University of London.
Following a Royal Charter and Act of Parliament in 1903, it became an independent university with the right to confer its own degrees called the University of Liverpool. The next few years saw major developments at the university, including Sir Charles Sherrington's discovery of the synapse and Professor William Blair-Bell's work on chemotherapy in the treatment of cancer. In the 1930s to 1940s Professors Sir James Chadwick and Sir Joseph Rotblat made major contributions to the development of the atomic bomb.
From 1943 – 1966 Allan Downie, Professor of Bacteriology, was involved in the eradication of smallpox.
In 1994 the university was a founding member of the Russell Group, a collaboration of twenty leading research-intensive universities, as well as a founding member of the N8 Group in 2004. In the 21st century physicists, engineers and technicians from the University of Liverpool were involved in the construction of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, working on two of the four detectors in the LHC.
The University has produced eight Nobel Prize winners, from the fields of science, medicine and peace. The Nobel laureates include the physician Sir Ronald Ross, physicist Professor Charles Barkla, the physiologist Sir Charles Sherrington, physicist Sir James Chadwick, chemist Sir Robert Robinson, physiologist Professor Har Gobind Khorana, physiologist Professor Rodney Porter and physicist Professor Joseph Rotblat. Sir Ronald Ross was also the first British Nobel laureate in 1902.
The term "red brick" was first coined by Liverpool professor Edgar Allison Peers (writing as Bruce Truscot) to describe the red brick built civic universities that were built in the UK, mostly in the latter part of the 19th century; these were characterised by Victorian buildings of red brick, such as Victoria Building, which was historically the administrative heart of the University.

Present


Abercromby Square, University of Liverpool
Liverpool has the sixth largest financial endowment of any UK university, valued at £110m, according to the Sutton Trust. It is a member of the Russell Group of Universities and a founding member of the Northern Consortium. The University has over 23,000 registered students, with almost 18,000 full-time registered students. The University has a broad range of teaching and research in both arts and sciences, and has a large medical school, which is associated with the neighbouring Royal Liverpool University Hospital. In September 2008, Sir Howard Newby took up the post of Vice-Chancellor of the University, following the retirement of Sir Drummond Bone.
The University has a Students' union to represent students' interests, known as the Liverpool Guild of Students.
Whilst Liverpool has a total of five universities, the colloquial term Liverpool University commonly refers to the University of Liverpool rather than any of the other four: Liverpool Hope University, Liverpool John Moores University, Edge Hill University, or LIPA.

Campus and facilities

The University is mainly based around a single urban campus approximately five minutes walk from Liverpool City Centre, at the top of Brownlow Hill and Mount Pleasant. The main site is divided into three faculties: Health and Life Sciences; Humanities and Social Sciences; and Science and Engineering. The Veterinary Teaching Hospital (Leahurst) and Ness Botanical Gardens are based on the Wirral Peninsula. There was formerly a research station at Port Erin on the Isle of Man until it closed in 2006. The Johnston Laboratories, a pathology research facility of repute during much of the 20th century, is now the biochemistry department of the university.

Academic reputation

In the Times Good University Guide 2011, the University of Liverpool was ranked 28th.[29]
In the Complete University Guide 2008, published in The Independent, the University of Liverpool was ranked 1st out of 113, based on nine measures, while The Times Good University Guide 2008 ranked Liverpool 34th out of 113 universities. The Sunday Times university guide recently ranked the University of Liverpool 27th out of 123. In 2010, "The Sunday Times has ranked University of Liverpool 29th  of 122 institutions nationwide. In 2008 the THE-QS World University Rankings rated University of Liverpool 99th best in the world, and 137th best worldwide in 2009. In 2011 the QS World University Rankings ranked the university in 123rd place, up 14. Times Higher Education are publishing a separate ranking soon.
UK University Rankings

2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
Times Good University Guide 28th
28th 28th 39th 41st 41st= 42nd 38th 37th= 40th 40th 38th 32nd 38th 24th= 22nd= 28th= 19th=
Guardian University Guide 39th 47th 44th 36th 47th 47th 45th 43rd 37th









Sunday Times University Guide


30th 27th 31st 29th 36th 31st= 33rd 31st 34th 32nd 29th




Daily Telegraph



41st


33rd









The Independent / Complete 32nd 34th 42nd 41st














The Financial Times





35th
32nd 36th 36th






QS World University Rankings 123 121
















Green issues

In 2008 the University of Liverpool was voted joint seventeenth greenest university in Britain by WWF supported company Green League. This represents an improvement after finishing 55th in the league table the previous year.
The position of the university is determined by point allocation in departments such as Transport, Waste management, sustainable procurement and Emissions amongst other categories; these are then transpired into various awards. Liverpool was awarded the highest achievement possible in Environmental policy, Environmental staff, Environmental audit, Fair trade status, Ethical investment policy and Waste recycled whilst also scoring points in Carbon emissions, Water recycle and Energy source.
Liverpool was the first among UK universities to develop their desktop computer power management solution, which has been widely adopted by other institutions. The university has subsequently piloted other advanced software approaches further increasing savings. The university has also been at the forefront of using the Condor HTC computing platform in a power saving environment. This software, which makes use of unused computer time for computationally intensive tasks usually results in computers being left turned on. The university has demonstrated an effective solution for this problem using a mixture of Wake-on-LAN and commercial power management software.

Sport


Sports Centre
The University of Liverpool has a proud sporting tradition and has many premier teams in a variety of sports. The current sporting project comes under the title of Club Liverpool. This athletic union offers nearly 50 types of sport ranging from football, rugby, cricket and hockey to others such as windsurfing, lacrosse and cheerleading. Many of the sports have both male and female teams and most are involved in competition on a national scale. BUCS is the body which organises national university competitions involving 154 institutions in 47 sports. Most sports involve travelling to various locations across the country, mainly on Wednesday afternoons.
Two other prominent competitions are the Christie Championships and the Varsity Cup. The Christie Cup is an inter-university competition between Liverpool, Leeds and Manchester. The Varsity Cup is a popular "derby" event between Liverpool John Moores University and the University of Liverpool.

Notable alumni

  • Dr Barham Ahmad Salih, Prime Minister of Kurdistan Regional Government
  • Sanjay Jha, Co-CEO Motorola,Inc. and CEO of Motorola's Mobile Devices business.
  • Clive Barker
  • Charles Barkla, Physicist and Nobel Laureate
  • Stephen Bayley
  • Torben Betts, award-winning playwright
  • Roger Bolton, broadcaster and television producer
  • Paula Byrne
  • Steve Coppell, footballer and manager
  • Alexander Critchley M.P. for Liverpool Edge Hill 1893 -1943.
  • Barry Horne (footballer), journalist and pundit
  • Frances Crook
  • Victoria Derbyshire
  • Carol Ann Duffy, Poet Laureate
  • Steve Firth, musician
  • Maxwell Fry, modernist architect
  • Rob Grant
  • Nick Grimshaw
  • Brian Hall, footballer
  • John Holt, physicist
  • Beverley Hughes MP PC
  • Dr Robert Roland Hughes, pioneer in Neuroscience and Electroencephalography
  • Frank Irving, aeronautical engineer, glider pilot and author
  • Sir Dawda Kairaba Jawara, First President and Prime Minister of The Gambia
  • Rory Jennings, actor
  • Syed Kamall
  • Brian Keaney, children's author
  • Sir Frank Kermode, literary critic
  • Professor Sir Ian Kershaw, historian
  • Peter Kilfoyle
  • Robert Legget
  • Sir Leigh Lewis, permanent secretary
  • Oliver W F Lodge
  • Chris Lowe, musician
  • Diarmaid MacCulloch, historian
  • Rex Makin, solicitor and philanthropist
  • Helen Marnie, member of the band Ladytron
  • Anna Maxwell Martin
  • Rod I. McAllister
  • Declan McManus (Honorus Causa)
  • Tony McNulty (Labour Minister)
  • Brian Millard, leader of Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council from 2005 to 2007
  • Margaret Murphy, crime writer and winner of First Blood Award
  • Doug Naylor
  • Sir John Neale, historian of Tudor England
  • Ernest Newman, music critic and biographer of Wagner
  • Lord Nicholls, retired Law Lord
  • Gordon Oakes
  • Stel Pavlou
  • David Andrew Phoenix OBE, Biochemist
  • Dee Plume and Sue Denim, musicians from the band Robots in Disguise
  • Phil Redmond, television producer
  • Wolfgang Rindler, physicist
  • Dame Stella Rimington, Director-General of MI5
  • Winifred Robinson, broadcaster
  • Patricia Routledge, actress
  • Amha Selassie of Ethiopia
  • Sir Robin Saxby
  • Scott Seaman-Digby, Conservative Councillor and Prospective Parliamentary Candidate
  • Maeve Sherlock OBE
  • Margaret Simey, social and political campaigner
  • F.E. Smith, 1st Earl of Birkenhead
  • Martin Smith, vehicle designer
  • Jon Snow, Channel 4 television news presenter
  • Olaf Stapledon, novelist and philosopher
  • James Stirling, architect
  • Lytton Strachey, biographer and essayist
  • Sir Michael Thompson, academic
  • Steve Voake, children's author
  • Tung Chee Hwa, first Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China
  • Baroness Walmsley, politician
  • "Professor" Sid Watkins, former Formula 1 chief medical officer
  • Sir David Weatherall, Regius Professor of Medicine (Oxford), 1992–2000
  • Laurence Westgaph, social historian and activist
  • Jim Woodcock, Professor of software engineering
  • Hossein Bashiriyeh, Iranian professor of Political science
  • Verna Wright, evangelist, physician and research scientist
  • Wade Barrett, wrestler and former WWE Intercontinental Champion

Nobel Prize winners

There have been nine Nobel Prize Laureates who have been based at the University during a significant point in their career.
  • Sir Ronald Ross (awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1908) for his work with malaria.
  • Professor Charles Barkla (awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1917) for discovering the electromagnetic properties of X-rays.
  • Sir Charles Sherrington (awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology/Medicine in 1932) for his research into neurons.
  • Sir James Chadwick (awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1935) for discovering neutrons.
  • Sir Robert Robinson (awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1947) for his research into anthocyanins and alkaloids.
  • Professor Har Gobind Khorana (awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology/Medicine in 1968) for his work on the interpretation of the genetic code and its function in protein synthesis.
  • Professor Rodney Porter (awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology/Medicine in 1972) for his discovery of the structure of antibodies.
  • Professor Joseph Rotblat (awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1995) for his efforts with nuclear disarmament.

Academic Departments

  • Ageing and Chronic Disease, Institute of
  • Archaeology Classics and Egyptology, School of (SACE)
  • Architecture, School of
  • Arts, School of
  • Biological Sciences, School of
  • Biomedical Sciences, School of
  • Biostatistics, Department of
  • Cancer Studies, School of
  • Chemistry, Department of
  • Civic Design, Department of
  • Combined Honours (Arts), School of
  • Combined Honours (SES), School of
  • Communication and Media, Department of
  • Computer Science, Department of
  • Cultures, Languages and Area Studies, School of
  • Dentistry, School of
  • Earth and Ocean Sciences, Department of
  • Ecology, Department of
  • Electrical Eng, Electronics & Computer Science, School of
  • Electrical Engineering and Electronics, Department of
  • Engineering, School of
  • English, School of
  • Environmental Sciences,School of
  • Eye and Vision Science
  • Geography, Department of
  • Health and Life Sciences, Faculty of
  • Health Sciences, School
  • Histories Languages and Cultures, School of
  • History, School of
  • Humanities and Social Sciences, Faculty of
  • Infection & Host Defence, School of
  • Infection and Global Health, Institute of
  • Integrative Biology, Institute of
  • Irish Studies, Institute of
  • Latin American Studies
  • Law, School of
  • Learning and Teaching, Institute of
  • Life Sciences, School of
  • Management School
  • Mathematical Sciences, Department of
  • Medical Education, School of
  • Medicine
  • Musculoskeletal Biology
  • Music, School of
  • Obesity and Endocrinology
  • Philosophy, Department of
  • Physics, Department of
  • Politics, Department of
  • Population, Community and Behavioural Sciences, School of
  • Psychology, Health and Society, Institute of
  • Psychology, School of
  • Reproductive and Developmental Medicine,
  • Science and Engineering, Faculty of
  • Sociology and Social Policy, Department of
  • Translational Medicine, Institute of
  • Tropical Medicine, Liverpool School of
  • Veterinary Science, School of

Courses

Undergraduate Courses

NameUCAS code
Accounting and Finance BA (Hons)N400
Aerospace Engineering BEng (Hons)H425
Aerospace Engineering MEng (Hons)H421
Aerospace Engineering with Pilot Studies BEng (Hons)H401
Aerospace Engineering with Pilot Studies MEng (Hons)H402
Anatomy and Human Biology BSc (Hons)B110
Ancient History and Archaeology BA (Hons)VV14
Ancient History BA (Hons)V110
Archaeology BA (Hons)V400
Archaeology BSc (Hons)V402
Archaeology of Ancient Civilisations BA (Hons)V401
Architecture BA (Hons)K100
Architecture MArchN/A
Artificial Intelligence BSc (Hons)G700
Artificial Intelligence with a Year in Industry BSc (Hons)G701
Astrophysics MPhysF521
Avionic Systems BEng (Hons)H430
Avionic Systems MEng (Hons)H431
Avionic Systems with a Year in Industry MEng (Hons)H433
Avionic Systems with Pilot Studies BEng (Hons)H490
Avionic Systems with Pilot Studies MEng (Hons)H491
Avionic Systems with Pilot Studies with Year in Industry BEng (Hons)H492
Avionic Systems with Pilot Studies with Year in Industry MEng (Hons)H493
Avionic Systems with Year in Industry BEng (Hons)H432


Biochemistry BSc (Hons)C700
Biochemistry with a year in Industry/Research BSc (Hons)C701
Biological and Medical Sciences BSc (Hons)C130
Biological Sciences (with a Foundation Year) leading to BSc (Hons)C108
Biological Sciences BSc (Hons)C100
Biological Sciences MBiolSciC900
Biology with a Year in Industry/Research BSc (Hons)C110
Bioveterinary Science BSc (Hons)D900
Business Economics BA (Hons)LN11
Business Studies and French BA (Joint Hons)NR11
Business Studies and German BA (Joint Hons)NR12
Business Studies and Hispanic Studies BA (Joint Hons)NR14
Business Studies and Italian BA (Joint Hons)NR13
Business Studies BA (Hons)N100
Business Studies with a Year in Industry BA (Hons)N101
NameUCAS code
Chemical Sciences BSc (Hons) (4 year route including a Foundation Year at Carmel College)F108
Chemistry BSc (Hons)F100
Chemistry MChemF102
Chemistry with a Year in Industry BSc (Hons)F111
Chemistry with Nanotechnology MChemF1F3
Chemistry with Research in Industry MChemF161
Civil and Structural Engineering MEng (Hons)H220
Civil Engineering BEng (Hons)H200
Civil Engineering MEng (Hons)H202
Classical Studies and a Modern Language BA (Joint Hons)QR89
Classical Studies BA (Hons)Q810
Classics BA (Hons)Q800
Combined Diploma in Dental Hygiene/TherapyN/A
Combined Honours BA (Hons) (three-subject first year)Y001
Combined Honours BA (Hons) (two-subject first year)L000
Combined Honours BSc (Hons)BCG0
Communication and Business Studies BA (Joint Hons)PN91
Communication Studies and Italian BA (Joint Hons)PR93
Communication, Media and Popular Music BA (Joint Hons)WN23
Comparative American Studies BA (Hons)T790
Computer Information Systems BSc (Hons)G500
Computer Information Systems BSc (Hons) (Foundation) (4 year route with Carmel College)G521
Computer Information Systems with a Year in Industry BSc (Hons)G502
Computer Science and Electronic Engineering BEng (Hons)HH66
Computer Science and Electronic Engineering MEng (Hons)GHK6
Computer Science and Electronic Engineering with a Year in Industry MEng (Hons)GHKP
Computer Science and Electronic Engineering with Year in Industry BEng (Hons)HG6L
Computer Science BSc (Hons)G400
Computer Science BSc (Hons) (Foundation) (4 year route with Carmel College)G408
Computer Science MEng (Hons)G401
Computer Science with a Year in Industry BSc (Hons)G403
Computing with a Year in Industry BSc (Hons)G402
Criminology and Sociology BA (Hons)LM39
NameUCAS code
Dental Hygiene and Dental Therapy BSc (Hons)B750
Dental Surgery BDSA200
Dental Surgery BDS (Graduate Entry)A201
Diagnostic Radiography BSc (Hons)B821
NameUCAS code
e-Finance BSc (Hons)N300
Earth Sciences entry route leading to BSc (Hons) (4 year route including a Foundation Year at Carmel College)F608
Ecology and Environment BSc (Hons)C192
Economics and Mathematics BA (Joint Hons)GL11
Economics BSc (Hons)L100
Egyptology BA (Hons)V410
Electrical Engineering and Electronics BEng (Hons)H603
Electrical Engineering and Electronics MEng (Hons)H606
Electrical Engineering and Electronics with a Year in Industry BEng (Hons)H605
Electrical Engineering and Electronics with Year in Industry MEng (Hons)H607
Electrical Engineering BEng (Hons)H620
Electrical Engineering with Year in Industry BEng (Hons)H624
Electronic and Communication Engineering BEng (Hons)H621
Electronic and Communication Engineering MEng (Hons)H646
Electronic and Communication Engineering with Year in Industry BEng (Hons)H622
Electronic and Communication Engineering with Year in Industry MEng (Hons)H623
Electronic Commerce Computing BSc (Hons)G490
Electronic Commerce Computing with a Year in Industry BSc (Hons)G491
Electronics BEng (Hons)H610
Electronics MEng (Hons)H602
Electronics with Year in Industry BEng (Hons)H613
Electronics with Year in Industry MEng (Hons)H614
Engineering BEng (Hons)H100
Engineering Foundation BEng (Hons) (4 year route including a Foundation Year at Carmel College)H109
Engineering MEng (Hons)H101
Engineering with Product Design BEng (Hons)H1WF
Engineering with Product Design MEng (Hons)H1WG
English and Communication Studies BA (Joint Hons)QP39
English and French BA (Joint Hons)QR31
English and German BA (Joint Hons)QR32
English and Hispanic Studies BA (Joint Hons)QR34
English and Modern History BA (Joint Hons)QV31
English and Philosophy BA (Joint Hons)QV35
English BA (Hons)Q300
Environment and Planning BA (Hons)K4L7
Environmental Science BScF750
Evolutionary Anthropology BSc (Hons)V4B1
NameUCAS code
Film Studies (European) and a Modern Language BA (Joint Hons)PR39
Foundation to Health and Veterinary Studies (Year 0)Apply to School
French and German BA (Joint Hons)RR12
French and Hispanic Studies BA (Joint Hons)RR14
French and Italian BA (Joint Hons)RRC3
French and Mathematics BA (Joint Hons)GR11
French BA (Hons)R120
NameUCAS code
Genetics BSc (Hons)C400
Genetics with a Year in Industry/Research BSc (Hons)C410
Geography and Archaeology BA (Joint Hons)LV74
Geography BA (Hons)L700
Geography BSc (Hons)F800
Geography BSc (Hons) (4 year route including a Foundation Year at Carmel College)F808
Geology (North America) MESci (Hons)F603
Geology and Geophysics MESci (Hons)F641
Geology and Physical Geography BSc (Hons)F6F8
Geology and Physical Geography MESci (Hons)FF68
Geology BSc (Hons)F600
Geology MESci (Hons)F601
Geophysics (Geology) BSc (Hons)F640
Geophysics (North America) MESci (Hons)F660
Geophysics (Physics) BSc (Hons)F656
German and Hispanic Studies BA (Joint Hons)RR24
German and Italian BA (Joint Hons)RR23
German BA (Hons)R220
NameUCAS code
Hispanic Studies and Italian BA (Joint Hons)RR34
Hispanic Studies BA (Hons)RR45
History (Modern) and Politics BA (Joint Hons)LV21
History (Social and Economic) BA (Hons)V340
History and French BA (Joint Hons)VR11
History and German BA (Joint Hons)VR12
History and Hispanic Studies BA (Joint Hons)VR14
History and Italian BA (Joint Hons)VR13
History BA (Hons)V100
NameUCAS code
International Business BA (Hons)N120
International Politics and Policy BA (Hons)L240
Internet Computing BSc (Hons)G501
Internet Computing with a Year in Industry BSc (Hons)G503
Irish Studies and English BA (Joint Hons)QQ53
Irish Studies and History BA (Joint Hons)QV51
Irish Studies and Politics BA (Joint Hons)QL52
Irish Studies BA (Hons)Q540
NameUCAS code
Latin American and Hispanic Studies BA (Joint Hons)RT47
Latin American Studies BA (Hons)T701
Law LLB (Hons)M100
Law with Accounting and Finance LLB (Hons)M101
Law with Business Studies LLB (Hons)M102
Law with Criminology LLB (Hons)M103
Law with French LLB (Hons)M104
Law with German LLB (Hons)M105
Law with Italian LLB (Hons)M106
Law with Philosophy LLB (Hons)M107
Law with Spanish LLB (Hons)M108
NameUCAS code
Marine Biology BSc (Hons)C160
Marketing BA (Hons)N500
Mathematical Physics MMathFGH1
Mathematical Sciences entry route leading to BSc (Hons) (4 year route including a Foundation Year at Carmel College)G108
Mathematical Sciences with a European Language BSc (Hons)G1R9
Mathematics and Business Studies BSc (Joint Hons)GN11
Mathematics and Computer Science BSc (Joint Honours)GG14
Mathematics and Philosophy BA (Joint Hons)GV15
Mathematics and Statistics BSc (Hons)GG13
Mathematics BSc (Hons)G100
Mathematics MMathG101
Mathematics with Education BSc (Hons)G1X3
Mathematics with Finance BSc (Hons)G1N3
Mathematics with Ocean and Climate Studies BSc (Hons)G1F7
Mechanical and Materials Engineering BEng (Hons)HJ35
Mechanical and Materials Engineering MEng (Hons)HJ3M
Mechanical Engineering BEng (Hons)H300
Mechanical Engineering MEng (Hons)H301
Mechanical Engineering with Business BEng (Hons)H3N2
Mechanical Engineering with Business MEng (Hons)H3NF
Mechatronics and Robotic Systems BEng (Hons)HH67
Mechatronics and Robotic Systems MEng (Hons)HH76
Mechatronics and Robotic Systems with Year in Industry BEng (Hons)HHP7
Mechatronics and Robotic Systems with Year in Industry MEng (Hons)HHR6
Medical Electronics and Instrumentation BEng (Hons)H673
Medical Electronics and Instrumentation MEng (Hons)H675
Medicinal Chemistry BSc (Hons)F1B2
Medicinal Chemistry with Pharmacology MChemF1BF
Medicine and Surgery MBChBA100
Medicine and Surgery MBChB (based at Lancaster University)A105
Medicine and Surgery MBChB (Graduate Entry)A101
Microbial Biotechnology BSc (Hons)C5J7
Microbiology BSc (Hons)C500
Modern European Languages BA (Hons)T900
Modern Language Studies and Business BA (Joint Hons)RN91
Modern Language Studies and English BA (Joint Hons)RQ93
Modern Language Studies and History BA (Joint Hons)RV92
Modern Language Studies and Philosophy BA (Joint Hons)RV95
Modern Language Studies BA (Joint Hons)R910
Molecular Biology BSc (Hons)C720
Molecular Biology with a Year in Industry/Research BSc (Hons)C721
Music/Popular Music BA (Hons)W300
NameUCAS code
Nursing BN (Hons)B700
NameUCAS code
Occupational Therapy BSc (Hons)B920
Ocean Sciences BSc (Hons)F700
Oceans, Climate and Physical Geography BSc (Hons)FF78
Orthoptics BSc (Hons)B520
NameUCAS code
Pharmacology BSc (Hons)B210
Philosophy and French BA (Joint Hons)VR51
Philosophy and German BA (Joint Hons)VR52
Philosophy and Hispanic Studies BA (Joint Hons)VR54
Philosophy and Italian BA (Joint Hons)VR53
Philosophy and Politics BA (Joint Hons)LV25
Philosophy BA (Hons)V500
Physical Sciences entry route leading to BSc (Hons) (4 year route including a Foundation Year at Carmel College)F308
Physics and Mathematics BSc (Joint Hons)FG31
Physics BSc (Hons)F300
Physics for New Technology BSc (Hons)F352
Physics MPhysF303
Physics with Astronomy BSc (Hons)F3F5
Physics with Medical Applications BSc (Hons)F350
Physics with Nuclear Science BSc (Hons)F390
Physiology BSc (Hons)B120
Physiotherapy BSc (Hons)B160
Politics and Communication Studies BA (Joint Hons)LP29
Politics and International Business BA (Joint Hons)LN21
Politics BA (Hons)L210
Psychology BSc (Hons)C800
Psychology BSc (Hons) (2+2 programme with Foundation Element)C801
Pure Mathematics BSc (Hons)G110
NameUCAS code
Radiotherapy BSc (Hons)B822
NameUCAS code
Sociology and Social Policy BA (Hons)LL34
Sociology BA (Hons)L302
Software Development BSc (Hons)G610
Software Development with a Year in Industry BSc (Hons)G611
NameUCAS code
Theoretical Physics MPhysF344
Town and Regional Planning MPlanK400
Tropical Disease Biology BSc (Hons)C111
NameUCAS code
Urban Regeneration and Planning BA (Hons)K430
NameUCAS code
Veterinary Science BVScD100
Veterinary Science with Intercalated Honours YearD101
NameUCAS code
Zoology BSc (Hons)C300

Postgraduate 

Advanced Chemical Sciences MSc/PGDip/PGCert
  • Organic Chemistry With Catalysis
  • Nanoscale With Interfacial Chemistry
  • Nanoscale With Materials Chemistry
  • Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry
Advanced Chemical Sciences MRes
  • Organic Chemistry with Catalysis
  • Nanoscale with Interfacial Science
  • Nanoscale with Materials Chemistry
  • Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry
Advanced Computer Science MSc/PGDip/PGCert
Advanced Computer Science with Internet Economics MSc/PGDip/PGCert
Advanced Engineering Materials MSc
Advanced Manufacturing Systems and Technology MSc
Advanced Practice in Healthcare MSc/PGDip/PGCert
Advanced Science MSc/PGDip/PGCert
  • Computer Sciences Pathway - Algorithmics
  • Computer Sciences Pathway - Artificial Intelligence
  • Physical Sciences - Astrophysics Pathway
  • Physical Sciences - Nanoscale and Condensed Matter Physics Pathway
  • Physical Sciences - Nuclear Physics Pathway
  • Physical Sciences - Particle Physics Pathway
Advanced Science MRes
  • Computer Sciences pathway - Algorithmics
  • Computer Sciences pathway - Artificial Intelligence
  • Computer Sciences pathway - Data Mining
  • Computer Sciences pathway - Safety Critical Systems
  • Physical Science Pathway - Astrophysics
  • Physical Science Pathway - Nanoscale and Condensed Matter
  • Physics Physical Science Pathway - Nuclear Physics
  • Physical Science Pathway - Particle Physics
Aerospace and Mechanical Systems Engineering MSc
Ancient History MA
Applied Criminal Justice Research MA
Applied Linguistics MA
Archaeology MA
Archaeology MSc
Architecture MA
Archives and Records Management MA
Art, Aesthetics and Cultural Institutions MA

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