Foundation year:
We’ll give you an introduction to applied science, covering everything from pharmaceutical science to food science. It will include methods used by forensic scientists and how biomedical scientists diagnose and treat disease.
There will also be modules exploring physical and life sciences, along with maths and data handling. These will provide you with a foundation for higher level study.
We’ll equip you with skills to communicate science to a range of audiences, and will also explore academic and digital skills.
First year:
We will introduce you to molecular and cellular biology, looking at how organisms exist. You’ll also explore genetics and the role of DNA and RNA in explaining how we get to be who we are. After understanding what’s ‘normal’, we start to look at genetic damage and cancer.
You’ll look at the interaction between disease, health and the environment. Though climate change, for instance, mosquitoes have spread disease to new places.
Another module will cover the practical skills for life scientists, include lab safety and risk assessments. You will carry out some research to put your knowledge into action.
Second year:
With six hours in the lab each week, you’ll begin to explore more challenging questions.
To experience the feel of a real scientific workplace, we’ll also get you to work as part of a team in a simulated pathology lab. You could be doing a cross-match on a blood type or determining the bacteria on a slide. You’ll also develop professional skills such as time management and project management.
You’ll look at specific human diseases and how you detect and treat them. For one assignment, you’ll be given a patient’s history and diagnosis and will then piece together what happened.
Third year:
For diagnostic pathology, which brings together health and disease management, you’ll analyse case studies to reinforce your understanding and practice critical workplace skills.
We also cover current advances and bioethics. Science can pose huge ethical problems – are the risks, such as side-effects, worth the rewards? You could also be delving into vaccine challenges by studying data for measles outbreaks and vaccine rates.
You’ll complete an in-depth life science research project. It could anything from working on real cancer cells through to the role of AI in healthcare settings.
There are several optional modules as well, covering areas such as cancer biology and regenerative medicine and also immunotherapy.