

MEng Electronic Engineering with a Year Abroad
About this course
Electronic engineering is the discipline concerned with the design and development of devices and systems that use electrical signals to process information, control machines, and enable communication. From the microprocessors in smartphones and the control systems in aircraft to the sensors in medical devices and the circuits in renewable energy converters, electronic engineering underpins almost every technology that defines modern life. Adding a year abroad to this degree programme places you in an international academic environment and broadens your professional outlook in a genuinely meaningful way. At the University of Nottingham, you will study the fundamental principles of electronics, including circuit theory, semiconductor physics, signal processing, digital systems, communications, and embedded computing. A strong mathematical foundation runs through the programme, equipping you to model and analyse the behaviour of electronic systems with precision. Laboratory work and design projects develop your practical skills alongside the theoretical understanding, and you will learn to move from a specification to a working circuit or system through a systematic engineering process. The programme includes a foundation year, which ensures that students entering from a wide range of qualifications have the secure grounding in physics and mathematics that the later years of study require. The year abroad component enriches your understanding of how electronic engineering is practised in different national contexts and builds the personal adaptability that is increasingly valued in a profession where international collaboration is the norm. The typical entry tariff is 136 UCAS points, and the programme is studied full time over four years. Graduates move into careers in electronics design, embedded systems, communications, power electronics, semiconductor development, and defence, as well as roles in management consultancy and finance. Postgraduate study in electronic engineering, photonics, wireless communications, or related areas is also a natural progression.
Syllabus & Modules
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