

BSc Forensic Psychology with Foundation Year
About this course
Forensic psychology applies psychological theory and research to the legal system, the criminal justice process, and the behaviour of those who come into contact with both. It asks fundamental questions about why people commit offences, how reliable eyewitness testimony is, what interventions reduce reoffending, and how mental disorder intersects with criminal responsibility. Drawing on social, cognitive, developmental and clinical psychology, the discipline is rigorous and evidence-driven, moving well beyond the dramatic portrayals that often attract students to the subject in the first place. At the University of Derby you will study forensic psychology over four years on a full-time basis, with an integrated foundation year that builds the academic and analytical foundations you need before you progress into the core degree content. This structure makes the programme well suited to students who bring genuine curiosity and motivation but who may not have followed a traditional A-level route, with a typical tariff of 56 reflecting that breadth of welcome. A year abroad is built into the programme, offering the opportunity to study how different legal systems and cultural contexts shape approaches to crime, justice and offender rehabilitation. You will develop skills in research design, data analysis and critical evaluation, learning to assess psychological evidence and communicate findings clearly, both in academic writing and in the kind of reports that inform legal and clinical decisions. The investigative dimensions of the subject, covering offender profiling, risk assessment and the psychology of deception, sit alongside study of mental health, victimology and rehabilitation. Forensic psychology graduates pursue careers across the criminal justice system, including roles as trainee forensic psychologists in the prison and probation services, police forces, secure mental health settings and youth offending teams. Some move into research, policy or academic work. Becoming a fully chartered forensic psychologist requires further postgraduate training and supervised practice, and many graduates use their undergraduate degree as the foundation for that pathway. Others apply their skills in social work, counselling, human resources or community-based roles where understanding human behaviour in difficult circumstances is genuinely valued.
Syllabus & Modules
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