

BSc Geography (with a Year in Industry)
About this course
Geography is a discipline that spans the physical and human worlds, asking how places are shaped by natural processes and by the decisions and inequalities that characterise human societies. Physical geographers study landforms, climate systems, rivers, coasts, soils, and the ecosystems that depend on them. Human geographers examine how cities are organised, how populations move and change, how development and globalisation reshape places, and how environmental change interacts with social and political structures. What makes geography distinctive is its ambition to bridge these two domains and to think spatially about complex problems at scales from the local to the global. At the University of Chester you will study this four-year full-time degree, which includes a year in industry and a year abroad. The year in industry gives you the opportunity to work in a professional context, applying geographical skills in areas such as environmental consultancy, urban planning, GIS, sustainability, international development, or the public sector. The year abroad gives you first-hand experience of a different physical and human geography, developing the cross-cultural awareness and adaptability that employers value. Together these elements make this a particularly practice-oriented geography degree. Across the programme you will develop research skills in both quantitative and qualitative methods, GIS and remote sensing, fieldwork, and data analysis. The typical entry tariff is 104 points. Geography graduates work in an exceptionally wide range of careers, reflecting the breadth of the discipline. Environmental consultancy, urban and regional planning, GIS and spatial analysis, international development, emergency planning, the civil service, teaching, journalism, and the voluntary sector are all common destinations. The year in industry often leads directly to graduate employment. Further study in geography, environmental science, urban planning, development studies, or related fields is a natural progression for those who want to specialise.
Syllabus & Modules
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