

BSc Geography/Statistics
About this course
Geography and statistics is a combination that pairs one of the most integrative and contextually rich of the social and natural sciences with one of the most rigorous and transferable of quantitative disciplines. Geography examines the surface of the Earth as the site of human living and natural processes, engaging with the variability of physical and human landscapes and the relationships that bind them together. It addresses questions ranging from coastal management and environmental hazards to migration, urban development, and global solidarity, developing both qualitative and quantitative analytical skills. Statistics provides the formal mathematical framework for reasoning under uncertainty, collecting and analysing data, and drawing reliable conclusions from complex and variable evidence, skills that are fundamental to the empirical work that geography demands. At the University of Glasgow, this four-year full-time degree with a year abroad develops both disciplines to a high level. You will study the full range of human and physical geography, developing skills in spatial analysis, fieldwork, quantitative and qualitative research, and independent inquiry, alongside the mathematical foundations and applied statistical methods of the statistics programme. The combination is particularly powerful for research and applied work in geography, where the ability to apply rigorous statistical methods to spatial, environmental, and social data is increasingly essential. The year abroad provides the opportunity to study geography and statistics in a different academic and cultural environment. Graduates of this combination are attractive to a wide range of employers who value the ability to collect, analyse, and interpret data in spatial and environmental contexts. Common career pathways include roles in data analysis, market research, environmental monitoring, urban and regional planning, GIS and spatial data analysis, public health, government statistical services, and research. The statistics component opens additional pathways in actuarial science, financial analysis, data science, and consulting. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in statistics, data science, environmental science, or geography, deepening their quantitative or applied expertise for research and specialist professional roles.
Syllabus & Modules
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