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BSc Life Sciences with a Modern Language
About this course
Life sciences covers the biological disciplines that study living organisms, from the molecular mechanisms within individual cells to the ecological systems that sustain life on earth. The addition of a modern language to this degree reflects the reality that biological research, pharmaceutical development, and environmental science are international endeavours, carried out through global collaborations and communicated across linguistic boundaries. Combining scientific training with language fluency opens doors that neither discipline would provide alone. At the University of Manchester, this four-year programme combines rigorous biological science with structured language study. In the life sciences strand, you will build a thorough grounding in the core biological disciplines, including cell biology, genetics, physiology, and ecology, developing both the conceptual knowledge and the laboratory skills that scientific careers require. The modern language component develops your linguistic competence to a level that can be applied professionally, preparing you to work and communicate in an international scientific or healthcare context. The programme includes a foundation year to develop academic and scientific skills, a sandwich year providing extended professional experience in a relevant industry or research setting, and work placement opportunities throughout, all of which build the professional credentials that employers look for alongside academic achievement. Graduates are well positioned for careers in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and healthcare industries, where the combination of scientific knowledge and language ability is a genuine advantage in working with international colleagues, partners, and regulators. Research roles in universities and public health bodies are another pathway, particularly for those who continue to postgraduate study. The life sciences industry is heavily international, and graduates who can work comfortably in another language alongside English have broader options in terms of where they work and what roles they can take on. Teaching science or modern languages, science communication, and roles in international health organisations are further possibilities.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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