

BSc Psychology with Sociology
About this course
Psychology and sociology are disciplines that each offer a distinct but complementary lens on human experience. Psychology focuses on the individual: how people think, feel, perceive, and behave, drawing on neuroscience, cognitive science, and experimental methods to understand mental processes and their variations. Sociology takes the wider view, examining how social structures, institutions, and inequalities shape collective life, asking how class, race, gender, and power operate across society. Together, they allow you to move between the individual and the social, understanding how inner lives are shaped by outer structures and how collective patterns emerge from individual action. At the University of Plymouth, this three-year, full-time programme allows you to develop genuine depth in both disciplines. You will study the core areas of psychology, building the scientific and empirical grounding required by the British Psychological Society, while also engaging seriously with sociological theory and the study of social inequalities, including poverty, social class, health, gender, sexuality, family, race, and ethnicity. The programme includes a foundation year for those who need additional academic preparation, a sandwich placement year for extended professional experience, a year abroad, and work placement integrated throughout the course. This combination of structural features gives you considerable practical and international exposure alongside your academic study. A typical entry tariff of 136 points reflects an academically demanding programme with a broad range of entry routes. Graduates with psychology and sociology go on to careers in social research, public health, mental health services, social work, education, human resources, community development, journalism, policy analysis, and the civil service. Many continue to postgraduate study in psychology, social work, sociology, or counselling, developing the specialist expertise needed for particular professional roles. The combination of individual and social perspectives the degree develops is especially valuable in careers that require both empathy and structural analysis.
Syllabus & Modules
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