

BSc Sport and Exercise Science
About this course
Sport and exercise science applies the principles of biology, physics and psychology to understanding how the human body performs, adapts and recovers under physical demand. It is a discipline that draws on physiology, biomechanics and psychology in roughly equal measure, exploring everything from the cellular mechanisms of muscle contraction to the psychological strategies that help athletes manage pressure and sustain motivation. As scientific approaches to performance, health and physical activity have become central to sport at every level, the discipline has grown rapidly in both academic rigour and professional relevance. At the University of Northampton, this part-time programme covers the full breadth of the discipline in a format that allows you to study while managing other commitments. You will engage with biomechanics, exploring how movement is produced and how forces act on the body during sport and exercise. You will study exercise physiology, understanding how the cardiovascular, respiratory and muscular systems respond to training and how those responses can be optimised. You will also examine the psychology of sport and exercise, looking at motivation, attention, anxiety and behaviour change. Laboratory and practical work are central to the programme, as the university's own description emphasises, grounding your scientific understanding in hands-on investigation and real performance contexts. The degree develops both scientific literacy and the practical skills needed to work with athletes, exercisers and clinical populations. You will learn to design and evaluate training programmes, conduct fitness assessments and interpret physiological and biomechanical data, skills that are directly applicable in a range of professional settings. Graduates work as strength and conditioning coaches, performance analysts, exercise physiologists, sport scientists in professional clubs and national governing bodies, personal trainers and fitness consultants. Others move into health promotion, rehabilitation, teaching or clinical exercise physiology roles. Further study at masters level, including in areas such as sports rehabilitation, strength and conditioning or applied sport psychology, is a common route for those seeking specialist professional accreditation.
Syllabus & Modules
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