

BSc Sport Rehabilitation and Conditioning
About this course
Sport rehabilitation and conditioning occupies the space where sports science, clinical practice, and performance meet. Rehabilitation is concerned with helping people recover from injury and return to full function, using movement, exercise, and evidence-based therapeutic techniques. Conditioning is concerned with developing physical attributes, strength, power, endurance, and speed, to support performance and reduce the risk of future injury. Together they describe the work done by professionals who support athletes and active populations throughout the cycle of preparation, competition, and recovery. At the University of Northampton, this part-time programme is aimed at students committed to working with athletes and the wider public to support improvements in health and wellbeing. You will study anatomy, physiology, biomechanics, injury pathology, assessment techniques, and rehabilitation methods, developing both the theoretical knowledge to understand what is happening in an injured or deconditioned body and the practical skills to assess, treat, and rehabilitate effectively. The programme covers injury prevention strategies as well as recovery, reflecting the understanding that the best rehabilitation begins before injury occurs. You will work with populations of different ages and fitness levels, building the adaptability and clinical reasoning that this kind of work demands. Studying part-time allows you to develop your skills while managing other professional or personal commitments, and many students on programmes like this are already working in sport or fitness contexts and are looking to build on and formalise their practical experience. Graduates move into careers as sport rehabilitators, strength and conditioning coaches, athletic trainers, and practitioners working in sport performance environments, NHS or private physiotherapy support roles, and community exercise and health settings. Professional registration pathways, including those with the British Association of Sport Rehabilitators and Trainers (BASRaT), provide a route to formal practice recognition. Some graduates pursue postgraduate study in physiotherapy, sport science, or performance medicine.
Syllabus & Modules
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