Course contact details
Admissions
Email:askadmissions@derby.ac.uk
Phone:01332 591167
University of Derby
Kedleston Road
Derby
DE22 1GB
BA (Hons) Media and Criminology
Does prison work? Is rehabilitation effective? How do the justice and penal systems in other countries compare to our own? To what extent do we use media as a way of claiming and understanding identities?
Why choose this course?
On this degree you’ll explore the full breadth of human behaviour, from how social divisions play key roles in both access to the media and modes of representation in media texts to understanding crime as both an individual and social phenomenon. You’ll also build an awareness of the economic forces that frame the media, cultural and creative industries, and the role they have in areas of contemporary political and cultural life.
How you will learn
Our teaching is underpinned by staff expertise and ongoing research and practice. Team teaching is a key feature of a number of modules with staff and external expertise employed to best effect. Teaching takes a flexible approach, utilising learning and teaching methods, such as:
formal lectures
seminars: these can be tutor-led or student-led and can include e.g. discussion; critical analysis of reading; planning and/or designing production work or group presentations; debates
group work
tutorials: one-to-one sessions with a tutor to discuss the development of assignments
screenings
workshops on skills or development of ideas
supported project work
research exercises
work experience projects
self-directed study.
Opportunities and experiences
You will have the opportunity to work with our links with local and national media organisations and employers, engaging in projects such as multiplatform advertising and content production, film festivals and screening events, public relations and promotional campaigns and media research. You will learn how to write for different media platforms, such as journalism, promotional and PR writing, with an emphasis on digital media platforms such as web content writing, blogging and social media. You will also develop your creativity through the planning, design and creation of media projects, learning essential skills in script or treatment writing, digital video and editing.
Our Criminology team work closely with courts, prisons and youth offender training centres, and bring this expertise into their teaching.
Careers and employability
As a criminology graduate, you will receive an exceptional grounding for a career in the probation service, the prison service, the police, youth justice, voluntary organisations or the wider public sector. Alternatively, you may wish to pursue postgraduate studies at the University. Our strong links with local and regional agencies coupled with our staff’s extensive practice experience means that our criminology teaching is highly relevant to today’s job market.
Media graduates have found jobs in the television industry, public relations, marketing and journalism; or have gone on to take the Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) in order to get a job in teaching; or have enrolled for other postgraduate study. Media graduates would be well suited for a range of roles in areas such as:
media research
audience/market research
journalism
multiplatform content production; such as web content writing, web video
visual and creative production internships
advertising, marketing, promotions and public relations
digital and print publishing; including books, newspapers, magazines, and journals and periodicals
self-employment and freelance work
producers or in media buying and commissioning
PG study
media distribution, e.g. promotion, cinema management
film and television graduate level entry, e.g. internships
teaching.
The following entry points are available for this course:
IELTS overall score at a minimum of 6.0; with at least IELTS 5.5 in each band (Reading, Listening, Speaking, Writing) or another Secure English Language Test(SELT)at CEFR level B2 or above
We have excluded the Grades on Entry data for this course. We may operate some flexibility with entry grades to support widening participation, though most of the students that enrol on this course achieve the published entry tariff or above. Applicants who achieve grades below the published tariff may be offered an alternative course or a 4-year route if there is one available. For further information please contact askadmissions@derby.ac.uk.
This section shows the range of grades that students who received offers were previously accepted on to this course with (learn more).
It is designed to support your research but does not guarantee whether you will or won't get a place.
Admissions teams consider various factors, including interviews, subject requirements, and entrance tests. Check all course entry requirements for eligibility.
We are unable to show previous accepted grades for this course. This could be because the course is new, it's a postgraduate course, there isn't enough historical data, or the provider has opted out of sharing their entry grades data for this course - learn more.
This report uses your grades to show how students with similar results have done when applying to this course in the past. Sometimes, there isn’t data for every possible set of grades. When that happens, universities and colleges occasionally fill in the gaps for sets of grades that are typically accepted.
| Location | Fee | Year |
|---|---|---|
| England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, Channel Islands, Republic of Ireland, EU & International | TBC |
Tuition fee status depends on a number of criteria and varies according to where in the UK you will study. For further guidance on the criteria for home or overseas tuition fees, please refer to the UKCISA website.
The Home and International fees for the 2027 term have not yet been confirmed.
Email:askadmissions@derby.ac.uk
Phone:01332 591167
Kedleston Road
Derby
DE22 1GB
At University of Derby