

University of Bradford
Sociology
Study detals
: Bachelor's degree : BA (Hons) Sociology : Full time : 36 MonthRequirements
Entry requirements
You should be aware that meeting the grade requirements specified does not necessarily guarantee admission as there may be additional requirements you need to satisfy.
Secondary School Leaving Certificate
136+ UCAS tariff points | 120 - 135 UCAS tariff points | 96 - 119 UCAS tariff points |
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Foundation Programme required
English language
The standard University requirement is 6.0* with no sub-test less than 5.5 (or equivalent) on IELTS, or on the university's own entry test BASALT. Conditional offers to international students will be made on this basis.
IELTS - at least 6.0*, with at least 5.5 in each of the four sub-tests (speaking, listening, reading, writing).
TOEFL - at least 80*, and sub-tests not less than 18 in Reading, 17 in Writing, 17 in Listening and 20 in Speaking if you require a Student Visa.
Other qualifications which may be accepted:
There are other English language qualifications which may be accepted. For example, the University of Bradford also recognises:
- Cambridge Advanced Certificate - grade C or above
- Cambridge Proficiency Certificate - grade C or above
Please note that we DO NOT accept the TOEIC test.
Speciality
Pathways Available: International Foundation Year | International Year Zero
Sandwich course fees - charged during the placement year away from the University of Bradford for students on thick sandwich courses, or during the year in which the second placement falls for students on thin sandwich courses. Students charged at 10% of the equivalent full-time fee.
If a placement year is to be undertaken abroad and supported by University funding through the University’s exchange programmes, fees will increase to 15% of standard fees to cover additional support, advice and administration costs.
Additional information
Degree Overview
The Sociology course at Bradford starts with ensuring you are intellectually stimulated and engaged with the subject matter. You will do this firstly through our academic staff, all of whom are research-active and highly enthusiastic about what they teach.
Throughout the course teaching is student-focussed. It is vital that we enable students to engage with a range of contemporary and relevant subjects, debates and issues through a diversity of sociologically-grounded perspectives and theories.
Modules have specific focus on how society can be better understood, and made more just, through exploring markers of identity, such as class, ethnicity, gender and sexuality. The modules that make up our degree also reflect the ways in which power presents itself and influences us on a daily basis.
Through linking theory with the real world, you are encouraged to apply your sociological knowledge to social contexts whether they are related to inequality, the state, crime, difference, securitization and mass media, or those every day, taken-for-granted features of life which seem less important, such as consumption, taste and the performance of our identities.
Studying this course will give you opportunities to explore and analyse the nature of diverse societies, and develop informed insights into the challenges facing a globalised and interconnected world.
Studying Sociology at Bradford allows you to develop and apply your skills of reasoning and critical assessment, and to understand a broad range of theoretical, practical and contemporary issues and social problems.