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In the UK for Art and Design in Complete University Guide 2024

Fashion Communication and Promotion BA (Hons)

Start date

  • Level(s) of Study: Undergraduate
  • Typical Offer: 104 - 112 UCAS tariff points
  • UCAS Code(s): WN2M
  • Start Date(s): September 2024
  • Duration: 3 / 4 year(s)
  • Study Mode(s): Full-time / Sandwich
  • Campus: City Campus
Information for 2024

Introduction:

What is fashion communication and promotion? Simply, it’s the science of understanding people, the art of reaching them, and the magic of persuasion. We’re the ones who inspire desire — the people behind every purchase.

We tell creative, persuasive, sometimes disruptive stories about brands. We strike chords, we stir emotions, and we strive to do it in an honest, ethically responsible way. We’re free-thinking, hands-on, sleeves-up creatives, working at the point where fashion and culture collide — developing the world’s most memorable advertising campaigns, and bringing companies to life through screens, magazines, and retail environments.

Learn how the iconic names in fashion and beauty have been built from words and pictures. See what AI and immersive tech mean for the future of advertising campaigns, and how they’ll enrich your own creative vision. Develop your own visual identity, finding inspiration in music, film, art, and human experience. Work with real brands on real briefs, and learn to predict trends — not just react to them.

It’s time to start telling your own story. Let’s create.

  • Work on live creative projects with the hottest new names in fashion, beauty, music and event promotion, and more!
  • Tour the UK’s fashion hubs, and enjoy an optional second-year trip to one of Europe’s major style capitals.
  • Study abroad with one of our famous international partners, like the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City.
  • Build those priceless professional connections with an optional placement — lasting from either six weeks to one year.

What you’ll study

We’re a top 10 UK university for Art & Design (QS World University Rankings 2023). NTU was rated ‘Gold’ in the 2023 Teaching Excellence Framework, meaning you’re in good, knowledgeable hands — from the support you receive in and outside the classroom, to the quality and relevance of what you’re being taught. Fashion communication and promotion is continually evolving, and it’s our job to make sure your career’s future-proofed for years to come.

Together, we’ll explore the past, present and future of the craft, growing your core creative skills and asking some big, human questions. What works, in terms of great visual storytelling? How can your imagination work in harmony with AI, the emerging force in campaign production? How do we ensure that we’re building desire in an ethically sound way — not just encouraging consumers to “spend money they’ve not got on things they don’t need, to impress people they’ve never met”? Together, we’ll be answering questions like these — and many, many more.

Throughout the course, you’ll:

  • look at the behaviours and needs of customers, explore their connections to different subcultures and identities, and learn how to build meaningful, memorable relationships
  • explore the psychology and creative methods for establishing desire, and learn how to do it in a responsible, sustainable, and authentic way
  • grow as a creative and a risk-taker, taking inspiration from diverse corners of popular culture to challenge stereotypes and find new ways of thinking, talking, and making
  • develop CV-boosting multimedia production skills in areas like photography, film, graphics, print, and digital and retail design
  • take a deep dive into trend prediction — NTU has more graduates involved with The Future Laboratory trend forecasting agency than any other UK university or fashion course
  • apply the same design processes as the pros, working collaboratively to understand the bigger picture of roles, responsibilities, and workflow processes throughout the industry
  • have the opportunity to complete a certificated professional placement — either for six weeks, or up to a whole year
  • stay focused on your employability — we’re big on making sure you’re ready for industry life, from the quality of your online portfolio, to the voice of your comms, to the day-to-day practical skills you’ll need to shine.

Here’s a full breakdown of the modules you’ll be studying.

Perspectives in Fashion Communication and Promotion

(40 credit points)

In this module you will style, cast and produce fashion photoshoots on both sides of the camera, edit and sequence images into a fashion editorial and publish your ideas in zines and printed publications. You’ll create content for social media, practising your creative copywriting and fashion journalism skills, enhanced with moving image and film making. And you’ll explore the worlds of fashion advertising and PR, producing an industry-ready pitch-deck.

Passport to Creative Process and Technology

(20 credit points)

Develop your fundamental graphic design skills including layout, typography, image creation and photo editing. You’ll move into the world of moving image and film making and become confident in the use of industry standard software including Adobe Creative Suite. If you’re new to creative work, this module is a rapid and effective bootcamp; for those with a creative background it's an opportunity to cultivate higher skills through experimentation and refinement.

Fashion Anthropology

(20 credit points)

Unpack the meaning behind fashion, investigating how individual style and personal identity are deeply connected. You’ll speak to people about how their personal fashion and style choices reflect who they are and who they aspire to be, and you’ll explore the connections between fashion and sub-cultures.

The Fashion Industry and You

(20 credit points)

Discover the broad range of job roles open to course graduates, and prepare for internships, placements and the first stages of employment within the fashion industry career. This module introduces areas of practice, and explores opportunities for working within brands, within creative agencies and as a freelance creative practitioner. It provides a place to review and refine your interests and skills, and an opportunity to develop a plan to support your career aspirations, ambitions and overall employability.

Advanced Creative Process and Emerging Technology

(20 credit points)

Explore both the advancements in technology that will support communication and promotion in the future and expand the digital and analogue craft skills required to support your work. Working with artificial intelligence (AI), virtual and augmented reality (AR / VR), and cutting-edge 3D technology, you’ll be part of the experiments driving the future of the fashion industry, supported by the expertise and resources available across Nottingham School of Art and Design.

Agency of the Future

(40 credit points)

Experience the excitement, creativity and fast pace that comes from working in a forward-thinking creative agency, responding to briefs from fashion industry clients. You’ll develop advanced team-working and team-management skills and strategies and increase your confidence in pitching your ideas and responding to real industry feedback.

Fashion Futures

(20 credit points)

Build your skillset as a trend researcher, forecaster and consultant. You’ll be introduced to the technical practice of trend forecasting to explore the relationship between societal changes and shifting movements, styles and tastes. You’ll also gain industry insight across a variety of sectors – including clothing, retail, beauty, health and wellness, food and drink, travel and hospitality – with a focus on future thinking and areas of innovation.

Critical Fashion Journalism

(20 credit points)

Begin developing your opinion and critical voice within the fashion industry in order to influence, persuade and inspire. You’ll discover strategies for keeping up-to-date and start the journey towards expertise and authority in your chosen field. You’ll also learn new writing techniques and cultivate your own tone-of-voice and personal communication style. And you’ll explore how fashion journalism uses print, digital, audio and video for seamless communication.

Co Lab: Research, Exploration and Risk-taking

(20 credit points, second half of the year)

Through active participation with team-based problem solving, you will work together in mixed teams on a project where you will use your creative ideas to generate solutions to the challenge or brief. Your project will allow you to explore how creativity can make an impact in society, as you choose a theme of sustainability, social justice, enterprise and innovation or community. This collaborative learning experience will expose you to a range of new processes and approaches that will develop your creative thinking.

You will also choose one 20-credit Optional module from:

  • Publishing: Experimental Formats
  • Typography: Use and Expression
  • Trend Forecasting
  • Digital Marketing and Communication
  • Responding to the Visual World
  • Creative Live Event Production
  • Web3 & Creative Autonomy
  • Beauty Industry: Innovation to Impact

Optional Placement Year (Sandwich)*

We have an option for all of our students to undertake a placement year (Sandwich) and allow you to decide whether this is right for you once you have completed years 1 and 2 of your course. This time spent working in industry provides our students with crucial work experience, which is highly prized and much sought after by employers upon graduation. If you are successful in securing a placement you will have the chance to gain an additional Certificate or Diploma in Professional Practice, dependent on duration.

* If you choose to take the sandwich route option, you will still need to apply for this course with the full-time UCAS code: WN2M

Personal Project

(60 credit points)

Explore, research and creatively respond to a topic of your own choice within the wide landscape of fashion communication and promotion. You’ll apply the specialist skills you’ve learned during the course to your own interests, passions and career aspirations, demonstrating your intellectual depth, creative abilities and understanding of fashion culture.

This personal project is an opportunity to work in-depth and in detail, applying your developing practice as you research, evaluate and propose an industry problem and associated creative campaign solution.

Personal Project

(40 credit points)

Bring together your three years of personal development, supported by goal setting, reflection and tutor feedback. You’ll advance your skills in confidently communicating who you are to industry, using relevant digital self-promotion. This module prepares you for entry into your chosen industry sector by further developing, connecting and showcasing the range of competencies developed across the course journey.

Live Project Project

(20 credit points)

Working in a fully professional approach, you will respond to a real fashion industry problem from a real industry client, a powerful springboard into your career. This module challenges you to create an innovative and commercial response to a real industry brief of your choice. You will propose, pitch and evaluate a dynamic creative campaign, along with supporting process and workflow undertaken as part of a team.

This provides you with an opportunity to develop and test industry readiness with support and feedback from creative professionals.

Don’t just take our word for it, hear from our students themselves

Student Profiles

Katie Sayer

The highlight of my time in New York was getting to volunteer for Marc Jacobs Spring/Summer 2018 at NYFW. Working for such a renowned name was amazing.

Sara Ngwenya

Nottingham is such a creative hub! There is always something to do, something to be inspired by – music, art, fashion, and cool niche cafés.

Jade Gates

I’ve always loved the idea of living away from home and originally I wanted to study in London. However, after attending an open day at NTU it totally changed my mind.

Susie Thurlow, BA (Hons) Fashion Communication and Promotion

I think Nottingham is a very creative and cultural city, there is art work round every corner, not necessarily a planned piece of art work but the architecture is stunning, the streets are pretty, such wide open spaces.

Grace Irons

The exchange to FIT in New York was one of my most beneficial life experiences to date.

Beth Howell

The course offers such a diverse selection of content, giving you the chance to try out different aspects involved in the fashion industry. The opportunity to work on live briefs is also pretty exciting and of course the study trips are amazing!

Zoe Brice

The variety of skills that we get to learn and study is amazing, for example, I have learned how to use InDesign as well as mono-printing and book binding.

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How you’re taught

Who better to tell you about communication and promotion than the people who’ve worked in it for years? Your lecturers made their professional names as graphic designers, illustrators, art directors, filmmakers, copywriters, creative strategists, consultants, event managers, and more; alongside our high-profile guest speakers, they’ll introduce you to industry contacts, keep you up to date on the newest trends, and guarantee that your own creative voice stays loud, proud, and fresh.

We’re a family, welcoming people from a huge range of backgrounds. We’re here to help nurture your creative bravery, and that’s why our course is as much about attitude and lifestyle as it is learning. To find and shape that bravery, you’ll learn through:

  • lectures, where you’ll explore the key creative methods in visual storytelling, and answer that all-important question: what is fashion communication and promotion?
  • workshops, where you’ll learn and apply new technical skills; supportive studio sessions, for a more community-focused approach to creating; friendly small-group tutorials; and regular one-to-ones, to make sure you’re happy, inspired, and energised throughout the course
  • Co Lab, where you’ll learn about the industry’s different roles and responsibilities by partnering with students from other fields to meet a real-world industry brief
  • exciting live projects, working with big names like Levi’s, Paul Smith and Revolution Beauty; up-and-coming independents such as TSPTR, Dawson Denim and All We Are; and creative agencies like McCann, helping clients like Chanel and Adidas find creative answers to business challenges.
  • regular field trips, and the chance in Year Two to study abroad with one of our international exchange partners
  • industry competitions — get your name known nationally at the Drum Awards, D&AD, Creative Conscious, the Adobe Design Awards, Blue Print for All, Future Lions, Young Creatives Nottingham, the One Club, and Graduate Fashion Week
  • an optional placement, to build up your own professional reputation — recent destinations have included ASOS, Calvin Klein, Rimmel, Coty, Stella McCartney, and Tommy Hilfiger. Choose from our six-week Professional Practice Certificate, or a longer Professional Practice Diploma in Year Three.

Contact hours

  • Year One — lectures / seminars / workshops (26%), independent study (74%)
  • Year Two — lectures / seminars / workshops (20%), independent study (80%)
  • Final Year — lectures / seminars / workshops (15%), independent study (85%)

Staff Profiles

Simon Rudkin - Principal Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Simon Rudkin is the Principal Lecturer for the undergraduate Fashion Communication and Promotion and Creative Direction and Curation for Fashion courses in the Department of Fashion Management, Marketing and Communication.…

Matthew Gill - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

I am a senior lecturer in visual communication for fashion, teaching across all years on a range of courses within the Fashion Management, Marketing and Communications subject area at NTU.…

Rose Davison - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Rose teaches across all years on Fashion Communication and Promotion, plus on the MA and on BA Creative Direction and Curation for Fashion (CDCF). She is module leader on the

Jay Harris - Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

As a dedicated module leader and lecturer in Creative Direction & Curation for Fashion, as well as Fashion Communication and Promotion, I play a pivotal role in shaping the next…

Timothy Rundle - Principal Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Principle Lecturer across the Department of Fashion Management, Marketing and Communication, contributing to 6 Undergraduate course and 4 Postgraduate programmes. Subject specialist in Visual Literacy and design communication, with a…

Gabby Walton - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Gabby is senior lecturer on the Fashion Communication and Promotion course and leads the Fashion Anthropology module. She also teaches across a number of other BA and MA level courses

Liv Auckland - Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Liv Auckland is a Lecturer on Fashion Communication and Promotion BA (Hons). She currently teaches across years one and two, including the optional Trend Forecasting module. Liv is also Module…

Chris MacDonald - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Chris MacDonald is a Senior Lecturer on B.A. (Hons) Fashion Communication & Promotion. Aiming to bridge the gap between academic theory and real-world industry practices, Chris MacDonald brings his experience

Megan Wall - Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Meg teaches across BA Fashion Communication and Promotion and BA Creative Direction and Curation for Fashion. She is module leader on the ‘Ideate and Curate’ module which focuses on facilitating…

Laura Quick - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Laura Quick is a Senior Lecturer and Module Leader on Fashion Communication and Promotion. She integrates her 22 years of industry experience and her pedagogic research to the course, introducing…

Aikaterini Paraskevopoulou - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Aikaterini is a Senior Lecturer and Module Leader for Fashion Communication and Promotion. She is involved in teaching across all levels and has contributed to the development of course modules

Sarah Lewington - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

I have worked at NTU for over 16 years and was the level 6 level leader and also module leader for Professional Development and Professional Practice on FCP. I was…

Hui-Ying Kerr - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Hui-Ying is a Senior Lecturer on the BA (Hons) Fashion Communication and Promotion course in the Nottingham School of Art and Design. She currently teaches across the undergraduate and Masters

Claire Phipps - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Claire Phipps is Course Leader for (Hons) Fashion Communication and Promotion within the School of Art and Design. The role includes; innovative curriculum development, delivering a course which balances student…

Hollie Bellis - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

My role at NTU has allowed me to be involved in the development of a course; Creative Direction and Curation for Fashion, which is very close to my heart and…

Angie Fletcher - Senior Lecturer

Nottingham School of Art & Design

Senior Lecturer in Visual Communication for Fashion Communication and Promotion.

How you’re assessed

People shine in different ways, and we want everybody to have the best possible chance of success.

We believe in ‘authentic assessment’, which means measuring your progress based on the everyday things you’ll actually be doing in the industry — not essays and dissertations. This is an active ‘doing’ degree, not a passive writing one, and that ‘doing’ covers everything from perfecting your presentation and pitching skills, to the creative evolution of your online portfolio, to mastering new technical skills in the art of visual storytelling. These are the kinds of things you’ll be assessed on, all through the course.

Visit our ‘We Are Creatives’ showcase to explore this year's graduating students’ work — and get a taste of the work you could be producing yourself.

Careers and employability

We’re constantly delivering new talent to the wide and wild world of fashion promotion. Confident, connected, and industry-ready, our students have found homes in fashion advertising, PR, content creation and publishing, trend forecasting, graphic design, copywriting, account and campaign management, social and entertainment media, and visual merchandising — to name just a few.

You’ll graduate with the skill, vision and commercial savvy to stand out in a competitive field. If you want to find a future in this global industry, a ‘passion for fashion’ alone won’t cut it — you’ll need connections, a keen cultural eye, plenty of hands-on experience, and a great portfolio. That’s exactly what we’ll provide you with. With theoretical knowledge, practical talent, and the support of our award-winning Employability team, you’ll graduate knowing who you are, how you work, and where you want to go.

We’ve got people in every corner of the industry. Today, our former students are working as / at:

  • Brand Creative, Uskees
  • Account Executive, Here Be Dragons
  • Partnership Executive, Lounge Underwear
  • Account Manager, Nzime
  • Creative Coordinator, TikTok
  • Global Product Manager, Boots No. 7
  • Marketing and Culture Manager, The Standard
  • Paid Social Media Executive, Charlotte Tilbury
  • Foresight Analyst, Future Laboratory
  • Senior Account Director, W-Communications

Campus and facilities

You’ll be based in the City Campus’ Barnes Wallis building, with everyday access to purpose-built editing suites, workshops, and all the professional tools of the trade. For a full breakdown of our brilliant facilities, just take the virtual tour.

Our City Campus has everything you’ll need to stay happy between lectures. As well as the Boots Library and its beautiful roof garden, there’s our superb Students’ Union building and two-storey, 100-station gym; a whole host of cafés, bars, restaurants and food outlets; performance and rehearsal spaces for musicians; and much, much more!

If that’s not enough, take just a few steps off campus and you’ll find yourself in the heart of Nottingham, one of Britain’s top 10 student cities. It’s big, small, old, and new — not just a place to study, but somewhere to properly call home. Tour the revolving run of street-food and fashion pop-ups in Sneinton Market; immerse yourself in the too-cool, late-night vibes of the Creative Quarter; get comfy in galleries, hidden cinemas and speakeasys; uncover a city that’s stuffed with secrets and independent enterprise. As an inspiration-hungry creative, there’s no better place to understand the heritage of the past, the possibilities of the present, and the promise of the future — all through the social, cultural and artistic lens of Britain’s original ‘rebel city’.

Entry requirements

BSc (Hons) Fashion Communication and Promotion

  • Standard offer: 112 UCAS Tariff points from up to four qualifications
  • Contextual offer: 104 UCAS Tariff points from up to four qualifications

Contextual offers

A lower offer may be made based on a range of factors, including your background (such as where you live and the school or college you attended), your experiences and individual circumstances (you may have been in care, for example). This is called a contextual offer and we get data from UCAS to make these decisions. NTU offers a student experience like no other and this approach helps us to find students who have the potential to succeed here but who may have faced barriers that make it more difficult to access university. Find out how we assess your application.

Other qualifications and experience

We may also consider credits achieved at other universities and your work/life experience through an assessment of prior learning. This may be for year one entry, or beyond the beginning of a course where applicable, for example, into year 2. Our Recognition of Prior Learning and Credit Transfer Policy outlines the process and options available for this route.

Meeting our entry requirements

Hundreds of qualifications in the UK have UCAS tariff points attached to specific grades, including A levels, BTECs, T Levels and many more. You can use your grades and points from up to four different qualifications to meet our criteria. Enter your predicted or achieved grades into our tariff calculator to find out how many points your qualifications are worth.

Getting in touch

If you need more help or information, get in touch through our enquiry form

BA (Hons) Fashion Communication and Promotion

  • 112 UCAS Tariff points from up to four qualifications

International qualifications

We accept qualifications from all over the world – check yours here:

Undergraduate preparation courses (Foundation)

If you don’t yet meet our entry requirements, we offer Foundation courses through our partner Nottingham Trent International College (NTIC), based on our City Campus:

English language entry requirements

You can meet our language requirements by successfully completing our pre-sessional English course for an agreed length of time, or by submitting the required grade in one of our accepted English language tests, such as IELTS:

Advanced standing (starting your undergraduate degree in year 2 or 3)

You may be able to start your undergraduate course in year 2 or 3 based on what you have studied before.  This decision would be made in accordance with our Recognition of Prior Learning and Credit Transfer Policy.

Would you like some advice on your study plans?

Our international teams are highly experienced in answering queries from students all over the world. We also have members of staff based in Vietnam, China, India and Nigeria and work with a worldwide network of education counsellors.

Fees and funding

Preparing for the financial side of student life is important, but there's no need to feel anxious and confused about it. We hope that our fees and funding pages will answer all your questions.

Getting in touch

For more advice and guidance, you can contact our Student Financial Support Service.

Tel: +44 (0)115 848 2494

What's included in the course fees?

The School will cover the costs of any mandatory study trips.

In Final Year, the Nottingham School of Art & Design will provide infrastructure costs for the Showcase. If you’re selected to showcase your work at Graduate Fashion Week in London, the School will cover the cost of transporting your work and the exhibition stand.

Additional costs

Print and copy costs

Depending on the materials you choose to work with, you should budget a minimum of £50 - £150 in each year to cover printing costs.

The University allocates an annual printing and copying allowance of £20 depending on the course you are studying. For more details about costs for additional print and copying required over and above the annual allowance please see the Printing, photocopying and scanning information on the Library website.

Stationery and reading materials

Most study modules will recommend one or more core textbooks, which most students choose to purchase. Book costs vary between courses and further information is available in the University’s bookshop, Blackwell’s. A good supply of these essential text books are available in the University libraries, which students can easily borrow or access directly whilst studying in the library. You should budget £50 - £100 (minimum) per year for stationery and reading materials.

Material costs

Depending on the materials you choose to work with, you should budget a minimum of £50 - £100 (Year One), £50 - £100 (Year Two), and £150 - £500 (Final Year) to cover the production costs associated to your course, including things like your final year exhibition.

Field trips

All essential field trip costs will be included in your course fees. There may also be an opportunity to take part in an optional field trip to a European destination that will be tailored to suit your course.

Placements

If you're undertaking a placement year, you'll need to budget for accommodation and any travel costs you may incur whilst on placement. Many of our placement students do earn a salary whilst on placement which can help to cover these living costs.

If you undertake work experience or a longer placement, you will have the chance to gain an additional Certificate or Diploma in Professional Practice, dependent on duration.  The Diploma in Professional Practice incurs a fee for the additional placement year.

Preparing for the financial side of student life is important, but there's no need to feel anxious and confused about it. We hope that our fees and funding pages will answer all your questions.

You might be able to get a scholarship to help fund your studies. We award scholarships to those international students who can demonstrate excellent achievement, passion, and dedication to their studies.

Please take a look at our International students page for information about fees, scholarships for international students, visas and much more.

Getting in touch

For more advice and guidance, you can contact our Student Financial Support Service.

Tel: +44 (0)115 848 2494

What's included in the course fees?

The School will cover the costs of any mandatory study trips.

In Final Year, the Nottingham School of Art & Design will provide infrastructure costs for the Showcase. If you’re selected to showcase your work at Graduate Fashion Week in London, the School will cover the cost of transporting your work and the exhibition stand.

Additional costs

Print and copy costs

Depending on the materials you choose to work with, you should budget a minimum of £50 - £150 in each year to cover printing costs.

The University allocates an annual printing and copying allowance of £20 depending on the course you are studying. For more details about costs for additional print and copying required over and above the annual allowance please see the Printing, photocopying and scanning information on the Library website.

Stationery and reading materials

Most study modules will recommend one or more core textbooks, which most students choose to purchase. Book costs vary between courses and further information is available in the University’s bookshop, Blackwell’s. A good supply of these essential text books are available in the University libraries, which students can easily borrow or access directly whilst studying in the library. You should budget £50 - £100 (minimum) per year for stationery and reading materials.

Material costs

Depending on the materials you choose to work with, you should budget a minimum of £50 - £100 (Year One), £50 - £100 (Year Two), and £150 - £500 (Final Year) to cover the production costs associated to your course, including things like your final year exhibition.

Field trips

All essential field trip costs will be included in your course fees. There may also be an opportunity to take part in optional field trip to a European destination that will be tailored to suit your course.

Placements

If you're undertaking a placement year, you'll need to budget for accommodation and any travel costs you may incur whilst on placement. Many of our placement students do earn a salary whilst on placement which can help to cover these living costs.

If you undertake work experience or a longer placement, you will have the chance to gain an additional Certificate or Diploma in Professional Practice, dependent on duration.  The Diploma in Professional Practice incurs a fee for the additional placement year.

How to apply

Apply through UCAS.

You can apply for this course through UCAS. If you are not applying to any other UK universities, you can apply directly to us on our NTU applicant portal.

Application advice

Apply early so that you have enough time to prepare – processing times for Student visas can vary, for example.  After you've applied, we'll be sending you important emails throughout the application process – so check your emails regularly, including your junk mail folder.

Writing your personal statement

Be honest, thorough, and persuasive – we can only make a decision about your application based on what you tell us:

Would you like some advice on your study plans? 

Our international teams are highly experienced in answering queries from students all over the world. We also have members of staff based in Vietnam, China, India and Nigeria and work with a worldwide network of education counsellors.

The University's commitment to delivering the educational services advertised.