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BA Childhood and Early Years Studies
About this course
Childhood and early years studies examines one of the most critical and formative periods in human development. Research consistently shows that experiences in the first years of life shape cognitive development, emotional resilience, social skills, and long-term wellbeing in profound ways. This field brings together perspectives from developmental psychology, sociology, education, social policy, and health to understand how children grow, how society structures childhood, and what conditions allow children to flourish. It is a discipline with clear moral purpose and direct practical relevance to the work of schools, nurseries, families, and public services. At Northumbria University in Newcastle, this three-year full-time programme is designed to give you both the knowledge and the insight to make a genuine difference in the lives of children. You will explore child development across its physical, cognitive, and emotional dimensions, examine the social and cultural contexts that shape childhood, and consider how policies and institutions support or fail children and families. The programme draws on current research in early years education, safeguarding, inclusion, and play, helping you build a well-rounded and critical understanding of what it means to work with young children. You will develop skills in observation and reflection that are fundamental to high-quality practice with children. The ability to analyse situations thoughtfully, to understand a child's perspective, and to work effectively with families and multi-agency teams are capacities that you will build throughout the degree. Critical thinking, academic research, and professional communication are woven into the programme alongside subject knowledge. Graduates from childhood and early years studies pursue careers across a broad range of settings. Many go on to work in early years education, nurseries, children's centres, or primary schools, sometimes progressing to qualified teacher status through further study. Others move into social work, health visiting, family support, speech and language therapy, play therapy, or policy roles in local government and the voluntary sector. The understanding of child development and family systems that the degree develops is relevant wherever children's welfare is the central concern, and postgraduate study is a natural route for those who want to specialise further.
Syllabus & Modules
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