

BSc Cybersecurity (including a Foundation Year)
About this course
Cybersecurity is the discipline concerned with protecting digital systems, networks, data, and the people who use them from unauthorised access, damage, and disruption. As societies and economies have become increasingly dependent on interconnected digital infrastructure, the threats posed by cyberattacks, data breaches, ransomware, and digital espionage have grown correspondingly, making cybersecurity one of the most pressing challenges facing governments, businesses, and individuals. The field combines technical knowledge of how systems work and how they can fail with analytical, legal, and ethical thinking about how to defend them effectively. At the University of Chester, this four-year full-time degree includes a foundation year, giving you a supported pathway into degree-level study if you would benefit from additional preparation before the main programme begins. The foundation year builds the technical and analytical foundations that cybersecurity study requires, making the degree accessible to those with the aptitude for the subject whose prior qualifications do not give direct entry. From there, you will develop skills in network security, cryptography, ethical hacking and penetration testing, digital forensics, secure software development, and risk management. You will learn how attackers think and operate, which is essential background for designing defences, and engage with the legal and ethical frameworks that govern what is permissible in both offensive and defensive security work. Cybersecurity graduates are in exceptional demand across every sector that depends on digital infrastructure, which in practice means nearly all of them. Roles include security analyst, penetration tester, cybersecurity consultant, incident responder, digital forensics analyst, and information security manager. Government, defence, finance, healthcare, and technology are among the largest employers of cybersecurity professionals, and the supply of qualified graduates currently falls well short of demand. Further study options include postgraduate degrees in cybersecurity, computer forensics, and information security, as well as a wide range of professional certifications that support career progression.
Syllabus & Modules
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