

BSc Cybersecurity
About this course
Cybersecurity is the discipline concerned with protecting digital systems, networks, and data from unauthorised access, disruption, and attack. As organisations and individuals depend ever more heavily on digital infrastructure, the significance of the security professionals who defend it grows accordingly. Cybersecurity is both technically demanding and strategically important: effective security requires understanding not just the technical vulnerabilities of systems but the human, organisational, and legal dimensions of how security policies are designed, implemented, and maintained. At the University of Chester, this three-year, full-time programme includes a sandwich year and a work placement, giving you the opportunity to apply your technical skills in a real security environment before completing your final year. The placement is particularly valuable in cybersecurity, where practical experience of real systems and real threats is important for developing the professional judgement that the field demands. Across the programme you will study network security, cryptography, ethical hacking and penetration testing, digital forensics, risk management, security governance and compliance, and the legal and ethical frameworks that govern cybersecurity practice. Programming and systems knowledge form an important foundation, and you will develop the analytical skills to investigate incidents, identify vulnerabilities, and recommend appropriate countermeasures. A typical entry tariff of 120 UCAS points indicates the entry expectations for the programme. Cybersecurity develops technical precision, analytical rigour, and the ability to think like an attacker in order to build better defences. Problem-solving under pressure and clear communication of complex risks to non-technical stakeholders are capacities built throughout. Graduates work as cybersecurity analysts, penetration testers, security engineers, digital forensics investigators, and information security managers across sectors including finance, government, healthcare, and technology. Demand for cybersecurity professionals consistently outstrips supply, and the career prospects for qualified graduates are strong. Many pursue professional certifications and postgraduate study to specialise further.
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