

BSc Forensic Science with a Year Abroad
About this course
Forensic science applies the methods of the natural sciences to the investigation of crime and the pursuit of justice. It sits at the intersection of chemistry, biology, physics, and law, requiring practitioners who can collect and interpret evidence rigorously and communicate their findings clearly in legal settings. This four-year programme at the University of Kent includes a year abroad, giving you the chance to study within a different national legal and scientific tradition and to see how forensic practice varies across jurisdictions. You will study areas such as trace evidence, ballistics, and DNA analysis, developing the laboratory skills and scientific reasoning that underpin forensic investigation. The programme trains you to examine physical evidence critically, to understand the statistical basis for forensic conclusions, and to appreciate how uncertainty should be communicated when presenting findings to a court. You will also train in delivering expert witness testimony, which requires translating complex scientific data into language that is accurate, clear, and accessible to a non-specialist audience. The legal and ethical dimensions of forensic work are woven throughout the course, ensuring that you understand the responsibilities that come with giving evidence that may determine a person's fate. The year abroad is a significant feature of this degree. Spending time at an overseas university deepens your understanding of how forensic science is practised internationally, broadens your scientific vocabulary, and builds adaptability. It is also a genuine differentiator for employers in a field that increasingly operates across borders. The typical entry tariff is 136 UCAS points, and the degree is studied full time. Graduates from forensic science programmes enter a range of careers. Many work in forensic laboratories for police services, government agencies, or private providers, specialising in areas such as digital forensics, toxicology, fingerprint analysis, or firearms examination. Others move into analytical roles in the pharmaceutical or environmental sectors, where the same precise laboratory skills apply. Further study options include postgraduate forensic science programmes, law conversion courses, or research degrees exploring specific scientific techniques used in criminal investigation.
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