

High Drop-out Rate Alert
85% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
BSc Information Technology
About this course
Information technology is the discipline concerned with how digital systems are designed, managed and deployed to serve the needs of organisations and individuals. It sits at the intersection of computing and business, addressing questions of how technology can solve organisational problems, how systems are built and maintained securely, how data is stored, processed and transmitted, and how people interact with digital environments. Professionals in this field are in sustained demand because every organisation, from small businesses to global corporations to public institutions, depends on effective information systems. At Middlesex University this programme includes a foundation year, providing an entry point for students who want to build the foundational knowledge and skills needed before progressing to degree-level study. The programme is studied part time, giving you the flexibility to develop your knowledge alongside work or other commitments. It also includes a sandwich year and work-placement experience, connecting your academic study directly to professional practice and giving you the opportunity to apply what you have learned in a real working environment. These structured routes into industry consistently help students develop the practical skills and professional confidence that employers value. You will study topics spanning programming, networks and infrastructure, database design, cybersecurity, systems analysis and project management. You will also develop an understanding of how IT systems support and shape organisational processes, which means the degree combines technical depth with business and managerial awareness. Graduates from information technology programmes move into roles as IT support specialists, systems analysts, network administrators, database administrators, IT project managers, business analysts and cybersecurity professionals. The broad skills base the degree develops means you are well positioned to move into a range of technology roles across sectors including healthcare, finance, education and the public sector. Postgraduate study in computing, information systems, cybersecurity or data science is also a route taken by graduates wanting to specialise further.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (89% response rate)
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