

High Drop-out Rate Alert
55% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
BSc Professional Policing
About this course
Professional policing has changed significantly as a graduate-entry profession, with police officers increasingly expected to bring analytical skills, legal knowledge, and professional self-awareness to their work alongside the physical and interpersonal capabilities that policing has always required. At Wrexham University, the part-time Professional Policing programme develops the academic and practical foundation needed for police service, with access to dedicated practical facilities including a Crime Scene House, Custody Desk, and interview room that allow you to develop skills in realistic professional environments. The programme covers the legal framework within which policing operates, including criminal law, human rights law, and the powers and duties of constables, alongside the investigative skills required for evidence gathering, interviewing, scene management, and report writing. Criminal justice, criminology, and the sociology of crime provide the contextual understanding that effective policing requires: knowing why crime occurs, how it is distributed across communities, what victims experience, and how different approaches to policing affect community relations. Safeguarding, mental health, and the management of vulnerability are areas of growing importance in policing, and the programme engages with these alongside the more traditional core of law and investigation. Practical sessions in the dedicated facilities develop competencies that would otherwise only be available in a live operational context. Graduates of professional policing programmes are prepared for careers in the police service, having met the academic requirements that force entry now typically demands. The College of Policing's policing education qualifications framework has made degree-level education a standard expectation for police officer entry, and this programme is aligned with those requirements. Beyond direct entry to policing, the knowledge and skills developed are also applicable in roles in the probation service, prison service, border force, private security, intelligence, community safety, and victim support organisations. Some graduates go on to postgraduate study in criminology, criminal justice, or policing studies. The combination of practical facility training, legal and investigative knowledge, and sociological context the programme provides is a thorough preparation for work in the criminal justice system.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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