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BA Theology and Religious Studies (including a Foundation Year)
About this course
Theology and Religious Studies opens up some of the most enduring questions human beings have ever asked: what is the nature of ultimate reality, how should we live, and what have communities across history believed about the divine, the sacred, and the meaning of existence? It is a discipline that combines careful textual analysis, historical enquiry, and philosophical argument to explore the world's great religious traditions and the intellectual frameworks they have generated. At the University of Chester, this four-year full-time programme begins with a foundation year designed to build the academic skills and subject knowledge you need before progressing to the full degree. Chester has a particularly strong tradition in theology, and you will study a wide range of religious traditions, including Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, and Buddhism, alongside secular philosophical perspectives. You will engage with sacred texts, learning to read them with rigour and sensitivity, while also examining how religious institutions have shaped and been shaped by political, social, and cultural forces. The programme includes a year abroad, offering you the chance to study theology in a different national and intellectual context, which can be transformative for understanding how the same traditions are practised and interpreted across cultures. A typical entry tariff of 104 UCAS points means the programme is accessible to students from a range of educational backgrounds. The skills you develop are broad and transferable. You will learn to construct arguments from complex sources, to write with precision and nuance, to engage respectfully with viewpoints very different from your own, and to hold multiple interpretive frameworks in mind simultaneously. These capacities are valuable far beyond the study of religion itself. Graduates go on to careers in education, the charity sector, community development, the civil service, journalism, law, and the arts. Some progress to postgraduate research in theology, religious studies, or philosophy, while others train for ordained ministry or interfaith work. The degree equips you to think carefully about values and meaning in contexts where that matters enormously.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (72% response rate)
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