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BA Wildlife Media (with integrated foundation year)
About this course
Wildlife media is a discipline at the intersection of natural history, photography, filmmaking, and ecological science. It asks how the natural world can be observed, understood, and communicated to audiences, using the full range of visual media to tell stories about wildlife and habitats in ways that are scientifically grounded and artistically compelling. The growing public appetite for wildlife content, from streaming documentaries to conservation photography, reflects a deep human interest in the natural world, and the professionals who create that content require a distinctive combination of fieldcraft, scientific knowledge, and technical skill with camera and lens. At the University of Cumbria, this four-year, full-time programme begins with an integrated foundation year that builds the skills, knowledge, and experience needed to progress into the full degree. This makes the programme accessible to students who are passionate about wildlife and visual storytelling but who need additional preparation before joining at degree level. As you progress, you will develop the fieldcraft and naturalist skills to identify, track, and approach wildlife in the field, alongside the photographic and filmmaking techniques to capture that behaviour in sophisticated and visually powerful ways. Scientific knowledge of ecology and animal behaviour underpins the practical work, ensuring your media output is grounded in genuine understanding of the subjects you are filming and photographing. Cumbria's setting gives you access to diverse wild habitats as part of your practical training. A typical entry tariff of 88 points reflects an admissions approach that values creative and naturalistic talent alongside prior academic preparation. Graduates go on to careers as wildlife photographers, nature filmmakers, conservation communicators, natural history producers, science journalists, and content creators for conservation organisations. The combination of ecological understanding and media skills is also valued in environmental education, heritage interpretation, and the growing field of science communication. Further study at postgraduate level in wildlife filmmaking, conservation, or documentary production is an option for those who wish to develop their practice or specialise in a particular aspect of the field.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 20 respondents (75% response rate)
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