UCAS code | L705 |
---|---|
Duration | 3 years |
Entry year | 2025 |
Campus | Streatham Campus |
Discipline | Geography |
Contact | Web: Enquire online |
Typical offer | |
---|---|
A-Level: ABB - BBB Prof. Placement/Study Abroad: |
UCAS code | L708 |
---|---|
Duration | 4 years |
Entry year | 2025 |
Campus | Streatham Campus |
Discipline | Geography |
Contact | Web: Enquire online |
Typical offer | A-Level: A*AA - AAA |
---|---|
A-Level: ABB - BBB Prof. Placement/Study Abroad: |
UCAS code | L707 |
---|---|
Duration | 4 years |
Entry year | 2025 |
Campus | Streatham Campus |
Discipline | Geography |
Contact | Web: Enquire online |
Overview
- Learn from leaders in their fields about critical global issues and challenges affecting environments and societies around the world
- Choose from a wide range of modules based on our research specialisms, with the flexibility to study what interests you
- Develop your curiosity about social, cultural and natural environments on field trips in the region and internationally
- Spend a year studying abroad or gaining employment experience on a professional placement
- Join a friendly and active student community: the Geography Society (GeogSoc) is one of the university’s largest and hosts regular socials, sports teams, weekend trips and the famous GeogSoc ball
Top 50 in the world for Geography
QS World University Subject Rankings 2024
Learn from experts on field courses
Spend a year studying abroad or on a professional placement
Top 15 in the UK for Geography and Environmental Science
11th in the Complete University Guide 2025
Top 50 in the world for Geography
QS World University Subject Rankings 2024
Learn from experts on field courses
Spend a year studying abroad or on a professional placement
I love the diversity of modules that are available within Geography, from learning about coral reefs in one lecture to analysing commodity chains in the next, it’s always different! The teaching support is excellent, and lecturers always welcome discussions and questions.
Kieran
BA Geography
Entry requirements (typical offer)
Qualification | Typical offer | Required subjects |
---|---|---|
A-Level | AAA - AAB
A*AA - AAA (with Study Abroad/Professional Placement) |
B in a humanities or social science subject*
A in a humanities or social science subject* (with Study Abroad/Professional Placement) |
IB | 36/666 - 34/665
38/766 - 36/666 (with Study Abroad/Professional Placement) |
HL5 in a humanities or social science subject*
HL6 in a humanities or social science subject* (with Study Abroad/Professional Placement) |
BTEC | DDD
D*DD-DDD (with Study Abroad/Professional Placement) |
Applicants studying a BTEC Extended Diploma are also required to achieve A-level grade B in a humanities or social science subject*
Applicants studying a BTEC Extended Diploma are also required to achieve A-level grade A in a humanities or social science subject* (with Study Abroad/Professional Placement) |
GCSE | C or 4 | English Language |
Access to HE | 30 L3 credits at Distinction Grade and 15 L3 credits at Merit Grade 30 L3 credits at Distinction Grade and 15 L3 credits at Merit Grade (with Study Abroad/Professional Placement) |
To include at least 12 L3 credits at Merit Grade in an acceptable Humanities or Social Science subject area* To include at least 15 L3 credits at Distinction Grade in an acceptable Humanities or Social Science subject area* (with Study Abroad/Professional Placement) |
T-Level | T-Levels not accepted | N/A |
Contextual Offer | A-Level: ABB - BBB Prof. Placement/Study Abroad: |
Specific subject requirements must still be achieved where stated above. Find out more about contextual offers. |
Other accepted qualifications | ||
English language requirements |
International students need to show they have the required level of English language to study this course. The required test scores for this course fall under Profile B2. Please visit our English language requirements page to view the required test scores and equivalencies from your country. |
NB General Studies is not included in any offer.
Grades advertised on each programme webpage are the typical level at which our offers are made and provide information on any specific subjects an applicant will need to have studied in order to be considered for a place on the programme. However, if we receive a large number of applications for the programme we may not be able to make an offer to all those who are predicted to achieve/have achieved grades which are in line with our typical offer. For more information on how applications are assessed and when decisions are released, please see: After you apply
*Accepted humanities/social science subjects include: Ancient History/History; Business/Business Studies; Economics; English; Environmental Science; Geography; Government and Politics; Law; Media Studies; Philosophy; Politics; Psychology; Religious Studies; Sociology.
Course content
The BA Geography course allows you to follow your interests in human geography whilst giving you the flexibility to take optional modules in physical geography or beyond the department in each year.
You’ll investigate the world through novel geographical lenses, exploring the flows and spaces of globalisation, the impacts and responses to climate change, the importance of place and the shifting geographies of identity and culture.
You’ll choose from a range of optional modules which draw upon our research strength. You will also develop your knowledge and skills through fieldwork, practical research experience and carrying out a human geography dissertation.
The first year provides an excellent introduction to wide-ranging and cutting-edge research areas in human geography (including globalisation, sustainability, place, identity and culture) and the academic skills, supported by regular small-group tutorials, to enable you to thrive at university. You have a residential field trip allowing you to ‘learn through place’ and get to know your fellow course mates. You can also take two optional modules in physical geography or beyond the department.
90 credits of compulsory modules, 30 credits of optional modules.
Compulsory modules
Code | Module | Credits |
---|---|---|
GEO1105 | Geographies of Place, Identity and Culture | 15 |
GEO1106 | Geographies of Global Change | 15 |
GEO1309 | Study Skills for Human Geographers | 15 |
GEO1310 | Geographies of Environment and Sustainability | 15 |
GEO1313 | Learning through Place: Doing Human Geography | 15 |
GEO1316 | Concepts in Geography | 15 |
Optional modules
The modules we outline here provide examples of what you can expect to learn on this degree course based on recent academic teaching. The precise modules available to you in future years may vary depending on staff availability and research interests, new topics of study, timetabling and student demand.
Code | Module | Credits |
---|---|---|
GeoS S1 Physical opt for BA Geog 2024-5 | ||
GEO1211 | Earth System Science: The History of Our Planet | 15 |
GEO1213 | Earth System Science: Our Changing Planet | 15 |
The second year allows you to develop your interests further with a combination of core and optional modules. Optional modules at the interface between human and physical geography also enable you to examine the challenges of climate change and sustainable development.
You can also take two optional modules in physical geography or beyond the department.
60 credits of compulsory modules, 60 credits of optional modules.
a You must choose 30-60 credits from the Human Geography and interdisciplinary Geography modules listed.
b You may then choose 0-30 credits from other level 5 Geography modules listed.
Compulsory modules
Code | Module | Credits |
---|---|---|
GEO2311 | Ideas in Geography | 15 |
GEO2337 | Research Methodologies in Action | 15 |
GEO2338 | Doing Human Geography Research | 30 |
Optional modules
The modules we outline here provide examples of what you can expect to learn on this degree course based on recent academic teaching. The precise modules available to you in future years may vary depending on staff availability and research interests, new topics of study, timetabling and student demand.
Code | Module | Credits |
---|---|---|
GeoS S2 Human-Inter Geog opt for BA Geog 2024-5 see note a above | ||
GEO2131 | Nature, Development and Justice | 15 |
GEO2132 | Global Urban Futures | 15 |
GEO2134 | Everyday Lives | 15 |
GEO2135 | In/visible Spaces of Modern Life | 15 |
GEO2136 | Geographies of Migration | 15 |
GEO2317 | Climate Change: Science and Society | 15 |
GeoS S2 Physical opt for BA Geog 2024-25 see note b above | ||
GEO2232 | The Cryosphere | 15 |
GEO2233 | Landscape Response to Environmental Change: from Source to Sink | 15 |
GEO2234 | The 'Anthropocene' | 15 |
GEO2230 | Reconstructing Past Environments | 15 |
GEO2235 | Ecosystems of the future: climate change, terrestrial feedbacks and nature-based solutions | 15 |
Find out more about placement and study abroad options under Course variants.
with Professional Placement
120 credits of compulsory modules
Compulsory modules
Code | Module | Credits |
---|---|---|
GEO3603 | Professional Placement for Geographers | 120 |
with Study Abroad
120 credits of compulsory modules.
For your year abroad you will agree a suite of modules in your host institution with the Geography Study Abroad Co-ordinator. Details of individual modules that may be taken whilst abroad can be found by accessing the partner institution’s website at
https://www.exeter.ac.uk/studyabroad/outbound/research/where/#a1
Compulsory modules
Code | Module | Credits |
---|---|---|
GEO3601 | Study Abroad | 120 |
The final year offers optional modules across a wide range of critical subject areas in human geography, in many cases directly linked to ongoing research being undertaken in the department (covering fields such as political geography, environment and sustainability, and cultural geography). This year also gives you the opportunity to undertake your own research project. You can also take two optional modules in physical geography or beyond the department.
30-45 credits of compulsory modules, 75-90 credits of optional modules.
c You must choose either GEO3311 or GEO3312.
Compulsory modules
Code | Module | Credits |
---|---|---|
GEO3311 | BA Dissertation [See note c above] | 45 |
GEO3312 | BA Dissertation [See note c above] | 30 |
Optional modules
The modules we outline here provide examples of what you can expect to learn on this degree course based on recent academic teaching. The precise modules available to you in future years may vary depending on staff availability and research interests, new topics of study, timetabling and student demand.
Code | Module | Credits |
---|---|---|
GeoS SF BA Geog opt 2024-5 | ||
GEO3123 | Geographies of Material Culture | 15 |
GEO3129 | Images of the Earth | 15 |
GEO3146 | Digital Geographies | 15 |
GEO3326 | Managing the Climate Emergency | 15 |
GEO3327 | Science Communication in a Changing World | 15 |
GEO3239 | GIS for Professionals | 15 |
GEO3245 | Coastal Systems in a Changing World | 15 |
GEO3227 | Weather | 15 |
GEO3148 | Berlin Field Course | 15 |
GEO3158 | Sustainable Communities Field Course (Avignon - Marseille) | 15 |
GEO3325 | Environmental Futures Field Course | 15 |
GEO3144 | Geopolitical Cultures | 15 |
GEO3147 | Literature, Environment, Activism | 15 |
GEO3157 | Southern Urbanism | 15 |
GEO3328 | Water Resilience: Challenges and Solutions | 15 |
GEO3223 | Landscape Systems Management | 15 |
GEO3225 | Climate Change and its Impacts | 15 |
GEO3241 | Fire Ecology and Fire Management | 15 |
GEO3101 | Gender and Geography | 15 |
BEP3172 | Future 17: Sustainable Development Goals Challenge | 15 |
Course variants
UCAS code: L708
Why choose a professional placement year?
In your professional placement year you will learn to apply the knowledge learnt during your first and second years, improve personal and transferable skills, make new contacts and enhance your employability. Work placements allow you to gain experience of a professional workplace prior to graduating and develop your career focus, and are extremely valued by employers.
Where can I do my placement?
On this four-year variant of the BA Geography degree you will spend your third year on a self-organised work placement with an organisation relevant to your degree, which we support you to secure. Students have worked with a variety of employers such as the UK Hydrographic Office, Ernst & Young and a wildlife conversation charity in Kenya, undertaking placements both in the UK and internationally.
What support is available during my placement?
You will be supported through your professional placement by a programme director who will provide high-quality advice to ensure you get the most from your placement.
Does it count towards my degree?
The professional placement year counts towards your degree through the completion of your placement and associated coursework. It contributes to your final degree classification, and the words ‘with Professional Placement’ will appear in your degree title.
During your first, second and final years of study, you will follow the same programme of study as the BA Geography (see Course content).
How does it affect my tuition fee?
If you spend a full year on a work placement (in the UK or abroad) you will pay a reduced fee. Find out more in the fees section.
How do I apply?
You can apply to BA Geography with Professional Placement directly through UCAS using the code above. Occasionally it is possible to transfer onto this programme from the standard BA Geography, if there are spaces and you have met any necessary prerequisites.
How are the placements organised?
You are responsible for organising your own placement; however, we have established collaborations with local, national and international organisations that you can consider when applying for placement positions.
UCAS code: L707
Why study abroad?
Students who have studied abroad demonstrate initiative, independence, motivation and, depending on where they stay, may also have gained a working knowledge of another language – all qualities employers are looking for.
Where can I study abroad?
On this four-year variant of the BA Geography degree you will spend your third year at one of our international exchange partner universities in Australia, New Zealand, the United States, China or Japan.
You can find a complete list of International Exchange partner universities on the Study Abroad website.
What will I study whilst I am abroad?
Whilst abroad you will study approved modules at the host university equivalent to 120 Exeter credits; these will be credited towards your degree, which you would then complete after four years of study rather than three.
Does it count towards my degree?
Yes: your work during the year abroad is assessed and contributes to your final degree classification. The words ‘with Study Abroad’ will appear in your degree title and be recorded on your degree certificate.
During your first, second and final years of study, you will follow the same programme of study as the BA Geography (see Course content).
How does it affect my tuition fee?
If you spend a full academic year studying abroad you will pay a reduced fee for that year. Find out more in the fees section.
How do I apply?
You can apply directly to this programme through UCAS using the code above. To be eligible for a Study Abroad place, we would expect you to successfully complete your Year 1 studies with an average mark of at least 60%.
Occasionally it is possible to transfer onto this programme from the standard BA Geography course in your second year, if you have appropriate language skills and have achieved a mark of 60% or more in year 1.
Further information
For further information on where you can go and all the issues surrounding study abroad, see the Study Abroad website.
Fees
Tuition fees for 2025 entry
UK students: £9,535 per year
International students: £30,900 per year
Year abroad
If you choose the four-year version of this degree programme and spend a full academic year studying abroad, you will pay a reduced fee of 15 per cent of the maximum fee for that year.
Professional placement year
If you choose the four-year version of this degree programme and spend a full year on a work placement (in the UK or abroad) you will pay a reduced fee of 20 per cent of the maximum fee for that year.
Fieldwork
Please note: Field trip costs such as travel, accommodation, and breakfast/evening meals are included. Students may be asked to cover costs such as lunch, and any materials they may need (e.g. notebooks).
Scholarships
The University of Exeter has many different scholarships available to support your education, including £5 million in scholarships for international students, such as our Global Excellence Scholarships*. Financial support is also available for students from disadvantaged backgrounds, lower income households and other under-represented groups to help them access, succeed and progress through higher education.
* Terms and conditions apply. See online for details.
Fieldwork
Avignon and Marseille
The Sustainable Communities Field Course to Avignon-Marseille is centred on taking a social learning approach that explores community responses to social, environmental and sustainability challenges. This module includes opportunities to explore themes including community food projects, sustainable food innovation and sustainable tourism in the Avignon city region, along with spatialities of migration and their intersection with sustainability, community organising and sustainable heritage and tourism in Marseille. The module will introduce you to a range of contemporary debates on sustainable futures, community action on climate change, sustainable food networks, the spatialities of demographic change and migration, multi-level governance and coproducing knowledge with partners within the context of The Climate Emergency. The focus on sustainability is extended through a commitment to using low carbon travel to visit these two European cities and their surrounding areas. Through experiencing these two field sites, you will learn how social scientists are working with community partners to help reimagine ways to engender positive environmental and social transformations.
Field trip themes:
- Community action on climate change
- Sustainable heritage and tourism
- Demographic change and migration
- Spatialities of migration
- Migration and sustainability
- Bioregional economies and enterprise
- Food geographies
- Community food projects
- Sustainable food networks and innovation
- Knowledge coproduction for environmental governance
- Multi-level governance for environmental policy making
Berlin
Berlin has been central to many of the key political and urban issues of the last 100 years: at the heart of the turmoil during the rise of fascism; as the symbolic centre of the Cold War; and as a city that exemplifies many of the key urban issues of the 21st century. Through a series of activities in various sites, both well-known (e.g. the Reichstag, the Berlin Wall, the Jewish Museum) and lesser-known (e.g. Stolpersteine memorials, the neighbourhood of Prenzlauer Berg), and working in small groups with guidance and advice from academic staff, this trip equips you with the intellectual resources to undertake your own explorations and analysis of this fascinating city.
Itinerary:
Day | Activity |
---|---|
Day 1 | Berlin Wall Memorial Stasi Museum |
Day 2 | The Reichstag Prenzlauer Berg Mauerpark |
Day 3 | Humboldt Forum Marx Engels Forum Alexanderplatz |
Day 4 |
Topographies of Terror |
Day 5 | Independent group work Field trip social in evening |
Day 6 | Independent group work Transfer to airport/UK |
Freiburg and the Black Forest
The Environmental Futures Field Course is an interdisciplinary module centred on enabling you to engage critically and experientially with a range of contemporary debates on sustainable futures and landscape transformations within the context of The Climate Emergency. This learning focus is extended through a commitment to using low carbon travel (whole module group rail travel) to visit the city and its surrounding areas. Through experiencing a diverse range of field sites, you will learn how physical and social scientists are helping to reimagine the ways we engage with urban and rural spaces to engender positive environmental and social transformations.
Field trip themes:
- Behaviour change and personal mobility
- Sustainable cities
- Coexistence with wildlife
Skaftafell, Iceland
The Iceland field course provides an opportunity for you to apply and develop your physical geography research skills in a real-world environment. Iceland’s position at 60 degrees North on the Mid Atlantic Ridge in the North Atlantic Ocean has led to the development of a spectacular landscape which records contemporary and ongoing glacial, volcanic and fluvial processes. The field trip focuses on the physical processes that have shaped the dramatic landscape of Iceland, and how knowledge of these processes can help us better understand changes in regional climate. With ice caps and glaciers as sensitive indicators of climate, Iceland presents a unique environment in which to study glacier geomorphology and climate change over the past 150 years.
During the trip we will be based at a hotel located in the world-famous Vatnajökull National Park. The field course involves a series of site visits and field lectures in Iceland, focusing on observing and understanding these processes at field sites in the southeast of Iceland at the edge of the Vatnajökull Ice Cap. Using a combination of GIS and field-based techniques you will conduct a research project working in small groups in a glacier foreland studying:
- Glaciers as climate indicators
- Landscape evolution
- Relative dating techniques
- Quantifying rates of environmental change
As well as some great physical geography such as Thingvellir, Gulfoss and Geysir, there may be a chance to see the northern lights, participate in a glacier walk, and relax in a geothermal pool.
*Please note, some optional/alternative field courses may incur additional costs. Find out more in the Fees section.
Learning and teaching
How will I learn?
- Lectures
- Seminars
- Workshops
- Tutorials – small group discussion classes of 6-12 students
- Computer practicals
- Laboratory classes
- Field work
- Independent study
Learn from the experts
You will join a large, energetic community of Geography students and staff presenting a thriving environment in which to study. Our academic staff are world leaders across many critical contemporary research areas, from the protection of the Great Barrier Reef and the tropical ecology of the Amazonian forest to the reduction of antimicrobial use in farming, the geopolitics of migration and refugee displacement, and the development of craft economies.
We have strong links with international, national, and local research projects around the globe, and staff draw upon the insights and examples these provide in their teaching.
Learning technology and facilities
In lectures we encourage you to contribute through the use of smartphone interactive technology to ask questions or submit feedback. Where applicable to your module choices, all students have access to well-equipped laboratories and the latest geographical information systems (GIS), mapping statistics and coding software.
We have a virtual learning environment, where the details of all modules are stored in an easily navigable website. Here you can access detailed information about learning outcomes, and interact through discussion forums, blogging and virtual field trips. The virtual field trips integrate video and audio data, maps, datasets, documents and published research to help you develop field work and analytical skills that are firmly grounded in the real world.
Assessment
Your progress is monitored through tutorial work and practical assessments. Your final degree mark is based on approximately 50 per cent exam-based and 50 per cent coursework-based assessments. This is, however, dependent on your module choices where some optional modules might be 100% coursework for example. You can therefore pick modules by topic but also based on what you think will best allow you to demonstrate your learning. In your final year you will undertake a dissertation, which is an independent research project on the topic that excites you most.
You must pass your modules in the first year in order to progress, but your marks in this year do not influence your final degree classification.
Academic support
We are committed to providing you with a supportive learning environment in which you can build confidence and mastery of Geography.
You will have a personal and academic tutor who is available for advice and support throughout your studies and to support the transition to university-level learning. You will also be represented through Student-Staff Liaison Committees and have regular opportunities to feedback on your course and modules.
Optional modules outside of this course
Each year, if you have optional modules available, you can take up to 30 credits in a subject outside of your course. This can increase your employability and widen your intellectual horizons.
Proficiency in a second subject
If you complete 60 credits of modules in one of the subjects below, you may have the words 'with proficiency in [e.g. Social Data Science]' added to your degree title when you graduate.
- A Foreign Language
- Data Science
- Entrepreneurship
- Innovation
- Law (Penryn Campus only)
- Leadership
- Management
- Social Data Science
Your future
Employer-valued skills this course develops
Students studying Geography develop both a depth and breadth of knowledge, skills and experiences that make them highly employable across a diverse range of careers.
These skills include:
- Data gathering and quality control
- Information retrieval and professional analysis
- Problem solving and assessment of uncertainty
- Project planning and management
- Organising and communicating information
- Report production and presentation (written and oral)
- Plus the ability to work effectively on your own and as part of a team.
Supporting your career in Geography
We put on a range of employability sessions for students which include:
- Career talks with visiting alumni and employers from a range of backgrounds,
- Career conversations and employability seminar series events with employers,
- A Careers in Sustainable Development and Environmental Protection Careers and Networking event
- Visits to the Met Office and UKHO
- Annual Careers Fair
- Opportunities to access high-quality work placements through an employability optional module.
Careers services
We have a dedicated, award-winning Careers Service ensuring you have access to careers advisors, mentors and the tools you need to succeed in finding employment in your chosen field on graduation. We offer the Exeter Award and the Exeter Leaders Award which include employability-related workshops, skills events, volunteering and employment which will contribute to your career decision-making skills and success in the employment market.
The University of Exeter has an excellent reputation with graduate recruiters and our students and graduates compete very successfully in the employment market. Whatever path you wish to follow, we’re here to help and support you with all your career and employability needs.
Royal Geographical Society (RGS) Ambassador Scheme
You will have the opportunity to apply for the RGS Ambassador Scheme. The scheme recruits, trains and supports geographers currently at university and graduate geographers from the workplace to act as ambassadors for geography in the classroom. Ambassadors act as positive role models for pupils and can illustrate, with enthusiasm, both the specific and transferable skills they have developed as a geographer. For more information you can visit the RGS Ambassador Scheme website.
Career paths
The breadth of career opportunities open to Geography graduates is vast, with recent graduates starting careers in planning, environmental and sustainability projects, water analysis, insurance, teaching and more – both in the UK and overseas.
Whatever you choose to do after graduation, your Geography degree will stand you in good stead, with excellent employment prospects and transferable skills.
Below are a few examples of initial jobs undertaken by graduates from our Geography undergraduate programmes*.
Recent graduates are now working as:
- Chartered and certified accountants
- Business and related research professionals
- Data analysts
- Brokers
- Property, housing and estate managers
- Marketing associate professionals
- Estimators, valuers and assessors
- Project support officers
- Primary and secondary education teaching professionals
- Information technology professionals
Recent graduates are now working for:
- Babcock International
- BNP Paribas
- Centrica
- Environment Agency
- Ernst & Young
- European Space Agency
- NHS
- Ordnance Survey
- Oxborough Surveyors LLP
- Skanska
- UK Hydrographic Office
Further study
Further study is a popular choice for a number of students following graduation from a Geography undergraduate degree. Below are a few examples of further study undertaken by recent graduates of undergraduate programmes*.
- Graduate Diploma in Law
- MA Quantity Surveying
- MRes Sustainable Development
- MSc Environmental Consultancy
- MSc Flood and Coastal Engineering
- MSc Geospatial Sciences
- MSc International Development and Humanitarian Emergencies
- MSc Management
- MSc Public Health
- MSc Rural Land and Business Management
- MSc Transport and Planning
*This information has been taken from aggregating the responses from full-time, first degree, UK domiciled students who completed 2017/18 and 2018/19 Graduate Outcomes surveys. Please note that, due to data protection, the job titles and organisations are listed independently and do not necessarily correspond.
Top 15 in the UK for Geography and Environmental Science
11th in the Complete University Guide 2025