Overview
The 4 year MBBS programme will equip you with the professional knowledge skills values and behaviours required to be a competent medical practitioner.
Summary
Applications are open for August 2025 entry.
We will accept the appropriate GAMSAT scores from March 2021 - March 2025 exam sittings. Applications to the programme will close on January 29 2025.
This 4-year course is open to graduates from a wide range of science and non-science backgrounds. You will be part of a cohort of students that have a diverse range of experience and skills, making this an exciting and stimulating entry route into the medical profession. Upon graduation you will be awarded a primary medical qualification, an MBBS degree, which enables you to start work as a medical practitioner in the United Kingdom. At the time of writing, you will be eligible to enter the UK Foundation Programme, but with the introduction of the UK Medical Licensing Examination in 2024, the requirement for the UK Foundation Programme might have changed before you commence your studies.
The award of the final degree by Ulster University will be subject to satisfying the GMC’s rigorous quality assurance programme which is due to conclude in the spring of 2025. In the unlikely event that Ulster did not satisfy the GMC’s rigorous quality assurance programme, the final degree for currently enrolled students would be awarded by our partner Medical School, St George’s, University of London.
The care of patients, as a doctor, requires a broad approach which includes a sound understanding of biomedical and social sciences, and the ability to provide comprehensive, compassionate "whole patient" care. Applicants with non-science backgrounds bring unique and important skills and experience to both their studies and their eventual care of patients. This is why we welcome applications from a diverse range of backgrounds.
The start date for the programme is 18 August 2025
We’d love to hear from you!
We know that choosing to study at university is a big decision, and you may not always be able to find the information you need online.
Please contact Ulster University with any queries or questions you might have about:
- Course specific information
- Fees and Finance
- Admissions
For any queries regarding getting help with your application, please select Admissions in the drop down below.
For queries related to course content, including modules and placements, please select Course specific information.
We look forward to hearing from you.
About this course
About
The course is an intense full-time, four year programme leading to an MBBS degree, recognised by the General Medical Council as a Primary Medical Qualification in the UK. The award of the final degree by Ulster University will be subject to satisfying the GMC’s rigorous quality assurance programme.
We are delighted to be working with St George’s University of London as our partner medical school. St George’s has a long established reputation for delivering world-class medical education and has run a highly acclaimed Graduate Entry medical programme for many years.
Throughout the journey of the first cohort of students, we have been working closely with the GMC and St Georges to provide our students with the very best medical education; ensuring that they emerge as competent, caring, capable doctors.
Our 4-year MBBS programme can give you the opportunity to train as a doctor, even if this seemed like such a remote dream for you when you were at school that you did not even consider it. Perhaps you did not achieve the GCSE grades you had hoped for; or perhaps you were not sure whether to study arts or sciences at A level and opted for arts-based subjects. Maybe you just did not think you would ever be good enough to consider that you could be a doctor: but all along, you could not deny that this was really what you wanted to do.
In our School of Medicine, you now have a chance to fulfil your ambition to become a doctor. If you have a minimum of a 2.1 honours degree in any subject or Masters qualification with an mnimum of 60% overall, are willing to work hard and want to know more about what it means to study medicine and become a doctor; then come along to our open days. There, you will have an opportunity to speak to us to find out more about being a doctor, what Graduate Entry medicine entails, and how you can prepare for our admissions process. You will need to sit the GAMSAT test and undertake a Multiple-Mini Interview process to demonstrate that you have the personal qualities required of a doctor. Once a student with us, working in mixed groups means that, whatever your background, you will have an unique perspective and bring all your prior learning and life experience to your studies.
Being a doctor is endlessly rewarding, hard work and at times challenging. We are pleased to welcome applications from a wide range of students. A long term health condition of your own is not in itself a reason not to apply to study medicine, although we will take an individual approach to applicants with health problems and/ or disabilities, using Occupational Health professionals, in order to make sure that you have all the support you require to maximise your success as an undergraduate and then moving into the workplace. There is strong ongoing support for you whilst a student through the University’s support services, and there is further support available through the Ulster University Students Union.
Studying medicine with us will provide you with an intensely practical medical education. Ulster’s MBBS programme will have a problem-based and interdisciplinary learning focus. This will enable you to graduate, not only demonstrating that you meet all the GMC ‘Outcomes for Graduates’, but that you are fully prepared to work as a member of an integrated health and social care team with a strong community focus, even for patients cared for by hospital specialists.
You will benefit from access to practice learning placements across the full range of medical specialist subjects, significant opportunities for primary care-based experience, and knowledge and appreciation of the interconnectivity between primary, secondary, social and community-based healthcare.
Graduate entry medicine is an intense course of study and this course is therefore not available for part time study. Placements are delivered across Northern Ireland and students will be placed in a number of primary, secondary and community placements and travel will be required.
Northern Ireland is facing an unprecedented medical workforce shortage that will continue to impact negatively on the care of patients, their families and communities. Our medical school will help to ease the workforce challenges and future-proof our health service.
The MBBS programme is funded through the Northern Ireland executive as one element of an approach to addressing this shortage of doctors in Northern Ireland. In addition, the University’s Civic commitment is to enhance the wellbeing and economic prosperity of our society. We therefore encourage applications from individuals who are keen to join the medical workforce in Ireland. Applicants will not have to demonstrate knowledge of the Northern Ireland health system during the selection process but, in common with other medical schools in the UK, applicants will be expected to demonstrate their insight into the work of a doctor, and their commitment to work as a doctor following graduation.
Ulster University has a global reputation for biomedical sciences research across the breadth of the medical sphere. Our School of Nursing, also based at the Magee campus in Derry~Londonderry, is ranked 7th in the UK. Our unparalleled personalised medicine research, which primarily takes place in the C-TRIC facility at Altnagelvin Hospital, is globally renowned for pioneering personalised treatments for chronic health conditions.
Highlights
- Contact with patients from the fourth week of year one
- Learn anatomy with an emphasis on technology and live imaging, no cadaveric work.
- Patient-focused education with a strong emphasis on communicating with patients from a range of backgrounds
- Opportunities to undertake student selected component (SSC) of study on areas of interest to you, in particular, we are keen to support students who have an interest in remote and rural medicine to pursue this via SSC and elective.
- Problem Based Learning approach allowing you to learn basic and clinical sciences and psychosocial theory in the context of clinical cases.
- Interprofessional education: learning opportunities exist for our students to learn alongside one another reflecting the multidisciplinary nature of healthcare workplace environment.
- Careers advice embedded into our teaching
- Teaching is informed by our world class research which informs practice
- Many lecturers are working clinicians
Attendance
Full-time: 4 years; at least 45 months from initial enrolment; and not less than 5500 hours of theoretical and practical instruction. Maximum 6 years.
The course follows an attendance policy that mirrors that of the workplace. The expectation is for 100% attendance at timetabled events and any absences should be reported in a timely, professional manner. Campus teaching is generally scheduled 09:15 to 17:15, Monday to Friday, and placements shifts will include some out of hours working, particularly later in the programme.
Start dates
Teaching, Learning and Assessment
This course follows a Problem Based Learning model and is underpinned by three main themes:
- Basic and Clinical Sciences
- Patients, Populations and Society
- Professional Skills
In years one and two, the emphasis is on small group learning using clinical cases, independent study, clinical and communication skills tutorials and lectures. There are also clinical and community based placements in general practice and hospital trusts throughout Northern Ireland.
In year three (penultimate year) and year four (final year) clinical attachments take precedence, with complementary lectures running in parallel. Your exposure to clinical environments is maximised within general practice and hospital trusts throughout Northern Ireland.
In the final year all students undertake an elective. This is an opportunity to explore an aspect of medicine of particular interest to you, anywhere in the world. Elective plans are reviewed and approved by an academic member of staff, and a report is written upon completion.
The content for each year is outlined on the relevant module summary.
Assessment in the programme follows the three GMC Outcomes for Graduates domains: Professional Values and Behaviours, Professional Skills and Professional Knowledge. A range of assessment types are utilised to allow students to demonstrate competency across these domains, including Single Based Answer and Short Answer Question exams, Objective Structured Clinical Examinations, Workplace Based Assessments and Professional Development Portfolio.
Attendance and Independent Study
The content for each course is summarised on the relevant course page, along with an overview of the modules that make up the course.
Each course is approved by the University and meets the expectations of:
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Attendance and Independent Study
As part of your course induction, you will be provided with details of the organisation and management of the course, including attendance and assessment requirements - usually in the form of a timetable. For full-time courses, the precise timetable for each semester is not confirmed until close to the start date and may be subject to some change in the early weeks as all courses settle into their planned patterns. For part-time courses which require attendance on particular days and times, an expectation of the days and periods of attendance will be included in the letter of offer. A course handbook is also made available.
Courses comprise modules for which the notional effort involved is indicated by its credit rating. Each credit point represents 10 hours of student effort. Undergraduate courses typically contain 10, 20, or 40 credit modules (more usually 20) and postgraduate courses typically 15 or 30 credit modules.
The normal study load expectation for an undergraduate full-time course of study in the standard academic year is 120 credit points. This amounts to around 36-42 hours of expected teaching and learning per week, inclusive of attendance requirements for lectures, seminars, tutorials, practical work, fieldwork or other scheduled classes, private study, and assessment. Teaching and learning activities will be in-person and/or online depending on the nature of the course. Part-time study load is the same as full-time pro-rata, with each credit point representing 10 hours of student effort.
Postgraduate Master’s courses typically comprise 180 credits, taken in three semesters when studied full-time. A Postgraduate Certificate (PGCert) comprises 60 credits and can usually be completed on a part-time basis in one year. A 120-credit Postgraduate Diploma (PGDip) can usually be completed on a part-time basis in two years.
Class contact times vary by course and type of module. Typically, for a module predominantly delivered through lectures you can expect at least 3 contact hours per week (lectures/seminars/tutorials). Laboratory classes often require a greater intensity of attendance in blocks. Some modules may combine lecture and laboratory. The precise model will depend on the course you apply for and may be subject to change from year to year for quality or enhancement reasons. Prospective students will be consulted about any significant changes.
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Assessment
Assessment methods vary and are defined explicitly in each module. Assessment can be a combination of examination and coursework but may also be only one of these methods. Assessment is designed to assess your achievement of the module’s stated learning outcomes. You can expect to receive timely feedback on all coursework assessments. This feedback may be issued individually and/or issued to the group and you will be encouraged to act on this feedback for your own development.
Coursework can take many forms, for example: essay, report, seminar paper, test, presentation, dissertation, design, artefacts, portfolio, journal, group work. The precise form and combination of assessment will depend on the course you apply for and the module. Details will be made available in advance through induction, the course handbook, the module specification, the assessment timetable and the assessment brief. The details are subject to change from year to year for quality or enhancement reasons. You will be consulted about any significant changes.
Normally, a module will have 4 learning outcomes, and no more than 2 items of assessment. An item of assessment can comprise more than one task. The notional workload and the equivalence across types of assessment is standardised. The module pass mark for undergraduate courses is 40%. The module pass mark for postgraduate courses is 50%.
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Calculation of the Final Award
The class of Honours awarded in Bachelor’s degrees is usually determined by calculation of an aggregate mark based on performance across the modules at Levels 5 and 6, (which correspond to the second and third year of full-time attendance).
Level 6 modules contribute 70% of the aggregate mark and Level 5 contributes 30% to the calculation of the class of the award. Classification of integrated Master’s degrees with Honours include a Level 7 component. The calculation in this case is: 50% Level 7, 30% Level 6, 20% Level 5. At least half the Level 5 modules must be studied at the University for Level 5 to be included in the calculation of the class.
All other qualifications have an overall grade determined by results in modules from the final level of study.
In Masters degrees of more than 200 credit points the final 120 points usually determine the overall grading.
Figures from the academic year 2022-2023.
Academic profile
The University employs over 1,000 suitably qualified and experienced academic staff - 60% have PhDs in their subject field and many have professional body recognition.
Courses are taught by staff who are Professors (19%), Readers, Senior Lecturers (22%) or Lecturers (57%).
We require most academic staff to be qualified to teach in higher education: 82% hold either Postgraduate Certificates in Higher Education Practice or higher. Most academic and learning support staff (85%) are recognised as fellows of the Higher Education Academy (HEA) by Advance HE - the university sector professional body for teaching and learning. Many academic and technical staff hold other professional body designations related to their subject or scholarly practice.
The profiles of many academic staff can be found on the University’s departmental websites and give a detailed insight into the range of staffing and expertise. The precise staffing for a course will depend on the department(s) involved and the availability and management of staff. This is subject to change annually and is confirmed in the timetable issued at the start of the course.
Occasionally, teaching may be supplemented by suitably qualified part-time staff (usually qualified researchers) and specialist guest lecturers. In these cases, all staff are inducted, mostly through our staff development programme ‘First Steps to Teaching’. In some cases, usually for provision in one of our out-centres, Recognised University Teachers are involved, supported by the University in suitable professional development for teaching.
Figures from the academic year 2022-2023.
Modules
Here is a guide to the subjects studied on this course.
Courses are continually reviewed to take advantage of new teaching approaches and developments in research, industry and the professions. Please be aware that modules may change for your year of entry. The exact modules available and their order may vary depending on course updates, staff availability, timetabling and student demand. Please contact the course team for the most up to date module list.
Year one
Clinical Sciences
Year: 1
Status: C
The first year of the MBBS programme is the Clinical Science Year and introduces students, from a wide variety of backgrounds, knowledge and experiences, to the foundation knowledge required of a medical student and provides opportunities to put new knowledge and skills into practice on clinical placement in primary care setting. There is an emphasis on developing the relevant basic science necessary to recognise and understand signs and symptoms, the mechanisms that underpin these, and the ability to derive a set of pertinent differential diagnoses from their findings. The first year also introduces students to clinical and communication skills using models and simulated patients, and to appropriate personal and professional development and to the community and population context of care delivery.
Year two
Medicine (Transition Year)
Year: 2
Status: C
The second year of the MBBS programme is the Transition (T) Year, where students are transitioning into further clinical practice. T year includes an 17-week Problem Based Learning (PBL) programme which will rotate with 5-week clinical attachments in General Practice, Medicine and Surgery, followed by a 3-week Student Selected elective placement.
Teaching in T year links the learning within PBL with the underlying science, and primary and secondary care patient management. As with year 1, clinical and communication skills sessions continue to be carried out using models and simulated patients on-campus but are now also carried out in practice with real patients under appropriate supervision.
Year three
Medicine (Penultimate Year)
Year: 3
Status: C
The third year of the MBBS programme is the Penultimate (P) Year, where students spend the vast majority of their time on clinical placements, gaining practical experience of various medical and surgical specialties. Students extend the scope and depth of their learning in specialty placements and senior medicine and surgery. Clinical interviewing and examination increasingly support hypothesis generation, differential diagnosis skills and management planning. Students are supported to increase fluency in selected clinical procedures.
Year four
Medicine (Final Year)
Year: 4
Status: C
The fourth year of the MBBS programme, the Final (F) Year, is a year of Advanced Clinical Practice where students are supported to achieve the mastery standard required for foundation practice, and expand their horizons with public health experience, the final year Student Selected Component, and an Elective. During the assistantships in medicine, surgery and general practice, a one-to-one apprenticeship with a foundation doctor or general practitioner, allows students to achieve the standard of teamwork and clinical practice expected in foundation years. Rotations in anaesthetics and intensive care and emergency medicine complete the F year programme.
Standard entry conditions
We recognise a range of qualifications for admission to our courses. In addition to the specific entry conditions for this course you must also meet the University’s General Entrance Requirements.
A level
This is a graduate entry programme. School leavers cannot apply for this course. Please see 'Additional Entry Requirements' for more details.
Irish Leaving Certificate
English Language grade H6 or O4 or above or equivalent
Maths grade H6 or O4 or above or equivalent
Irish Leaving Certificate UCAS Equivalency
Tariff point chart
GCSE
English Language grade C (or grade 4) or above or equivalent
Maths grade C (or grade 4) or above or equivalent
Please note that for the purposes of entry to this course, the Level 2 Certificate in Essential Skills - Application of Number is NOT regarded as an acceptable alternative to GCSE Mathematics.
English Language Requirements
International and EU qualifications are assessed using UK National Information Centre (UK ENIC) and UCAS Overseas Qualifications manual. Applicants from non-English speaking countries are required to achieve IELTS grade 7.5 with no individual mark below 7.0 - this is in line with the GMC's requirements for overseas doctors seeking UK registration.
Additional Entry Requirements
Applicants must satisfy the University’s General Entrance Requirements: University Entrance requirements - Ulster University
Specific requirements for admission are:
- a minimum of a 2:1 Honours degree in any discipline or Masters qualification at a minimum of 60% overall
- Qualifications must be completed by the end of June in year of entry and confirmation of results available by mid July
- minimum score of 50 in each section of the GAMSAT test and meet an overall GAMSAT threshold for interview
- The threshold is set competitively each year based on the applications received. For reference, based on the 2020-2023 data, the average overall GAMSAT score of candidates invited for interview was 61.14
- pass Multiple-Mini Interview assessment
- a satisfactory Enhanced Disclosure from AccessNI or other relevant authority
- medical declaration completion and occupational health clearance
Prospective students should be aware of the GMC and MSC Medical students' professional values and fitness to practise guidance that considers behaviour both before and during a period of study. Failure to comply with this guidance could impair eligibility for a student to register with the GMC and affect continuation on the programme.
As a general rule, applicants who have previously studied, or are currently studying, at another UK, Ireland or International Medical School will not be considered for entry and all applicants will be checked against the Medical Schools Council excluded student database before being offered a place.However, if you experienced an extenuating circumstance, such as an unforeseen health or caring responsibility, which caused you to withdraw from a medical degree, it is possible for your application to be considered if you have made this clear in your UCAS personal statement. Remember you must declare all courses of previous study on UCAS regardless of whether you completed the course. If shortlisted, we would also require a letter from your current / previous Medical School proving academic and professional standing at point of withdrawal and supporting your claim for extenuating circumstances.
We welcome applications to our MBBS programme in accordance with the UCAS equal consideration deadline of 15 October 2024. For entry in August 25 applicants must have already completed GAMSAT or plan to take the test in March 25. GAMSAT is held biannually in September and March of each year. More information can be found at https://gamsat.acer.org/
For entry in August 25 we will consider GAMSAT scores from the following sittings: March 2021, September 2021, March 2022, September 2022, March 2023, September 2023, March 2024, September 2024 and March 2025.
If you have applied more than once and have not been shortlisted for interview we would suggest resitting your GAMSAT as it may be that your score is not competitive enough to gain an interview.
While there is no limit on the number of times you can apply to the programme, there is a maximum of two attempts at the Multiple Mini Interview. If you have undertaken the Ulster MBBS MMI twice, and have not gained an offer, a further UCAS application is unlikely to be considered.
Northern Ireland continues to face an unprecedented medical workforce shortage that will impact negatively on the care of patients, their families and communities. Our School of Medicine is part of the Northern Ireland Executive’s approach to addressing this shortage of doctors and therefore priority is given to students who are ordinarily resident in Northern Ireland or Republic of Ireland, with a smaller number of places for GB applicants. The number of places available for GB applicants differs year on year depending on the calibre of the applicant field. This approach has been taken to ease the workforce challenges in Northern Ireland and futureproof our health service. We also encourage applications from international applicants who are keen to join the medical workforce in Northern Ireland. Applicants will not have to demonstrate knowledge of the Northern Ireland health system during the selection process but, in common with other medical schools in the UK, applicants will be expected to demonstrate their insight into the work of a doctor, and their commitment to work as a doctor following graduation.
Exemptions and transferability
There can be no exemptions from any part of the approved programme.
Careers & opportunities
Graduate employers
Graduates from this course are now working for:
- Aid organisations
- Armed Forces
- National Health Service
- Private Healthcare Establishments
- Research Institutes
Job roles
With this degree you could become:
- General Practitioner
- Clinical Specialist
- Hospital doctor
- Overseas aid agencies
- Pathologist
- Surgeon
- Psychiatrist
Career options
On graduation you will have gained an MBBS primary medical qualification, with both the practical and clinical skills specific to medicine and the personal and professional attributes necessary to become a doctor. There are a wide variety of professional roles which you can choose to specialise in upon completion of your Foundation Training.
Career options can be found at:
https://www.medschools.ac.uk/studying-medicine
https://www.healthcareers.nhs.uk/explore-roles
https://www.prospects.ac.uk/careers-advice/what-can-i-do-with-my-degree/medicine
Work placement / study abroad
You will benefit from access to practice learning placements across the full range of medical specialist subjects, significant opportunities for primary care-based experience, and will develop knowledge and appreciation of the interconnectivity between primary, secondary, social and community-based healthcare. The programme will prepare you for 21st Century healthcare including the challenges of managing an ageing population, caring for patients with multiple Long Term Conditions, and managing the profound impact of mental health and distress on patients; and there will be an added element of cross-border collaboration focusing on remote and rural medicine. Students will spend over 83 core weeks on clinical placement, with the opportunity of spending up to 30 per cent of this within a primary care setting.
In Final Year you will undertake a medical elective, which can be taken in the United Kingdom or Ireland, with a number of students taking the opportunity to experience medicine from a global perspective. Although an international elective is optional and is funded by the student, it is hoped there might be bursaries available to students to support the cost of overseas electives.
Professional recognition
Accredited by the General Medical Council (GMC), this primary medical qualification entitles the holder to apply to the GMC for registration to practise medicine in the UK.
Fees and funding
Scholarships, awards and prizes
A limited number of Scholarships will be available for 2025 applicants. Information on these scholarships will be available soon.
PhD science graduates may also be eligible for the Foulkes Foundation Fellowship. The scheme provides financial support for recently qualified PhD science graduates with research experience who want to take a medical degree. For further information visit www.foulkes-foundation.org.
Additional mandatory costs
Entry to the course is subject to a satisfactory medical check and a criminal record check. Students will be required to meet these costs. AccessNI currently costs £33. Mandatory Occupational Health screening costs £35 and required vaccinations can cost up to £50 if you have not arranged these via your GP before the start of the programme. Additional screening and vaccinations can cost up to £170 if a student wishes to become EPP cleared, however this is not mandatory. Full details of OH requirements will be communicated to offer holders in advance.
Students will be required to meet the costs of accommodation and transport while attending placements during the programme. Students will also have printing costs and will be required to purchase required reading materials and certain clinical equipment such as a stethoscope and scrubs. Students will be expected to have a smart-phone or other hand-held device which can be used for assessments and accessing materials while on clinical placement.
The MBBS programme is longer than the usual 33 weeks for student accommodation which could attract higher living expenses.
**The fee for International students DOES NOT include the mandatory clinical placement levy to cover access to clinical placements in the Northern Ireland Health and Social Care system. This is currently £11 500 per year. The University subsides this levy, but international students will be expected to pay their share of this mandatory levy as per the following schedule on top of their international fee:
Year 1 £4,600
Year 2 £9,500
Year 3 £9,500
Year 4 £9,500 **
It is important to remember that costs associated with accommodation, travel (including car parking charges) and normal living will need to be covered in addition to tuition fees.
Where a course has additional mandatory expenses (in addition to tuition fees) we make every effort to highlight them above. We aim to provide students with the learning materials needed to support their studies. Our libraries are a valuable resource with an extensive collection of books and journals, as well as first-class facilities and IT equipment. Computer suites and free Wi-Fi are also available on each of the campuses.
There are additional fees for graduation ceremonies, examination resits and library fines.
Students choosing a period of paid work placement or study abroad as a part of their course should be aware that there may be additional travel and living costs, as well as tuition fees.
See the tuition fees on our student guide for most up to date costs.
Disclaimer
- The University endeavours to deliver courses and programmes of study in accordance with the description set out in this prospectus. The University’s prospectus is produced at the earliest possible date in order to provide maximum assistance to individuals considering applying for a course of study offered by the University. The University makes every effort to ensure that the information contained in the prospectus is accurate, but it is possible that some changes will occur between the date of printing and the start of the academic year to which it relates. Please note that the University’s website is the most up-to-date source of information regarding courses, campuses and facilities and we strongly recommend that you always visit the website before making any commitments.
- Although the University at all times endeavours to provide the programmes and services described, the University cannot guarantee the provision of any course or facility and the University may make variations to the contents or methods of delivery of courses, discontinue, merge or combine courses, change the campus at which they are provided and introduce new courses if such action is considered necessary by the University (acting reasonably). Not all such circumstances are entirely foreseeable but changes may be required if matters such as the following arise: industrial action interferes with the University’s ability to teach the course as planned, lack of demand makes a course economically unviable for the University, departure of key staff renders the University unable to deliver the course, changes in legislation or government policy including changes, if any, resulting from the UK departing the European Union, withdrawal or reduction of funding specifically provided for the course or other unforeseeable circumstances beyond the University’s reasonable control.
- If the University discontinues any courses, it will use its best endeavours to provide a suitable alternative course. In addition, courses may change during the course of study and in such circumstances the University will normally undertake a consultation process prior to any such changes being introduced and seek to ensure that no student is unreasonably prejudiced as a consequence of any such change.
- Providing the University has complied with the requirements of all applicable consumer protection laws, the University does not accept responsibility for the consequences of any modification, relocation or cancellation of any course, or part of a course, offered by the University. The University will give due and proper consideration to the effects thereof on individual students and take the steps necessary to minimise the impact of such effects on those affected. 5. The University is not liable for disruption to its provision of educational or other services caused by circumstances beyond its reasonable control providing it takes all reasonable steps to minimise the resultant disruption to such services.
Sustainability at Ulster
Ulster continues to develop and support sustainability initiatives with our staff, students, and external partners across various aspects of teaching, research, professional services operations, and governance.
At Ulster every person, course, research project, and professional service area on every campus either does or can contribute in some way towards the global sustainability and climate change agenda.
We are guided by both our University Strategy People, Place and Partnerships: Delivering Sustainable Futures for All and the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Our work in this area is already being recognised globally. Most recently by the 2024 Times Higher Education Impact rating where we were recognised as Joint 5th Globally for Outreach Activities and Joint Top 20 Globally for Sustainable Development Goal 17: Partnership for the Goals.
Visit our Sustainability at Ulster destination to learn more about how the University strategy and the activities of Ulster University support each of the Sustainable Development Goals.