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Accounting and Finance BSc (Hons)
Study mode: Full Time |
This course provides a conceptual basis for the analysis of issues in each subject, leading to studies of individual topics in the final year; the programme may allow students to take more law units than is possible in the other accounting programmes as well as specialising in finance.
Study mode: Full Time |
The main research themes reflect the interests of staff members; the particular strengths of the Department lie in empirical finance (Daniella Acker, Sylvain Freiderich, Paula Hill, Piotr Korczak, Neslihan Ozkan, Stuart Snaith and Richard Payne); market-based accounting research (David Ashton, Nicola Petrovic); management accounting (David Dugdale, Stephen Lyne) and public sector accounting (Sheila Ellwood).
Study mode: Full Time |
The main research themes reflect the interests of staff members; the particular strengths of the Department lie in empirical finance (Daniella Acker, Sylvain Freiderich, Paula Hill, Piotr Korczak, Neslihan Ozkan, Stuart Snaith and Richard Payne); market-based accounting research (David Ashton, Nicola Petrovic); management accounting (David Dugdale, Stephen Lyne) and public sector accounting (Sheila Ellwood).
Accounting and Management BSc (Hons)
Study mode: Full Time |
Course provides a conceptual basis for the analysis of issues in each subject, and uses advanced mathematical and statistical techniques in analysing the principles of economics, leading to study of individual topics in the final year.
Accounting, Finance and Management MSc
Study mode: Full Time |
This programme has been introduced for those students who wish to put greater emphasis on finance and accounting topics in their graduate studies; in the 1st term students develop key skills and a grounding in accounting, finance and management that prepare them for the more advanced units taught in the 2nd term.
Advanced Computing (Internet Technologies with Security) MSc
Study mode: Full Time |
This programme introduces students to the most important aspects of networked applications, databases, servers, legal issues, security issues, and cryptography; graduates become well equipped for a wide variety of employment in the computing industry, and wider fields such as commerce and banking.
Advanced Computing (Internet Technologies with multimedia) MSc
Study mode: Full Time |
This programme aims to introduce students to the most important aspects of networked applications and digital media information; graduates become equipped for a wide variety of employment in computing, business and the entertainment industry, and will have the opportunity to be leaders of the media revolution and its emerging technologies.
Advanced Computing (Machine Learning and Data Mining) MSc
Study mode: Full Time |
This programme is aimed at giving students a solid grounding in machine learning and data mining technology and equipping them with the skills necessary to construct and apply machine learning and data mining tools to the solution of complex scientific and business problems.
Advanced Mechanical Engineering MSc
Study mode: Full Time |
The main objective of this programme is to produce graduates with the ability to plan, execute and report technical projects for industry and academia.
Advanced Microelectronic Systems Engineering MSc
Study mode: Full Time |
This course has been designed to meet the needs of this local industry to remedy a shortfall in graduates with the qualifications and practical skills expected of semiconductor design engineers.
Aerospace Engineering MSc (Research)
Study mode: Full Time |
The University of Bristol benefits from the concentration of aerospace industry in the south-west of England and a key feature of the Department's research is its close links with the industry including: Airbus, Rolls-Royce, AgustaWestland, BAE Systems and others further afield: some of these research links have led to the establishment of formal technology partnerships, namely the Rolls-Royce University Technology Centre in Composites, the GE Aviation University Technology Strategic Partnership in Composites (with Oxford University) and the more recent AgustaWestland Helicopters University Technology Centre in Vibration; the result of this close relationship with industry, associated with substantial research funding from other UK and EU sources, is that the Department's research is industrially relevant and at the leading edge of the aerospace sector as reflected by the high proportion of research found to be internationally excellent and world-leading in the 2008 UK government Research Assessment Exercise; the department holds over £15 million worth of research contracts in the fields of aerodynamics and fluid dynamics, dynamics and systems and composite materials and structures; the latter leads the University's Advanced Composites Centre for Innovation and Science (ACCIS) cross-faculty research theme, which has recently been awarded a £7.1 million Engineering and Physical Research Council (EPSRC) Doctoral Training Centre in Composites; this DTC programme will fund 50 PhD students (intake 10 per year commencing in October 2009) to work at the interface of engineering and science; the vision is twofold: firstly to train highly technical researchers to satisfy industry needs, reflected in the industrial support for 50% of the projects, and also to develop next generation multifunctional composite materials; the DTC is different from conventional PhDs in that it is a 4 year programme involving a taught element to the first year comprising advanced technical units and transferable skills training, followed by the three-year research projects; as well as the contracted research, the department also undertakes a large amount of consultancy work and general research; the more fundamental research is supported from internal funds; this uninhibited approach to research ideas encourages collaborative projects with other departments and research centres throughout the University.
Study mode: Full Time |
The University of Bristol benefits from the concentration of aerospace industry in the south-west of England and a key feature of the Department's research is its close links with the industry including: Airbus, Rolls-Royce, AgustaWestland, BAE Systems and others further afield: some of these research links have led to the establishment of formal technology partnerships, namely the Rolls-Royce University Technology Centre in Composites, the GE Aviation University Technology Strategic Partnership in Composites (with Oxford University) and the more recent AgustaWestland Helicopters University Technology Centre in Vibration; the result of this close relationship with industry, associated with substantial research funding from other UK and EU sources, is that the Department's research is industrially relevant and at the leading edge of the aerospace sector as reflected by the high proportion of research found to be internationally excellent and world-leading in the 2008 UK government Research Assessment Exercise; the department holds over £15 million worth of research contracts in the fields of aerodynamics and fluid dynamics, dynamics and systems and composite materials and structures; the latter leads the University's Advanced Composites Centre for Innovation and Science (ACCIS) cross-faculty research theme, which has recently been awarded a £7.1 million Engineering and Physical Research Council (EPSRC) Doctoral Training Centre in Composites; this DTC programme will fund 50 PhD students (intake 10 per year commencing in October 2009) to work at the interface of engineering and science; the vision is twofold: firstly to train highly technical researchers to satisfy industry needs, reflected in the industrial support for 50% of the projects, and also to develop next generation multifunctional composite materials; the DTC is different from conventional PhDs in that it is a 4 year programme involving a taught element to the first year comprising advanced technical units and transferable skills training, followed by the three-year research projects; as well as the contracted research, the department also undertakes a large amount of consultancy work and general research; the more fundamental research is supported from internal funds; this uninhibited approach to research ideas encourages collaborative projects with other departments and research centres throughout the University.
Study mode: Full Time |
Study mode: Full Time |
The Department has many academic staff whose research is considered to be internationally competitive and is funded by research councils (e.g. MRC, BBSRC) and charities such as the Wellcome Trust; it also has 40 postdoctoral researchers and 45 PhD students; members of the department form the core of the MRC Centre for synaptic plasticity - a centre for excellence in understanding cellular and molecular mechanisms governing changes in communication between neurones.
Study mode: Full Time |
Course combines the study of important periods and themes of Greek and Roman political and social history with that of the strengths and limitations of different approaches and methods available to modern historians of antiquity.