ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥

Key facts

Entry requirements

120 or DMM

Full entry requirements

UCAS code

L502

Institution code

D26

Duration

3 yrs full-time

Three years full-time

Fees

2025/26 UK tuition fees:
£9,535*

2025/26 international tuition:
£16,750

Additional costs

Entry requirements

UCAS code

L502

Institution code

D26

Duration

3 yrs full-time

Three years full-time

Fees

2025/26 UK tuition fees:
£9,535*

2025/26 international tuition:
£16,750

Additional costs

With ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥â€™s BA (Hons) Social Work, gain the skills, experience, and confidence to make a real impact in communities that need it most.

Social workers are key to supporting individuals and communities, from child protection to mental health. Our degree equips you with the practical skills, knowledge, and resilience to become a confident, effective, and compassionate social worker. You'll learn everything from social work theories to professional skills, ensuring you're ready to help adults and children in various settings.

By the end of the course, you’ll be eligible to register with Social Work England and start your career in a field that makes a real impact.

  • Industry informed teaching: Learn from experienced staff with real-world social work practice, teaching, and research expertise, ensuring your learning experience is high-quality and up-to-date with contemporary issues, advancements and debates within the sector.
  • Gain real-world insight: Get direct input from people with lived experience, including co-taught lectures and assessments.
  • Flexible career paths: Gain the flexibility to work with both adults and children, opening doors to diverse career opportunities.
  • Boost your employability: Complete two assessed practical placements in a variety of settings, statutory, voluntary, and charitable, with children, young people, and adults allowing you to apply theory to real-world situations. 
  • Build key skills: Build valuable transferable skills through interprofessional learning alongside students from nursing, criminal justice, teaching, and more.

Social Work Bursary

You may be eligible for a non-repayable  of up to £4,862 (this is based on the latest NHS guidance so may change for future years).

What you will study

Preparation for Practice

The module aims to introduce students to the core elements of social work practice which includes: an understanding of the historical and contemporary context of social work practice, social work roles and functions, the PCFs, professional standards, and the profession’s ethical principles and values underpinning social work practice. The module will also focus on developing students’ understanding of social justice and anti-discriminatory and anti-oppressive practice. Through the use of associated skills development workshops, students will have opportunities to embed their learning in this module to develop core social work skills including; communication (with people with lived experience and other professionals), critical thinking and reflective practice and writing. During the module students will have the opportunity to develop an understanding of their learning styles and develop the use of IT and study skills, including accessing and using research informing best social work practice. The module is designed to prepare students for their first placement experience and will therefore explore the organisational context in which social workers practice and introduce students to the use of professional supervision. Students will build upon concepts of lifelong learning and professional development planning introduced both during the induction period and through the skills day reflective logs.

The module includes a communication exercise practical element, after which students will receive formative feedback from the involved People with Lived Experience and the module leader. This requires students to prepare for and meet a person with lived experience, demonstrating a professional approach and the ability to use communication skills in a way that would facilitate early conversations with a person with lived experience in practice.

Introduction to Law and Policy

This module aims to introduce students to key legal concepts, laws and policy relevant to social work including equality and human rights legislation. The module provides a history and overview of policy formulation and the principles and core knowledge around key social work legislation. It sets law in the context of developments in social policy thereby enabling you to understand the functions and purposes of law as it relates to social work practice.

Understanding the Lifespan

This module will introduce key psychological and sociological perspectives on human growth and development throughout the life span. The module will focus on understanding behaviour using a multi-factorial approach, including developmental, social, cultural, spiritual and physical influences on development across the lifespan and also include some consideration of lifespan development expectations across different cultures. The module will cover all age groups, key transition points and the impact of developmental issues for individuals and the families and communities to which they belong. This will also enable students to develop the knowledge and understanding needed for core observations skills and to apply theories of human growth and development to social work practice. 

Introduction to Social Work Theories and Skills in Practice

This module lays the foundation for students’ understanding of social work theories and how they inform practice. It will focus on theories that both enhance understanding of people’s lived experience and inform decisions about effective methods of intervention and support. The module will explore models and methods applicable to social work assessment and intervention for example; person centred and relationship-based practice, task-centred practice, crisis intervention and strengths- based practice although specific theories will be changed in accordance with teaching on other modules and changes in the profession).

Students will develop their understanding of personal and professional power, values and identity and their impact on social work practice. Together with the ‘Preparation for Social Work Practice’ module and the Skills Day 1 workshops, this module aims to prepare students for their first placement and will explore the theory underpinning the subject of communication and its central importance within social work practice.

The module includes the requirement to facilitate and lead a peer led learning activity. Students will receive peer and module leader feedback on this task.

Practice Placement One (70 days)

This module builds on the learning from all year BA 1 modules and provides students with an opportunity to undertake a 70-day placement in a social work setting, where they will work with people with lived experience and carers, as a member of an organisation. With support and supervision from a practice educator and possibly an on-site supervisor, students will be required to work in situations where there are no clear-cut solutions to people’s problems. Students will have opportunities to observe the practice of others and work independently and jointly with members of the placement provider organisation and as part of multi professional provision. By the end of the module students will be expected to have demonstrated effective use of the required knowledge, skills and behaviour, and to have shown commitment to core social work values commensurate with the Professional Capability Framework and Social Work England standards.

Students are expected to work 70 full days in line with normal working practices at the host agency. This will also include the requirement to attend three set recall days and set supervision sessions with both their allocated academic practice tutor and their practice educator. Study days are integrated into the placement period.

By the end of placement students will be required to demonstrate they meet the requirements for the End of First Placement PCFs.

Law for Social Work Practice

This module builds on the Introduction to Law, Rights and Policy, module at level 4 and the knowledge of law and policy gained during the first placement. It concentrates on topic specific areas of practice and the key areas of law and policy relevant to the professional social work practitioner including:

  • Law and Citizenship
  • Care Act
  • Mental Health and Mental Capacity
  • Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards
  • Fostering, Adoption & Permeance for Children and Young People
  • Private and Public law and Court Skills
  • Children Looked After, Care Leavers and Corporate Parenting
  • Domestic Abuse
  • Immigration and Asylum
  • Modern Day Slavery

Research informed practice

Students will develop the ability to apply research- based knowledge and understanding to inform their social work practice and interventions and promote the best outcomes with and for people with lived experience. By the end of the module, students will develop a critical understanding of the application of research to social work; the ability to identify appropriate sources of evidence; an appreciation of the methods used to obtain research evidence and the ability to make sense of complex findings. They will also gain the skills needed to develop a research- based project.

The students receive lectures and guidance on research methodology and literature searches but there is a high proportion of self-directed study (with seminar and tutorial support available) allowing students to explore their area of interest.

Social Work Processes, Theories, and Skills in Practice

This module builds on the foundation laid in the level 4 Introduction to Social Work Theories and Skills module and the first placement. The goal of this module is to explore social work theories and their application to social work practice in further depth. The module will focus on theoretical approaches to working with individuals and families for example cognitive behavioural theory, groupwork, systemic and structural theory, solution focused and narrative ways of working. The module is linked to the skills development days, which will facilitate student learning in respect of key aspects and specific areas of social work practice, providing the underpinning theoretical knowledge for the topics explored. The module will also address key skills in social work practice including: assessment skills, decision making, report writing and working with conflict and aggression. 

Social Work Theories, Inter-Professional Education (IPE)

Students will develop skills to operate effectively within multi-agency and inter-professional settings. Students will have an opportunity to investigate the roles and responsibilities of other professionals and will examine the role of people with lived experience and carers as partners in working together. The module will build on knowledge and experience gained from university-based IPE workshop events and skills days as well as students’ first placement.

Outline content: Exploration of the role and responsibilities of other professionals who work with and alongside social workers and the skills needed to work with them. This will include: Professional communication skills. Development of a critical understanding of the significance of inter-professional relationships with other social services, health, education, and criminal justice organisations. The influence of professional and organisational culture and value challenges of in multi-agency working.

Research Project

The module is designed to enable students to build upon their learning from the Research Informed Practice module at Level5, by undertaking a Research Project. Each project should have a clear focus on a topic or issue of interest to each student social worker that clearly relates to social work. Teaching on the module will focus specifically on enabling students to develop secondary, systematic research skills in order to undertake a non- empirical Research Project. Students will be allocated a Tutor who will supervise the work in progress though individual tutorials and/or small group sessions.

Students will develop skills in interpreting and applying research evidence and develop awareness and understanding of the purposes and value of research for social work, service improvement and evidenced based practice. By the end of the module, students will develop skills in critical reflection and appraisal, understand the principles of research design, apply analytical techniques, report findings accurately, make recommendations based on research findings and reflect on and apply their understanding of discrimination and oppression.

The Developing Professional Practitioner

This module is designed to enable students to establish themselves as a lifelong learner, who is able to meet Social Work England Continuous Professional Development Standard (4). The module aims to facilitate a seamless transition from student to final placement to newly qualified social worker and enable newly qualified practitioners to embark confidently, upon the Assessed and Supported Year in Employment. Social work is a challenging profession and this module will enable students to enhancer resilience and develop strategies to manage complexities, dilemmas and uncertainty. The module will equip students with the knowledge and skills to promote the learning and development of others and contribute to enhancing the quality of the social work profession and outcomes for people with lived experience. The module will build upon the strengths and development needs highlighted in placement 1 and enables the creation of a development plan for placement 2 and consider the development needs as a newly qualified social worker. Module content will include:

  • Role, purpose and effective use of supervision
  • Understanding and managing stress
  • Working in challenging and changing organisational contexts
  • Indicators and management of aggression and violence
  • Managing tensions and conflicts in team and inter-professional working

Professional Judgement and Decision Making

This module builds on learning throughout the programme and is designed to enable students to apply best evidence in their social work practice, within the parameters stipulated by legal and policy frameworks. Students will enhance their skills in critical reflection and appraisal of social work practice, understand the principles and illustrate the use of evidence-based practice in social work processes (assessment, planning, intervention and evaluation). The module will particularly focus on concepts of risk management and defensible decision-making. The module will explore ethics, conflicts, debates and dilemmas in social work practice such as; care and control; rights and responsibilities; loss and change and maintaining anti-oppressive practice with statutory and involuntary People with Lived Experience (PWLE). This module also includes a formative exercise (presentation) in preparation for the final assignment. 

Practice Placement 2 (100 days)

This module builds on the learning from all BA yr 1 and 2 modules and placement 1 and provides students with an opportunity to undertake a 100-day placement in a social work setting, where they will work with people with lived experience and carers, as a member of an organisation. With support and supervision from a practice educator and possibly an on-site supervisor, students will be required to work in situations where there are no clear-cut solutions to people’s problems. Students will have opportunities to observe the practice of others and work independently and jointly with members of the placement provider organisation and as part of multi professional provision. By the end of the module students will be expected to have demonstrated effective use of the required knowledge, skills and behaviour, and to have shown commitment to core social work values commensurate with the Professional Capability Framework and Social Work England standards.

Students are expected to work 100 full days in line with normal working practices at the host agency. This will also include the requirement to attend three set recall days and set supervision sessions with both their allocated academic practice tutor and their practice educator. Study days are integrated into the placement period.

Note: All modules are indicative and based on the current academic session. Course information is correct at the time of publication and is subject to review. Exact modules may, therefore, vary for your intake in order to keep content current. If there are changes to your course we will, where reasonable, take steps to inform you as appropriate.

Teaching and learning approaches include:

  • Individual and group work
  • Shadowing
  • Problem-based learning
  • Lectures
  • Tutorials

While on placements, you will work during the normal hours of your placement agency and may be required to attend placements 5 days per week. 

Assessment

To ensure students are ready to practice, they are assessed in their first year through a communication exercise with a service user or carer and a shadowing exercise where they will shadow a social worker in their practice with service users and reflect on this experience. In addition, you will be required to pass both the second and third year placements

Teaching Contact Hours

Contact hours in a typical week will vary from week to week. . However, typically you will have up to 23 contact hours of teaching and this will break down as:

Personal tutorial/small group teaching: approx. 1 hours of tutorials (or later, project supervision) some weeks.

Medium group teaching:  Approx. up to 5  hours of practical classes, workshops or seminars each week

Large group teaching:  Approx. up to 20  hours of lectures each week

Personal study:  Approx. up to 15 timetabled hours studying and revising in your own time each week, including some guided study using hand-outs, online activities, etc.

The timetable for each week varies and each week is made up of different activities. 

Our facilities

Hawthorn Building

Home to students and staff from Health and Life Sciences courses spanning pharmaceutical, healthcare, lab based and social science disciplines.

The facilities and spaces in the Hawthorn Building are designed to replicate current practice in health and life sciences, including contemporary analytical chemistry and formulation laboratories, audiology booths and nursing and midwifery clinical skills suites.

Purpose-built clinical skills areas allow you to practice in a safe environment. You will receive guidance and support from expert academic and technical staff.

Recently renovated, the Undercroft offers dedicated break out spaces and study spaces allowing for collaborative and interprofessional learning beyond the classroom.

Take a s c r o l l through campus

Experience a virtual tour of campus at your own pace.

Jump in

Accreditations, awards or memberships

Social Work England

Social Work England

Our Social Work BA (Hons) programme is approved by Social Work England. Approval of the programme means that that on successful completion of the programme, students are eligible to apply to register with Social Work England as a qualified social worker. Social Work regulation transferred to Social Work England on December 2nd 2019.

What makes us special

Four students looking down over a city from a high balcony on a hill

ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥ Global

Our innovative international experience programme  aims to enrich your studies and expand your cultural horizons, helping you to become a global graduate, equipped to meet the needs of employers across the world. Through ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥ Global, we offer a wide range of opportunities including on-campus and UK-based activities, overseas study, internships, faculty-led field trips and volunteering, as well as Erasmus+ and international exchanges. 

Students on this course have recently attended summer schools in Turkey, Japan and South Korea. These ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥ Global trips have given students the opportunity to learn alongside students from around the world, study unique modules and explore the cities of Istanbul, Fukuoka and Seoul.

Where we could take you

Two students talking at a cafe table

Placements

Benefit from practical work placements in settings including Child protection, Adoption and fostering, Physical and/or learning disability support and Youth Justice, which will take your learning beyond the classroom and enhance your experience and employability. 

During this course, students undertake two placements of 70 and 100 days to prepare to be effective practitioners. Placements are located in a range of public-sector, voluntary and private agencies such as hospitals, residential care and in fieldwork settings. 

You may work alongside a range of service user groups, including children and young people, adults with mental health needs, older people and people with physical and learning disabilities. 

Placements are usually based in Leicestershire or Leicester City, although occasionally placements may be in a neighbouring area. 

Please be aware that the social work placements team identifies placements for students, and you will not be able to find or arrange your own placement. Whilst we take student needs and preferences into consideration, placement opportunities are allocated based upon learning needs and professional standards.

Four students sitting around a table at the Careers Hub

Graduate careers

Our graduates go on to work in statutory and voluntary agencies with the range of service user groups identified above and also includes:

  • Social work with children and families
  • Child protection
  • Older people
  • People with learning disabilities
  • People who misuse substances and alcohol
  • People with mental health needs

Postgraduate opportunities allow you to continue your professional development, including;

  • Masters in Research (Social Work) MRes
  • Health/Youth and Community Development (with or without Professional Qualification) MA

Course specifications

Course title

Social Work

Award

BA (Hons)

UCAS code

L502

Institution code

D26

Study level

Undergraduate

Study mode

Full-time

Start date

September

Duration

Three years full-time

Fees

2025/26 UK tuition fees:
£9,535*

2025/26 international tuition:
£16,750

*subject to the government, as is expected, passing legislation to formalise the increase.

Additional costs

Entry requirements

GCSEs

  • Five GCSEs at grade 4 or above including English and Maths

Plus one of the following:

A levels

  • A typical offer is 120 UCAS points. You need to study at least two subjects at A Level or equivalent (e.g. BTEC)

T Levels

  • Merit

BTEC

  • BTEC National Diploma - Distinction/Distinction/Merit
  • BTEC Extended Diploma - Distinction/Distinction/Merit

Alternative qualifications include:

  • Pass in the QAA accredited Access to HE overall 120 UCAS tariff with at least 30 L3 credits at Merit.
  • English and Maths GCSE required as separate qualification. Equivalency not accepted within the Access qualification. We will normally require students to have had a break from full-time education before undertaking the Access course.
  • International Baccalaureate: 28+ points.

English language requirements

If English is not your first language an IELTS score of 7 overall when you start the course is essential, with a 7.0 in all components except writing which should be at least 6.5.

English language tuition, delivered by our British Council accredited Centre for English Language Learning (CELL), is available both before and during the course.

Work experience

Although not essential, some relevant social care experience – paid or voluntary, is desirable and can strengthen your application with us. Work experience will form part of the scoring criteria used at your interview.

Please tell us in your personal statement, and at interview details of the length of time spent gaining relevant social care experience and the type of social care experience you have. You should also clearly demonstrate your motivations and suitability to study and train as a social work practitioner, and how your experience relates to the role. 

Interview

Applicants who meet the entry criteria will be invited to attend an interview with a member of the Social Work team, usually in conjunction with a person with lived experience, a practice educator or a local practitioner.

Interviews are currently being conducted remotely via Microsoft Teams. You will receive further guidance about our online interviews along with your invite to interview.

Suitability Declaration

Should you be successful at interview and made an offer you will be required to complete a Suitability Declaration that also enquires about health conditions. Please note that if we require a form of written medical evidence you will need to pay for this yourself. We may also ask you to attend a suitability assessment meeting.

DBS (Disclosure and Barring Service) check

You must submit an enhanced Disclosure and Barring Service disclosure application form before starting the course (if you are overseas you will also need to submit a criminal records certificate from your home country), which needs to be cleared in accordance with ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥’s admissions policy.

We strongly advise that you opt for the DBS update service as it is possible that future placement providers may request a recent DBS and not one from the start of the programme. If you decide not to opt for this service then you will have to pay for the DBS again if requested by your placement provided – the university will not cover this cost.

You must meet and fulfil all non-academic requirements before 18 July 2025. Failure to meet this deadline may result in your offer being withdrawn.

Additional costs

You may incur  for this programme, including the cost of travelling to and from project/placement locations.