Education BA (Hons)

Develop insight to shape education where it matters most across people’s lives. Understand how we learn and education’s role in addressing global challenges.

Select your start date

This course will be available in Clearing.

Key information

Why choose this course at Sussex?

  • Build a career that helps people thrive in a world threatened by social injustice, climate catastrophe and the challenges of Generative AI.
  • Re-imagine how education can meet everyone’s needs to flourish, benefitting from Sussex’s interdisciplinary and active learning approaches.
  • Learn from expert staff to explore what education means in its broadest terms and experience this knowledge in professional settings.

Re-imagine how education can meet the needs of the mid-21st century and prepare for a wide range of careers in the education sector. We want to help you to support others to thrive in a world threatened by social injustice, climate catastrophe and the challenges of generative AI.

You’ll study education in both formal and informal settings, from schools and universities to community, refugee, peacebuilding and arts education. You’ll explore different ways of working and apply them in professional settings.

You’ll build the skills to support learners from early years to older age, studying:

  • curriculum, learning, culture and society
  • support for neurodivergent learners
  • inclusion, equalities and identities
  • education, democracy, social justice and global sustainability
  • digital education in the age of Artificial Intelligence.

Sussex’s interdisciplinary approach brings together history, politics, philosophy, sociology, psychology and policy. You can shape your degree through electives that open your mind to other disciplines, such as philosophy, law and modern languages. You’ll also gain practical experience through a work-based placement in Year 2.

You’ll learn from our expert staff and national leaders in their field. As part of the Centre for Teaching and Learning, you’ll connect with research and practice that shapes policy locally and nationally. 

You’ll also engage with our experts’ diverse international research, including:

  • the role of education in conflict zones
  • learning in prisons
  • children’s literacy
  • how sustainability is taught across the world.

By the end of your degree, you’ll be able to explore the areas of education that spark your interest – whether that’s infant schools, the arts, museums, peacebuilding or refugee education.

Campus tours

Join a campus tour this summer and get a feel for life at Sussex. With award-winning campus food, a National Park setting and buzzing Brighton on our doorstep, our location and facilities are hard to beat.

Book your visit

On campus - in person

You’ll study for this degree on our campus, joining our academics and fellow students. With in-person contact time, digitally supported educational resources, library collections and independent study, this course is designed to give you an inclusive education. Your learning experience may also include work placements, field trips, studying abroad and internationalisation experiences.

Find out about our beautiful campus

Virtual tour

Want to learn more about life at Sussex?

Our 360° virtual tour has been designed to introduce you to life in our diverse, supportive and inclusive community. Join our students for an immersive experience as they reveal why Sussex offers a space to follow your passions, find your voice, and discover people and places that will inspire you.

Begin your tour

ResearchPlus

As a founding partner of ResearchPlus, a collaboration of research-focused universities, we engage with government, industry and civil society to support economic growth, prosperity and wellbeing across the whole of the UK.

Find out more

Modules

This is a single-honours course, allowing you to focus in depth on your core subject. Find out more from our guide to undergraduate study

  • Year 1 at Sussex

    Your modules

    Core modules

    Core modules are taken by all students on the course. They give you a solid grounding in your chosen subject and prepare you to explore the topics that interest you most.

    Autumn teaching
    Spring teaching

    Your degree

    You’ll be encouraged to address philosophical and political questions about education globally, including questioning your own education. You’ll develop your teamwork, communication and problem-solving skills in collaboration with your tutor and peers.

    Teaching

    Teaching methods typically include seminars with teacher and student presentations, group work, discussion and interactive activities.

    100%: Seminar

    Assessment

    Assessment methods typically include coursework with a wide range of creative and authentic assessments.

    Contact hours and workload

    This year of study includes approximately 1,200 hours of work. This breaks down into about 180 hours of contact time and about 1,020 hours of independent study.

    Engage and actively participate throughout your studies to get the most out of your course. 

  • Year 2 at Sussex

    Your modules

    Core modules

    Core modules are taken by all students on the course. They give you a solid grounding in your chosen subject and prepare you to explore the topics that interest you most.

    Autumn teaching
    Spring teaching

    Your degree

    Combining critical theory, creative practice and reflection, you will develop the core knowledge and skills that you need for the rest of your degree and career. In addition to your teaching, you’ll build employability skills with about 40 hours on placement in an educational context in the area that interests you most – from infant schools to the arts and museums, to refugee, peace-building or community education contexts.

    Teaching

    Teaching methods typically include seminars with teacher and student presentations, group work, discussion and interactive activities.

    75%: Seminar
    25%: Practical

    Assessment

    Assessment methods typically include coursework with a wide range of creative and authentic assessments.

    Contact hours and workload

    This year of study includes approximately 1,200 hours of work. This breaks down into about 196 hours of contact time and about 1,004 hours of independent study.

    Engage and actively participate throughout your studies to get the most out of your course. 

  • Experience Year

    Study abroad (optional)

    Apply to study abroad – you’ll develop an international perspective and gain an edge when it comes to your career. Find out where your course could take you

    If your application to study abroad is successful, you’ll have to meet the academic requirements at Sussex and also at the partner university. Find out more about studying abroad as a Sussex student

    Placement (optional)

    To help you gain experience and increase your employability, you can apply for an optional placement as part of your course. You’ll be responsible for applying for and securing your placement. Our dedicated careers team can provide you with information and advice. If you’re successful in obtaining a placement, this will form part of your course.

    Find out more about placements and internships

    Please note that if you’re receiving – or applying for – USA federal Direct Loan funds, you can’t transfer to the version of your course with an optional study abroad period in any country or optional placement in the USA if the number of credits for the placement/internship exceeds 25% of the total credits for your course. Find out more about American Student Loans and Federal Student Aid

  • Year 3 at Sussex

    Your modules

    Core modules

    Core modules are taken by all students on the course. They give you a solid grounding in your chosen subject and prepare you to explore the topics that interest you most.

    Autumn and spring teaching
    Autumn teaching
    Spring teaching

    Your degree

    You’ll gain the confidence to work independently. You’ll conduct a research project, collect and analyse your data, and write up your final dissertation. Your research project could, for example, be linked to your placement in Year 2, researching an area that your partner organisation and you believe needs greater understanding.

    Teaching

    Teaching methods typically include seminars with teacher and student presentations, group work, discussion and interactive activities.

    100%: Seminar

    Assessment

    Assessment methods typically include coursework with a wide range of creative and authentic assessments.

    Contact hours and workload

    This year of study includes approximately 1,200 hours of work. This breaks down into about 173 hours of contact time and about 1,027 hours of independent study.

    Engage and actively participate throughout your studies to get the most out of your course. 

Customise your course

Study what inspires you

At Sussex, we collaborate across disciplines to tackle the biggest challenges facing the world. And – different to other universities – we invite you to be part of this from the moment you arrive.

Regardless of your background or chosen degree, you’ll have the opportunity to engage with issues across disciplines – from the humanities to the sciences, and social sciences.

In the first term, you choose one of three new flagship electives, each of which focuses on our transformation themes of Digital and Data Futures, Environmental Sustainability, and Human Flourishing:

Alternatively, you may choose to study a language from Arabic, British Sign Language, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Mandarin Chinese and Spanish. Or you can choose to study English Language Teaching. You’ll develop your language skills while also exploring connections across disciplines and cultures.

After the first term, you can choose from across our Progressive Futures electives. Alternatively, you may choose to study – or continue to learn – a language. This gives you the opportunity to customise your course and study what inspires you.

Check out all our electives below. Each elective lasts for one term.

On this course, you’ll have the opportunity to explore four electives – two in Year 1 and two in Year 2.

These electives are designed to help you explore key global challenges with world-leading experts from across the University and beyond.

Whichever path you take, you’ll develop key skills to tackle the complexity of contemporary challenges. This will help improve your employment prospects and help you contribute to creating progressive futures for all.

Spirit of Sussex Award

Feel involved in life at the University, make friends and enrich your experience with us – the Spirit of Sussex Award is our way of recognising your extracurricular and voluntary achievements.

Find out more about the Spirit of Sussex Award

  • Video transcript

    Hi everyone! As I'm sure you've all heard by now, the Spirit of Sussex Award is now live.

    Students across the Sussex community are already earning their points

    What will you do to earn yours?

    There's so many ways to get involved.

    Head over to the website to start your Spirit of Sussex journey.

    Text: The Spirit of Sussex Award is an exciting new programme designed to recognise and celebrate the things you do outside your course.

    Participating in the Award makes it easy and fun for you to get involved and make the most of university life.

We regularly review our modules to incorporate student feedback, staff expertise, as well as the latest research and teaching methodology. We’re planning to run these modules in the academic year 2026/27. However, there may be changes to these modules in response to feedback, staff availability, student demand or updates to our curriculum. We’ll make sure to let you know of any material changes to modules at the earliest opportunity.

We’ll do our best to provide as much optional choice as we can, but timetabling constraints mean it may not be possible to take some module combinations. The structure of a small number of courses means that the order of modules or the streams you choose may determine whether modules are core or optional. This means that your core modules or options may differ from what’s shown here.

Our experts

Careers

  • 86% of Sussex undergraduates have completed work experience by the end of their course (University of Sussex Career Readiness data at point of graduation 2023/24)

This course will prepare you for careers relating to the broad field of education. This could be anywhere from early years to adult education, and in the UK or globally.

You’ll gain skills and expertise for education-related careers, including:

  • educational research
  • local government and policy
  • community learning and adult education
  • arts or environmental education
  • education welfare
  • education-related work in charity organisations or NGOs, including adult refugee education.

On graduating, some students may choose to enhance their specialist knowledge, progressing to an Education MA, International Education and Development MA or Psychology MSc. Other students may want to train as teachers through a PGCE course.

Where do our graduates work now?

Surveyed 15 months after finishing their courses, our recent graduates from the Department of Education worked for employers including:

(Graduate Outcomes Survey 2017-2022)

Working while you study

Our Careers and Entrepreneurship team can help you find part-time work while you study. Find out more about career development and part-time work

Design your future at Sussex

Taking the next step in your career can feel daunting, but we’ll help you to explore, connect and flourish throughout your studies and beyond.

As a Sussex student, you’ll learn how to tackle real-world challenges and have access to tailored programmes of careers support:

  • our Career Lab helps you to explore your options, build key skills and connect with employers. Take part in internships, community consultancy projects and insight visits, where you can learn about life at organisations such as Brighton & Hove Albion Football Club, the Knepp Rewilding Project, and fashion brand Puig
  • one-to-one appointments with your Faculty Careers Consultant can enable you to identify your career goals, write an effective CV and prepare for future interviews
  • entrepreneurship initiatives like StartUp Sussex and Ideas Lab can empower you to turn your concepts into reality.

Explore how our Careers and Entrepreneurship team can support you

Entry requirements

Find your place in Clearing

This course will be available in Clearing. Explore your options at Sussex – right here, right now.

Fees

Note that your fees, once they’re set, may be subject to an increase on an annual basis. Find details on our Tuition fees page.

Home students

£9,790 per year

Channel Islands and Isle of Man students

£9,790 per year

On 19 March 2026 the UK Parliament set out that the tuition fee cap for 2026 entry will be £9,790. As the University of Sussex keeps fees for Home students and Channel Islands and Isle of Man students in line with UK Government-approved levels, fees will be £9,790 in 2026. In line with our terms and conditions, the University charges fees at the maximum levels set by the UK Government.

International students

£23,500 per year

Study abroad

Find out about grants and funding, tuition fees and insurance costs for studying abroad

Placement

Find out about tuition fees for placements

Additional costs

Note about additional costs

Additional costs to your tuition fees may include field trips, equipment, materials, bench fees or studio hire. These costs are best estimates based on current market values which we review each year. These costs may be subject to change due to unforeseen circumstances where the University has limited control such as a change in a service provider or government guidance. We will let you know at the earliest opportunity if there is any change to these costs. We will also tell you if these costs are mandatory for passing your course or optional. Find out how to budget for student life.

Placements

This course has a mandatory placement in Year 2. Students will need to fund travel to their placement, and would need to finance accommodation and subsistence should they choose to carry out a placement away from home. Students are not be required to carry out placements away from home.

Living costs

We know the rising cost of living is on everyone’s mind, and affects us all in different ways. Our guide to living costs has been designed to help you plan and budget for life as a Sussex student.

Learn more about typical living costs

Scholarships

Our goal is to ensure that every student who wants to study with us is able to regardless of financial barriers, so that we continue to attract talented and unique people.

Contact us

Ask a student

Chat to Sussex students online via the UniBuddy chat platform.

Enquiries

Contact us with any questions about your course:

+44 (0)1273 876787
Ask us a question

Find out more about the Department of Education

Legal information

We understand that deciding where and what to study is a very important decision. We’ll make all reasonable efforts to provide you with the courses, services and facilities described in this prospectus. However, if we need to make material changes, for example due to government or regulatory requirements, or unanticipated staff changes, we’ll let you know as soon as possible.

Find out about our terms and conditions, including the student code of conduct and your cancellation rights

Find out about our complaints and appeals process

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