BSc (Honours) Food and Nutrition (top up)
One year full-time
UCAS code • DB64
Location • City Campus
Subject area • Food and nutrition
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Watch videos explaining what makes our tourism, hospitality and events department unique, the facilities we have available and the student support we offer.
View a 360 degree tour of our kitchens.
Read about our food and nutrition staff.
Watch one of our students talking about our food and nutrition courses.
This course
This course is based on the final year of our BSc (Honours) Food and Nutrition. It allows you to top up your current qualifications to honours degree level.
You can apply for this course if you have a • higher national diploma • foundation degree • equivalent qualification in a relevant subject.
This course has a strong food industry focus and builds your understanding of the practical side of • food processing and development • quality management • applied nutrition. You also gain some management and marketing skills.
With a strong practical focus, you work on live projects and with industrial food processing equipment that reflects key industrial processes. These include an ice cream maker and a retort (an industrial pressure cooker) used to make heat sterilised products.
You take part in • seminars • workshops • projects • laboratory sessions in our modern facilities at City Campus.
Flexibility in your career choice is a key feature to this degree. By focusing on a range of areas, from food product development to applied nutrition, it prepares you for a broad range of careers in the food industry and related fields.
Our modern high-tech facilities can replicate industrial processes and practices. This includes newly installed equipment, which enables you to assess the effect of processing on the sensory qualities of food.
Find out more about BSc (Honours) Food and Nutrition (top up)
Related courses
You apply for this course through UCAS.
The course fee may be subject to annual inflationary increase. For further information on fees and funding see www.shu.ac.uk/study/ug/fees-and-funding
2013/14 academic year
Typically £11,880 a year
2014/15 academic year
Typically £11,880 a year
The course fee may be subject to annual inflationary increase. For further information on fees, scholarships and bursaries see www.shu.ac.uk/international/fees
• coursework • examinations
An interconnected department (1:23)
Find out the benefits of studying in an interconnected department.
Kevin Nield, head of the leisure and food management department, discusses how Sheffield Hallam University is unique in that we have an interconnected department which covers tourism, hospitality, events and food, which doesn't usually happen in other universities.
He also talks about our rates of employment being high despite the recession. Lots of our students are going into the sector and then moving up into management.
Practical facilities (1:35)
Find out about the practical facilities we have available.
These include kitchens, a restaurant, tasting booths, and food science labs which are of industry standard.
There are 72 members of permanent teaching staff, and specialist lecturers from industry can also be brought in to teach.
Support for international students (1:02)
Find out how we'll support you while studying at Sheffield Business School.
Kevin Nield, heads of the leisure and food management department within Sheffield Business School, talks about support provided for our international students - from their safe arrival in the country to bank accounts and accommodation.
More videos
An interconnected department (1:23)
Find out the benefits of studying in an interconnected department.
Practical facilities (1:35)
Find out about the practical facilities we have available.
Support for international students (1:02)
Find out how we'll support you while studying at Sheffield Business School.
Kitchens
Our kitchens have a wide range of specialist equipment for product development, testing and research.
Alison Campbell

Senior lecturer
I am a food technologist with a background in the food industry. I previously worked in the fields of product and process development , projects and quality assurance for a variety of companies including Unilever, RHM, and Northern Foods.
I have been teaching at Sheffield Hallam University since 2006.
Andrew Fairclough
Associate lecturer
I was appointed in 2007 to act as a research fellow for the Centre for Food Innovation to enhance the profile of the centre. I have 16 years experience within biomedical sciences at Sheffield Hallam University, specialising in microbiology, molecular biology and analytical biochemistry.
I am also an associate lecturer at Sheffield Hallam covering food hygiene, health and safety, the composition of food and also technically supporting food biotechnology.
Anna Hall

Course leader
I have a BSc (Honours) in Nutrition Health and Lifestyles and an MSc in Nutrition and Public Health Management, both from Sheffield Hallam University.
I am an associate public health nutritionist and course leader for the BSc Nutrition Health and Lifestyles and BSc Public Health Nutrition.
I have been a lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University for three years. I have also been involved in a variety of research projects focusing on weight management and physical activity, including small changes, be active, and moving forward. I have a particular interest in the role of dietary fibre and seaweed in appetite control and health.
Jenny Paxman

Senior lecturer
I have a BA (Honours) in anthropology from Durham University and an MMedSci in human nutrition and MPhil in nutrition from Sheffield University. I am a registered nutritionist and have a postgraduate certificate in learning and teaching.
I have been working as a senior lecturer in nutrition for Sheffield Hallam University since September 2002. I have taught nutrition at both degree and MSc level.
I am involved in ongoing research, particularly in relation to obesity prevention and appetite.
My previous work includes sessional nutrition work for South West Sheffield PCT.
Wayne Martindale

Research fellow
I am a research fellow in the Centre for Food Innovation and I am currently working on many aspects of resource efficiency within the food industry and novel ways of communicating food supply chain issues.
I work on multidisciplinary projects within the food and drink sector. My specialist areas are technical communications within agri-food systems and how they impact on our food and industrial supply chain.
I have worked with the Environment Agency, Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development, Agronomy Department Purdue university, Secretariat for International Landcare Australia, British Grassland Society and many companies and agencies across the food sector.
Alison Bell

Senior lecturer
I have a BSc (Honours) in Home Economics from the University of Surrey and an MA in Learning and Teaching from Sheffield Hallam University.
Having spent time working in the food industry, I have now been lecturing at Sheffield Hallam for many years, more recently in the area of academic and professional skills for Food and Nutrition students.
Jacqueline Lomas
Senior lecturer
I am a senior lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University with a PhD in human nutrition.
My specialist areas of interest include the effects of diet on Alzheimer's disease and methods of dietary assessment.
I have been lecturing at Sheffield Hallam for 10 years.
John Nicolson

Senior lecturer and course leader
I graduated from the University of Glasgow with a BSc (Honours) degree in Microbiology with Molecular biology.
I have specialist teaching and research experience in the areas of food safety, food microbiology, food biotechnology, and food technology. My particular research expertise is in microbiological water quality, and the distribution of Cryptosporidium in water supplies.
I began teaching at the West of Scotland Agricultural College, and have taught at Sheffield Hallam Uiniversity for the past 20 years.
Tony Lynn
Senior lecturer
I am the course leader for MSc Nutrition with Public Health Management course.
I have an undergraduate degree and PhD in nutrition. My PhD investigated the effect of raw and processed vegetables on DNA damage in colonocytes.
I have previously worked as a nutritional scientist for the Scottish Foods Standard Agency and as a researcher in the human nutrition unit at the University of Sheffield.
My main area of interest is the effect of phytochemicals on health.
Einir Williams
Senior lecturer
I joined Sheffield Hallam University in May 2007 as a senior lecturer in food technology. My work is divided between teaching undergraduate food and nutrition courses and managing commercial and training projects for clients.
I have been involved in education and training within further and higher education system in the UK for the past eight years, and have conducted research into the use of e-media as a distance learning tool for the food industry.
I have also worked internationally for organisations including the Food and Agricultural Organisation, United Nations Industrial Development Organisation, Heinz and the former New Zealand Dairy Board, working in food quality management, new product development and supply chain management.
Trevor Simper
Senior lecturer
I am a senior lecturer and researcher in the food and nutrition group within the Sheffield Business School at Sheffield Hallam University. I am also a registered public health nutritionist.
My undergraduate studies were in health with sport science, and I have a Masters degree in public health and health promotion and a postgraduate teaching certificate in higher education.
My current doctoral studies focus on weight management, nutrition, exercise and behaviour.
I co-ordinated the Bradford Food Network for several years, which won the prestigious Caroline Walker Trust award for improving public health through good food in 2005.
I have worked for a variety of health promotion departments across the country including the London Borough of Southwark, East Staffordshire Borough Council, Rotherham Primary Care Trust and Bradford Health Development Service before I became a full-time academic.
I have published over 20 academic and peer reviewed articles and have managed or been involved in nearly £2 million worth of consultancy projects for the University, including Small Changes, Moving Forward, Be Active and several other nutrition and public health projects in recent years.
Profiles
Alison Campbell
Senior lecturer
Andrew Fairclough
Associate lecturer
Anna Hall
Course leader
Jenny Paxman
Senior lecturer
Wayne Martindale
Research fellow
Alison Bell
Senior lecturer
Jacqueline Lomas
Senior lecturer
John Nicolson
Senior lecturer and course leader
Tony Lynn
Senior lecturer
Einir Williams
Senior lecturer
Trevor Simper
Senior lecturer
About the course (0:47)
One of our students talks about her experiences on the course, the bits she has enjoyed most and how she has personally developed during her studies.
The nutrition fair (1:32)
One of our students talks about the annual nutrition fair, which nutrition students organise as part of their course to help local food fans make sensible decisions about nutrition and lifestyle.
Stalls at the fair include information on how to
• grow your own vegetables
• eat healthily in pregnancy
• make easy meals from scratch
The fair is open to everyone and offers tasting opportunities, interactive activities and information about diet, food, health and lifestyle. In 2010 it was sponsored by Asda.
Assessment methods (0:50)
One of our students talks about the different assessment methods that are used on the course and how they are varied to meet the different strengths of individuals.
What next (1:11)
A group of our students talk about their career plans after graduating from the course.

