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BSc (Honours) Sport Technology

Four years full-time (including one year work placement) or three years full-time

UCAS code • C6G4

Location • City Campus
Subject area • Engineering
Related subjects Sport and active lifestyles


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This course provides a broad, multidisciplinary study of sport technology.

You develop your knowledge and understanding of why technology is important in the sport environment, and the analytical skills and personal qualities you need for a successful career.

Topics range from manufacturing and marketing a product to using suitable instrumentation to check product and athletic performance.

The course has three major themes
• designing and developing sport products
• selecting and using sport materials
• sport instrumentation and data handling

You use computer-aided design to adapt existing products or create new designs. You learn to select and use different materials. This includes studying the physical properties of new high tech materials. You also learn how and why you would use a particular material in different sport applications.

The course
• highlights why it is important to use instruments to test performance
• examines ways in which you can measure the athlete’s or sport product’s performance
• emphasises computer-based measurement techniques

In year three, you can take an optional year of supervised work experience. Our students have secured placements with renowned sports equipment manufacturers such as Grays International and leading sports testing laboratories such as Labosport. A work placement is valuable in focusing you for the final year and improving your employability after you graduate.

In the final year of the course you complete a major project, often with an industrial partner. This allows you to apply your engineering skills to a sports related problem of your choice.

The course is led by Dr Tom Allen, an active sports engineering researcher who works closely with a number of major sports brands.

Find out more about BSc (Honours) Sport Technology

How to apply

You apply for this course through UCAS.

Fees – home and EU students

For information on fees and funding see www.shu.ac.uk/study/ug/fees-and-funding

Fees – international students

2012/13 academic year

Typically £10,320 a year

2013/14 academic year

Typically £10,320 a year

For further information on fees, scholarships and bursaries see www.shu.ac.uk/international/fees

Assessment

• coursework • examinations

Work placements

Find out about work placements and how we can support your placement experience.

Optional year-long work placements are normally gained by competitive interview and are not a guaranteed part of a course.

Contact us

For more information or to check the progress of your application phone +44 (0)114 225 5555, fax +44 (0)114 225 2167, e-mail admissions@shu.ac.uk

Professional recognition

This course counts as the first step towards chartered engineer status. It is accredited by the Institute of Measurement and Control and the Institution of Engineering and Technology.

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Dr Andy Young

Principal lecturer

On leaving school I became a craft apprentice in a defence company manufacturing naval artillery, where I was trained as a precision miller-turner-fitter. In 1989 I was awarded a Whitworth Scholarship from the IMechE to encourage practical engineers to seek higher education, which led to my enrolment on a Manufacturing Systems Engineering degree at The University of Leeds.

In my first year I transferred onto mechanical engineering to get a more general education, and by the third year I developed an interest in computer modelling of how fluids behave. I was awarded prizes from the IMechE and Sun Microcomputers for project work, a Parkinson scholarship for continued study from the University, and sponsorship from International Paper to embark on a PhD research degree into thin film generation for the printing industry.

I was then employed as a Research Fellow in the Industrial Coating Research Group, where I focused on the transference of academic research to industrial problems, working with companies such as Kodak, 3M, and Ilford.

I moved to a leading industrial consultancy company called Fluent in 1998, and became focused on thermo-fluids and Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD). I worked in materials processing industries, helping manufacturers apply technology to understand how to make better glass, polymer, and metals products.

In 2005 I began teaching engineering fundamentals and their industrial applications to students. I joined engineering at Sheffield Hallam leading the teaching for thermo-fluids and CFD, and supervising PhD students.

In 2009 I recognised an opportunity to start-up a new venture in the University called Hallam Energy which works directly with industry to reduce their energy costs and carbon emissions by the application of technology.

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Sheffield Hallam University, City Campus, Howard Street, Sheffield S1 1WB, UK

Phone +44 (0)114 225 5555 | Fax +44 (0)114 225 4449

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