大象传媒

Close icon

Personalise what you see on this page.

Choose from the options below. We'll show you information based on your current location as default.

I'M FROM

  • Hong Kong
Please select so we can show the most relevant content.

LIVING IN

  • Hong Kong
Please select so we can show the most relevant content.

LOOKING FOR

  • Undergraduate courses
Please select so we can show the most relevant content.
Viewing as a student from Hong Kong living in Hong Kong interested in Undergraduate courses

Materials Science with Foundation Year MEng (Hons)

University of Oxford

Add to favourites
UCAS CODE: FJ2F

Course options

  • Qualification

    Master of Engineering (with Honours) - MEng (Hon)

  • Location

    Open Application

  • Study mode

    Full time

  • Start date

    12-OCT-25

  • Duration

    5 Years

Course summary

Are you a student from the UK interested in studying Materials Science but your personal or educational circumstances have meant you are unlikely to achieve the grades typically required for Oxford courses? If so, Materials Science with Foundation Year might be the course for you.The Foundation Year is completely free for UK students and is designed to be a one-year intensive academic course which will bridge any gap between school and our academically challenging undergraduate courses. The programme is carefully designed to build and develop your study skills, subject knowledge and capacity for independent study. Students that pass the course will be awarded a nationally recognised Certificate in Higher Education (CertHE) qualification. If you pass the course at the required level, you will be automatically admitted into Oxford as an undergraduate student if you wish to be, without the need to re-apply. For more information on this course please visit www.ox.ac.uk/fyps Materials Science is an interdisciplinary subject, spanning the physics and chemistry of matter, engineering applications and industrial manufacturing processes. Modern society is heavily dependent on advanced materials, for example, lightweight composites for faster vehicles, optical fibres for telecommunications and silicon microchips for the information revolution. Materials scientists study the relationships between the structure and properties of a material and how it is made. They also develop new materials and devise processes for manufacturing them. Materials Science is vital for developments in nanotechnology, quantum computing, batteries and nuclear fusion, as well as medical technologies such as bone replacement materials. For more information on this course please visit ox.ac.uk/ugmatsci. This course is for UK state school students who meet the eligibility criteria. For more information about the eligibility criteria please visit foundationyear.ox.ac.uk/eligibility.International students are not eligible to apply.

Tuition fees

Students living in Hong Kong
(International fees)

Information not available

Please check with the institution for most up to date details.

Entry requirements

Choose a qualification

A level : AAB

Including Physics and Mathematics, with both As in science subjects and/or Maths.Excluding General Studies (if taken)

VIEW MORE

University information

University of Oxford

  • University League Table

    2nd

  • Campus address

    University of Oxford, University Offices, Wellington Square, Oxford, Oxfordshire, OX1 2JD, England

Subject rankings

  • Subject ranking

    2nd out of 12

  • Entry standards

    / Max 230
    230 100%

    1st

  • Graduate prospects

    / Max 100
    90.0 90%

    6th

  • Student satisfaction

    / Max 4
    3.10 77%

    8th

    6

Suggested courses

University of Sheffield
SIMILAR RANKING

Materials Science and Engineering with an Industrial Placement Year BEng (Hons)

University of Sheffield

Materials Technology league table

5
University of Sheffield
MOST VIEWED

Materials Science and Engineering MEng (Hons)

University of Sheffield

University league table

18

Is this page useful?

Yes No

Sorry about that...

HOW CAN WE IMPROVE IT?

SUBMIT

Thanks for your feedback!