Metadata
Title
Applying for further study
Category
undergraduate
UUID
b16d357085ef4e30a462a40a64f1b19e
Source URL
https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/options/further-study/...
Parent URL
https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/about/appointments/
Crawl Time
2026-03-20T07:24:23+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Applying for further study

Source: https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/options/further-study/applying/ Parent: https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/about/appointments/

Searching for and choosing courses

Use the course search tools on Prospects, www.postgrad.com or www.findamasters.com. As well as searching for courses by subject, you can also explore profiles of the universities and academic departments you're interested in.

What should my research include?

Documents and deadlines

Check what documents you will need for your application and request them in good time. You may need to obtain an official transcript from the University, so find out how to obtain official documents.

There is no central admissions system for most postgraduate courses, so you will need to submit individual applications for each course. There may not be a deadline, but check this for the course you're interested in, and remember popular courses fill up quickly, so submit your application as early as possible.

Clearing house

Some vocational courses (teacher training, law, clinical psychology, nursing, dentistry, medicine) use a clearing house for applications. This means you can apply for several courses through one application form, usually incorporating a personal statement. Admissions tutors will consider your suitability for the profession and your motivation, as well as your academic ability.

Applications and personal statements

You will usually have to complete an application form, though some universities ask for a CV and research statement. In some cases an application fee is payable.

A personal statement or supporting letter is a good opportunity to express your motivation and enthusiasm for a course and your understanding of the subject to be studied.

The personal statement might be part of the application form, with a strict word limit – or a separate statement with no limit specified. In that case, one side of A4 is about right: keep it concise and only include information relevant to the course.

Advice on writing your personal statement:

All of these give you advice on what to include, what admissions tutors are looking for in your statement, and some dos and don'ts.

You can get feedback on your personal statement by uploading it to your documents in Handshake, and then messaging the Careers Information Team in Handshake asking for a review. Alternatively, you can book an appointment.

What to include in a personal statement

Vocational courses

An effective personal statement should include the following:

If you would like a second opinion on your personal statement, upload it to your personal profile in Handshake and then message us via Handshake.

Non-vocational courses

Applications to ‘academic’ taught courses (Masters) should explain your interest in the subject and demonstrate the relevance of your previous studies and how they have prepared you for the course to which you are applying.  However, do provide other details where they are relevant - for example, a year in industry as part of a science degree will be relevant to an application for a postgraduate science programme, and time spent doing voluntary work in a developing country will be relevant to courses in Development Studies. The following points should be covered in your personal statement:

If you would like a second opinion on your personal statement, upload your statement to your profile in Handshake and message us in Handshake to request a review.