Metadata
Title
Postgraduate taught courses / masters
Category
courses
UUID
c5774c165dce4ed9bd56608494fa1a08
Source URL
https://sheffield.ac.uk/careers/support/study/pgt
Parent URL
https://sheffield.ac.uk/careers
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T16:37:58+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Postgraduate taught courses / masters

Source: https://sheffield.ac.uk/careers/support/study/pgt Parent: https://sheffield.ac.uk/careers

On

Getting started

There are different types of further study. These include:

If you really enjoy studying your subject, postgraduate study or research will allow you to deepen your knowledge and specialise in certain aspects of it. Meanwhile, gaining a postgraduate qualification may help you get into the career you have in mind, although this is not automatically the case.

For example, in some careers having a masters or PhD may be required or desirable, while some employers may relax their entry requirements for masters students. However, in many cases, a postgraduate qualification does not automatically give you an advantage over an undergraduate degree in the job market, or necessarily lead to a higher starting salary.

Before applying for further study, make sure to research the possible routes into the careers that interest you, so that you understand how postgraduate study might fit in with your career plans as well as how you can fund your studies.


Postgraduate taught courses

A typical masters degree includes a mixture of teaching through lectures and seminars, a research project, a thesis or dissertation plus examinations.

In some cases, you can study a subject as a conversion course which can open up a wide range of careers not related to your undergraduate degree. Additionally, some masters courses offer a fast-track into a profession for those with a relevant undergraduate degree, for example, a bioscience graduate could undertake a two-year masters course in physiotherapy or dietetics rather than completing another 3 year bachelor’s degree.

To help find and apply for a course:

Studying outside your home country

Choose your course carefully if you plan to study a professional or vocational qualification in one country but want to work in a different one. Do not assume qualifications awarded in some countries will automatically be recognised in others.


Key tasks

Find courses via databases such as:

Contact the institutions you are interested in to find out more about the course:

You may also want to ask about the careers that graduates from the course go on to do. If you are a disabled or dyslexic student, it’s a good idea to discuss your needs with the university you plan to apply to prior to making an application.

Masters study discovery afternoon

See where a Sheffield masters could take you with our on-campus event. Get expert advice, take a campus tour and chat to current students.

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