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Food Science and Innovation at Manchester Metropolitan University - UCAS

Course summary

Overview Through this course, you’ll explore 21st century food manufacturing and develop your understanding of how the biochemical properties of food components influence how foods taste and feel, and their impact on nutrition and health.  You’ll explore sensory evaluation, food law and how global trends in trade, regulation and policy influence the sustainability and wider impact of the food chain. You’ll also consider topics such as modern production and analytical technologies, functional foods and labelling legislation, and how to ensure that foods are nutritious and safe to eat.  Technical skills are vital to the food industry and they’re an important part of this course. In our dedicated food technology and biochemistry laboratories, you’ll have practical sessions in areas of food production, evaluating the sensory properties of foods, microbiological quality, and the chemical and physical analysis of foods.  Features and Benefits

  • Technical skills - You’ll learn skills in food production, sensory analysis, microbiology and biochemistry.
  • Industry-standard facilities - You’ll use our on-campus food manufacturing facilities, which includes a 10-booth sensory taste panel suite, development kitchens, and food biochemistry and physiology laboratories.
  • Food safety - You’ll carry out all aspects of food safety testing (including food microbiology, shelf-life studies, mycology, RT-PCR, microscopy, and species identification) in our on-campus food safety laboratory.
  • Food development project - You’ll create your own innovative foods, working on everything from marketing and sensory analysis to legal requirements – and you’ll create your product too.
  • Professional development - You can access student membership of the Institute of Food Science and Technology (IFST).

Qualified teacher status (QTS)

To work as a teacher at a state school in England or Wales, you will need to achieve qualified teacher status (QTS). This is offered on this course for the following level:

  • Course does not award QTS

Entry requirements

Typically, you will have a minimum 2:2 undergraduate honours degree, or an international equivalent, in a natural or applied science discipline or in an engineering discipline, including Food Science and Technology, Food engineering, Biotechnology, Biochemistry, Nutrition, Chemical engineering, agricultural sciences, Biomedical sciences, biology or related subject. Good honours candidates from other subjects may still be eligible if they can demonstrate significant proven professional experience in a relevant field.


Fees and funding

Tuition fees

No fee information has been provided for this course

Tuition fee status depends on a number of criteria and varies according to where in the UK you will study. For further guidance on the criteria for home or overseas tuition fees, please refer to the UKCISA website .

Additional fee information

For further information: https://www.mmu.ac.uk/study/postgraduate
Food Science and Innovation at Manchester Metropolitan University - UCAS