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Photography - BA (Hons) Degree

About the Course

Photography is a powerful language. It enables us to communicate complex ideas and emotions. It tells us what is considered important, and helps us to understand and question the past and the present.

Your unique vision can help to redefine the way we see the world around us. As a critical and creative photographer, you can contribute to creating the visual landscapes of the future.

The BA Photography degree at Cardiff Met will develop your understanding of technical, creative and conceptual approaches to photography, drawing inspiration from artistic and editorial approaches to image-making and experimental lens-based practices. You will acquire professional digital and film photography skills alongside a knowledge of photographic history and practice.

You will learn to critically evaluate your creative approaches to contemporary photographic practices, positioning these within wider visual culture. We will encourage you to pursue your own photographic interests, nurturing a unique way of seeing, and creating a dynamic portfolio of work.

You will develop a distinctive visual identity and an understanding of the ways in which your personal style might be applied to a range of contexts from fashion and fine arts to advertising and editorial.

This BA in Photography is based at our Cardiff School of Art & Design. The school has a longstanding partnership with Ffotogallery, the National Photography Agency for Wales, focused around short courses and workshops, paid internships and opportunities for students to exhibit and volunteer during their biennial Diffusion: Cardiff International Festival of Photography.

BA (Hons) Photography achieved 100% Overall Student Satisfaction in the latest National Student Survey (2025).

This course will develop skills and expertise in the following:

  • Analogue and digital image making skills
  • Studio & location lighting techniques
  • Photographic genres
  • Editing and sequencing
  • The language of photography
  • Digital workflow and post production
  • Portfolio development
  • Ethical protocols
  • Professional contexts (including budgeting, pricing, copyright, agencies, and market awareness)

Year One

Photography Fundamentals - 40 credits

This module aims to introduce students to the basic fundamental skills, ideas, and technical processes relating to the field of photography and encourage them to apply appropriate production techniques to realise their ideas.

It will facilitate the planning of a response to a creative brief whilst developing students’ understanding of visual languages nurturing their ability to communicate ideas, emotions, and information via the photographic image.

The module will introduce students to the work of practitioners working in the field of photography, both contemporary and historical, and the critical ideas behind their work with the aim of developing students’ own ability to produce images actively and with purpose.

The focus is on manual camera handling, working in the photo studio, traditional darkroom techniques and digital imaging processes.

Photographic Perspectives - 20 credits

This module aims to provide students with the opportunity to develop more advanced photographic skills and techniques whilst introducing them to a range of genres and contexts with regard to photographic and lens-based practices.

The focus is on working with professional formats and exploring key photographic genres and preparing images for display.

Students will develop creative image manipulation techniques and explore the differences between conceptual, functional and aesthetic approaches to photography.

It will develop students’ ability to reflect upon, and evaluate their own skills in order to identify the most appropriate approaches to the production of images in specific contexts.

The module will encourage students to consider the expectations, perceptions, and responses of their audience and reflect upon the historical, societal, and cultural dimensions of their own practice.

Research Basics - 20 credits*

This module aims to develop students' core academic research skills including locating sources, evaluating credibility, and analysing information. It will provide the foundations from which students will cultivate their confidence to engage in theoretical discourse and idea-driven dialogues which will be required throughout their undergraduate studies.

Interdisciplinary Understanding - 40 credits

This module aims to introduce you to the principles of Interdisciplinary working: collaborative working, critical thinking and reflection. Projects within the module will challenge you to work with another discipline to explore a societal and cultural theme or challenge.

Year Two

Creative Photographic Practice - 40 credits

This module will build on students’ foundational knowledge and will focus on their individual creative expertise within the context of contemporary cultural, ethical and professional photographic practices. It will support students’ development through independent enquiry, personal innovation, and risk taking, encouraging them to explore, experiment with, and gain an understanding of different forms of contemporary photographic practices.

The focus is on Experiment, Narrative and Context.

The module aims to extend students’ professional, technical, and intellectual skills and develop their confidence in order that they can identify where their individual creative practice is located within the broad spectrum of photographic and lens-based practices. The module will require students to explore alternative and diverse avenues of expression, production and presentation to further develop their skills whilst developing a cohesive portfolio of work.

21st Century Challenges - 40 credits

The 21st Century Challenges module builds upon the introduction to Interdisciplinary problem-solving developed at level 4 to continue to refine, and begin to apply, your skillsets through real-world projects and live briefs. Projects will tackle 21st Century Challenges to develop your leadership, collaboration, future literacy/critical thinking skillsets.

Real-World Contexts - 20 credits

The Real-World Contexts module challenges you to apply the situated awareness and future-thinking skills to deploy your own practice in the creation or promotion of value for a variety of external stakeholders and communities.

Research Proposal - 20 credits*

The Research Proposal offers you an opportunity to strengthen your research skills, consolidate your research experience and orientate your level 6 contribution around an enquiry of your choosing that is inspired by your learning across all modules at level 4 and 5. This research proposal will be used to continue your personal and professional development at level 6 where you will identify a route for your own enquiry.

Year Three

Professional Photographic Practice - 60 credits

This module aims to develop students’ understanding of strategic planning, negotiating workloads, and developing a professional portfolio. It will nurture students’ advanced professional intellectual and technical skills and develop the aesthetic judgement required from them at this level.

The focus is on photographic projects made for publication and planning a career in Photography.

Students will be able to deploy knowledge of general and specialist discipline areas through the engagement with an individually developed project that will demonstrate intellectual depth and rigour, synthesising ideas from a breath of a theoretical and practice based contexts. Creative thinking techniques will be evident through experimentation and innovation that clearly demonstrates an understanding of the specificity of audience.

This module will extend practical skills through the production and presentation of independent, high quality photographic work that has the appropriate intellectual underpinning.

Positioning in Practice - 20 credits

The module aims to support your readiness in developing your unique professional career. It will embed attributes reflective of the requirements of real-world practice aligned to your specialist discipline. You will have the opportunity to reflect upon how your experiences over the last 3 years have allowed you to position yourself as a professional in preparation for graduate level work, continued study, research, and entrepreneurial ventures.

Contribution - 40 credits*

Your practice is underpinned by your knowledge. Demonstrate your research and analysis skills in your final research submission, where you explore ideas in both written and practical forms​.

All undergraduate programmes within the School of Art & Design are taught within an interdisciplinary learning environment.

Our sector-leading curriculum has been designed in relation to current literature and best practices across the UK and Europe, providing students with authentic learning opportunities with a focus on real-life situations and solving real world problems. Our graduates are ready for, and adaptable to, 21st century working and living, driven by creativity, social responsibility, futures literacy and entrepreneurial thinking and behaviours. You can read more about our undergraduate curriculum here.

Studio-Based Learning

All programmes are delivered through a studio-based learning approach, with an authentic environment that encourages collaboration, independent exploration, and a shared learning experience. Studio spaces are designed to meet the specific needs of your discipline, offering a range of learning opportunities such as group seminars, critiques, presentations, one-on-one tutorials, technical workshops, and guided independent study. This environment supports the development of student-led learning, where you can shape your research focus and expertise, working autonomously with guidance from expert academic and technical staff.

Hands-On Practical Workshops

You will engage hands-on in practical studio sessions and workshops, building core skills in materials and processes relevant to your discipline. Lectures provide a theoretical framework that complements your studio practice, while smaller group seminars offer targeted support for practical growth. Collaborative group projects create opportunities to build connections and develop teamworking skills that may extend into extra-curricular or personal projects. Regular critiques (studio crits), briefing sessions, and presentations are designed to develop critical thinking, effective communication, and build confidence to present work both visually and verbally.

Project-Based Learning

Learning strategies aim to develop professional competencies while promoting critical and creative thinking. A strong focus is placed on project-based and problem-based learning, where you will tackle projects that vary in scope: from set briefs to student-led and real-world live projects. Each project challenges you to analyse problems, conduct research, make decisions, and develop both technical and creative solutions. Projects will have defined objectives, but you are encouraged to develop an individual interpretation.

Self-Reflection

Students are further supported through a structured Personal Development Plan (PDP), which encourages self-reflection and professional development. This document serves as both a record of growth and a portfolio, highlighting your evolving body of work. Throughout your studies you will be introduced to real-world scenarios, often collaborating with external industry professionals, guest speakers, or on placements, giving you valuable exposure to industry standards and practices.

Virtual Resources

Additional support is available through personal academic tutors, who provide guidance on academic matters and your journey through the degree, contributing to student well-being and helping you to find a professional path within the programme. A Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) complements in-person learning by offering a range of resources, discussion forums, and self-assessment tools. This platform also enables formative assessment and facilitates communication within the programme.

This integrated learning and teaching approach ensures that students acquire both foundational knowledge and advanced, discipline-specific skills. By blending theoretical understanding with practical application, the course prepares students for sustained, lifelong learning and equips them with the competencies to navigate and contribute to their chosen fields.

Throughout the duration of your studies, you will be evaluated on three main criteria, which underpin all of the disciplines being taught at CSAD: 

SKILLS: 
The practical, technical and conceptual skills you acquire during your course.

CONTEXT:
Your understanding and knowledge of broader intellectual context within which your discipline and work is located. This includes historical, environmental and ethical issues and will often be explored in your 'Theory and Context' modules.

IDEAS:
Your understanding of intellectual and creative ideas from within and beyond your discipline; plus your ability to acquire new concepts and form new ideas. Ideas will be explored in your written work, as well as being evident in your practical progress. Each of these criteria is given equal weighting during the assessment process. That is to say that they are seen as equally important and critical to your development; an emphasis which is designed, for example, to enable a more well-rounded skill set from a student who may be skilled technically, but weak in generating ideas, or a student with much creative flair who may struggle to hone a broad concept into a strong, individual design. 

We provide a number of ways for you to track your progress en route to submitting your work for marking. Understanding that the emphases will revolve around the core areas of skills, context and ideas, you will also become familiar with the structured assessment form used by your tutors and learn to relate to your work back to the intended learning outcomes of each brief. 

The main types of formative assessment are; academic (feedback from your tutors); peer (from your course-mates or project partners); and self-assessment (which is your own critique, in light of other forms of feedback). You won't just be receiving feedback at the end of a brief, however – your tutors will often assess your progress as your work develops, providing formative feedback at crucial moments where it is hoped to encourage you to take risks, maintain your motivation or shape-up your ideas ahead of deadline.

Graduates from the programme are well placed to work as independent photographers, join media and design companies or advertising agencies, or to be employed in the wider creative art and design industries.

​​During the course you'll forge connections, secure coveted placements and work alongside industry professionals through enlightening talks and mentoring sessions. We are proud of our longstanding partnership with Ffotogallery, the revered National Photography Agency for Wales, which opens the doors to paid internships and the chance to showcase your talents during their biennial Diffusion: Cardiff International Festival of Photography.​

Some graduates become teachers by taking a PGCE. Some graduates elect to take their studies further by studying at CSAD for a master's level qualification and there are opportunities to take this further still, into research with a PhD or a Professional Doctorate in Art or Design.

Typical Offers

  • Tariff points: 96-120
  • Contextual offer: See our contextual offers page.
  • GCSE: Preferably five GCSEs at Grade C / 4 or above to include English Language / Welsh First Language, Mathematics / Mathematics – Numeracy.
  • English Language Requirement: Academic IELTS 6.0 overall with at least 5.5 in all elements, or equivalent.
  • A level: Minimum three A levels. No specific subjects required. Welsh Advanced Skills Baccalaureate considered as a third subject.
  • BTEC National / Cambridge Technical Extended Diploma: MMM-DDM
  • T Level: No specific subjects required.
  • Access to Higher Education Diploma: No specific subjects required.
  • International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma: 24 points. No specific subjects required.
  • Irish Leaving Certificate: No specific subjects required. Higher level subjects only considered with a minimum grade H4.
  • Scottish Advanced Highers: No specific subjects required.
  • Other requirements: Successful portfolio review. For more information please read our Advice for Applicants page.

Combinations of the above qualifications are accepted if they meet our minimum requirements. If your qualifications aren’t listed, please contact Admissions or refer to the UCAS Course Search.

Further information on Overseas qualifications can be found here.

If you are a mature applicant, have relevant experience or RPL that you would like us to consider, please contact Admissions.

 

How to Apply

Further information on how to apply can be found here.

What’s included?

We offer a wide range of specialist facilities for our creative programmes, with dedicated studios, purpose-built workshops, and extensive technical equipment. You will have access to these workshops following successful inductions, and will be supported by a highly skilled technical team.

You will not be charged a studio fee and will be provided with all the essential materials that you need to learn the processes that your course requires.

Cardiff Met is an Adobe® Creative Campus, and CSAD students have access to the full Adobe® Creative Cloud at no additional cost.

We pride ourselves on leading the way in sustainable studio and workshop practices. Whether that’s carbon literacy, re-use, waste reduction and material science, you will be encouraged to use materials consciously as you develop your own way of working. You will also get:

  • Dedicated studios for independent work or group study
  • UK-based study trips that are core to your learning experience
  • Creative digital facilities tailored to your course, such as specific software, print facilities or digital visualisation tools
  • IT and library facilities, which include an extensive range of artists’ books, publications, journals, magazines, and digital resources to support your learning and research

What is an additional cost?

When developing individual projects, you will select and provide your own materials, many of which can be purchased at cost price on campus. We will support you in sourcing additional materials depending on your creative ambitions and budget, and in keeping with our sustainable and safe practices.

You may require course-specific equipment and tools, but this will vary depending on your practice. A joining pack will be sent to you before you start, containing detailed information about any recommended equipment including laptop specification advice. We recommend that you don’t make major purchases before receiving the joining pack or speaking with a member of staff.

Some examples of additional costs:

  • Students will find a laptop or tablet helpful and will need to allow for the purchase of apps and software
  • Optional UK or overseas study trips and exchange programmes
  • Placements and associated costs such as travel and accommodation
  • Optional access to Cardiff FabLab which is subject to charges for equipment use and materials
  • Material costs when opting to use specialist equipment independently, such as digital fabric printing, 3D printing and laser cutting
  • Other costs such as printing, copying, and the purchase of textbooks

For up-to-date information on tuition fees and financial support that may be available whilst at Cardiff Met, please visit www.cardiffmet.ac.uk/fees.

If you have any questions in the meantime, please contact us.

For general enquiries please contact the Admissions Team on 029 2041 6044 or email askadmissions@cardiffmet.ac.uk.

For course specific enquiries, please contact BA (Hons) Photography Admissions Tutor, Dr Duncan Cook: Email: DPCook@cardiffmet.ac.uk

  • UCAS Code

    W640

  • Location

    Llandaff Campus

  • School

    Cardiff School of Art & Design

  • Duration

    3 years full time.
    4 years full time if undertaking year-long sandwich placement.

We endeavour to deliver courses as described and will not normally make changes to courses, such as course title, content, delivery, and teaching provision. However, it may be necessary for the University to make changes in the course provision before or after enrolment. It reserves the right to make variations to content or delivery methods, including discontinuation or merging courses if such action is considered necessary. For the full information, please read our Terms and Conditions.

Photography shooting area with camera between two large lights pointed at a white background Photography shooting area with camera between two large lights pointed at a white background

Explore Our Facilities

Photography Studios

Our photographic facilities include three lighting studios equipped with electronic flash, Tungsten and LED lighting, and a wet darkroom for traditional photographic processes.

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