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BA (Hons) Sports Journalism

Gain thorough training for life at sport media's cutting edge. Learn the latest techniques in digital, video, and broadcast production. Study for UK journalism's gold standard qualification, the National Council for the Training of Journalists (NCTJ) diploma.

Sports journalism students working in the press boxes at a football match

Key course information

UCAS codeP505
Duration3 years
Fee (UK)£9,535
Fee (Int)£17,500
LocationOn campus

Course summary

Gain thorough training for life at sport media's cutting edge. Learn the latest techniques in digital, video, and broadcast production. Study for UK journalism's gold standard qualification, the National Council for the Training of Journalists (NCTJ) diploma.

You'll get the opportunity to undertake assignments such as:

  • Reporting from the press box at Wembley Stadium
  • Interviewing club executives
  • Visiting some of Europe's finest football stadiums
  • Reporting on professional county cricket
  • Producing your own website, sports TV episode, or series of investigative sports articles
  • Using our state-of-the-art TV studios and outside broadcast equipment

Working in the mediaHUB, you'll build your practical experience and develop a portfolio of work. You'll publish your work on SportsByte, our student-run website covering sport across the north-east.

Our graduates have gone on to work for:

  • Sky Sports News
  • BBC Sport
  • Manchester United FC
  • Liverpool FC
  • Everton FC
  • Newcastle United FC
  • Golf’s Ryder Cup and DP World Tour
  • The Williams F1 team
  • National newspapers
Jordan Brown graduated with a degree in BA (Hons) Sports Journalism and became the Social Media Editor at Manchester United Football Club. Where will your degree take you?

What you'll study

Many of our courses include a range of modules you can choose from. Some of these options may only be available if you’ve already studied specific required modules. If you’re not sure what you need before picking a module, your course leader can help.

Undergraduate module credits should total 120 credits per academic year. If optional modules are available alongside core modules on your course, you should choose an amount that totals 120 credits.

How you'll learn

In your first year, we'll set you up with the core skills of sports journalism. This includes training in writing styles, research, and media law. You'll learn traditional sports reporting techniques as well as contemporary digital sports journalism skills.

In your second and final year, you'll study topics in more depth. You'll work in our state-of-the-art facilities while training in shorthand – a key skill valued by employers such as Sky Sports News – free of charge.

Throughout the course, you'll build your practical experience and portfolio of published work by taking on reporting and/or editing roles on SportsByte. This is our student-run website covering sport across the north-east. You can also benefit from our exclusive links with:

  • Durham County Cricket Club
  • Newcastle Falcons Rugby Club
  • Sunderland AFC (where a part-time internship is available each year to one final-year student)

Here, you'll gain invaluable match day and behind-the-scenes reporting experience of big sporting stages.

In your final year, you can have your sports content published by JPI Media each week for an entire semester, and go on work placement. Here you'll put what you’ve learned into practice while building crucial workplace relationships. You’ll produce a large-scale piece of journalism, which will be a significant piece to add to your portfolio of work to present to prospective employers.

Teaching methods include lectures, demonstrations, seminars, workshops, group projects, and practical skills work. Your teaching staff have all worked as journalists and have strong links with regional employers and industry organisations. We also invite experienced industry professionals to carry out regular guest lectures.

Assessment methods include portfolios of practical work, essays, examinations, reports, and presentations.

Entry requirements

Fees and finance support

UK£9,535
International£17,500

The tuition fee includes the NCTJ exam fees. It covers the cost of one attempt at all seven exams required for the NCTJ Diploma, including each shorthand speed.

Undergraduate fees are set according to rules from Government in line with forecast inflation. The fee for your first year of study for 2026/27 will be £9,535. You'll pay tuition fees for every year of study. Fees may increase every year based on the Retail Price Index.

Apply now

UK students

International students

Disclaimer

We want to make sure you have clear and accurate information about our courses. Our website always shows the latest updates. If you’ve applied and been offered a place, we’ll contact you in writing if anything important changes.

View our programme specifications(opens in new tab) for further information about what the course covers, learning outcomes and the skills you'll gain when you graduate.