

BSc Computing Science/Geography
About this course
Computing science and geography is a combination that might not be immediately obvious, but it is one of remarkable coherence and growing professional relevance. Computing science addresses the theory and practice of computation: how algorithms are designed and analysed, how large software systems are built and managed, how artificial intelligence and machine learning work, and how data can be retrieved, stored, and processed at scale. Geography brings spatial thinking, an understanding of how places and environments are connected and shaped, and a tradition of working with data that is inherently geographical, from satellite imagery to socioeconomic surveys. At the University of Glasgow, this four-year full-time combined degree develops your computing science skills across a broad range of areas, from programming and software engineering to algorithms, networks, and AI, alongside a rigorous geographical education that examines both human and physical geography. The intersection of the two disciplines is particularly productive in areas such as geographic information systems, spatial data analysis, environmental modelling, and the application of machine learning to geographical problems. A year abroad is included in the programme, giving you the opportunity to engage with these disciplines in an international academic context. The combination of computing and geography opens a distinctive range of career pathways. Geographic information systems roles, spatial data science, remote sensing, urban analytics, environmental informatics, and technology roles in organisations with a strong geographical dimension are all natural destinations. The computing science component also qualifies you for roles in software engineering, data engineering, and AI across a wide range of industries, while the geographical grounding gives you a perspective on spatial and environmental problems that pure computing graduates often lack. Postgraduate study in geographic information science, data science, or computing research is an option for those who wish to develop further specialist expertise.
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