Bachelor of Arts (with Honours) - BA (Hons)
Here's what you will need to get a place on the Theatre & Performance with Professional Placement course at Falmouth University.
Select a qualification to see required grades
We welcome A Levels in a wide range of subjects, especially in those relevant to the course for which you apply.
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Attend an audition
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Most popular A-levels studied
See who's studying at Falmouth University. These students are taking Theatre & Performance with Professional Placement or another course from the same subject area.
| Subject | Grade |
|---|---|
| Drama and Theatre Studies | B |
| English Literature | B |
| Psychology | B |
| Film Studies | A |
| History | B |
UCAS code: PY10
Here's what Falmouth University says about its Theatre & Performance with Professional Placement course.
Create innovative, brave and enthralling work for theatre and live performance.
Help to shape the future of performance as a powerful contemporary artform on this multidisciplinary Theatre & Performance degree. Created to develop passionate hands-on practitioners who want to bring powerful theatre and storytelling to life, you will be supported to become a culturally aware and adaptable live performance artist.
With audiences hungry for innovative and engaging shows, this course responds directly to the industry’s need for collaborative and highly skilled creative explorers. From the start, you'll be trained by makers, practitioners and academics as you develop a diversity of theatre making skills in addition to performance prowess – including devising, directing, writing, scenography and digital technology, building your confidence as an industry-facing professional.
Taught within our Academy of Music & Theatre Arts (AMATA), underpinned by intensive practical work, you will collaborate across disciplines, creating performances that push the boundaries of technology and art and given the freedom to express an individual approach to your practice.
With the emphasis on learning by doing and interrogating all elements of live productions, you’ll graduate as a creatively confident and physically skilled practitioner who can manage, produce, perform and professionally facilitate your own work – ready to build your name in the industry.
Why study this course at Falmouth? Work with highly skilled and experienced practitioners, artists, academics and creative technicians. Have access to the latest resources and technologies, including green screen, motion capture and virtual reality resources, as well as an extensive range of technical sound, lighting and recording and editing equipment. Benefit from AMATA’s year-round performance programme, which attracts top artists and performers across a range of disciplines. Build industry links through workshops, guest lectures and visits by companies such as Ad Infinitum, Beyond Face, Gecko, Prodigal Theatre, Wildworks, Miracle Theatre and The Royal Shakespeare Company. Create and take part in a diverse range of collaborative performance projects, including a major immersive production and your own Professional Project.
This course is an accredited degree with Spotlight and Equity. Students are eligible to join Spotlight in the first term of their final year. Inclusive of their membership, they have a wealth of support, content and events tailored explicitly towards this membership group from Spotlight.
Source: Falmouth University
Qualification
Bachelor of Arts (with Honours) - BA (Hons)
Department
The Academy of Music and Theatre Arts
Location
Penryn Campus | Penryn
Duration
4 Years
Study mode
Full-time
Subjects
• Theatre studies
Start date
14 September 2026
Application deadline
14 January 2026
With consistent and in-depth professional skills training, you’ll learn to create and respond to performances. You’ll explore techniques and methods in different environments; from solo performances to full public productions, from work for traditional spaces to site-specific, immersive and unusual contexts.
Year one: You’ll develop essential foundational skills and approaches for voice, body, movement and imaginative practices. You will also develop your knowledge and skills in relation to digital and immersive technologies and explore their potential in making live performances more engaging for modern audiences.
Modules Performance Skills Culture & Contexts: Stage and Screen Play Texts Making Skills 1 Stagecraft: Physical and Digital Scenography Ensemble Performance
Year two: In your second year you’ll take on advanced body-based?training?and learn about technical theatre, directing, writing and creating drama on stage.?You will also develop scenography skills and engage with design thinking, adapting the stage to the story.?Alongside this, you’ll?create and present?a solo performance?of your own making, influenced by?a range of?styles like scripted monologue and?stand-up comedy.?? Working?as part of a theatre company, you’ll?create and?put on a?public?production?focusing on?the relationship between a show and its audience.
Modules Extended Making Skills: Physical, Vocal, Digital Immersive and Participatory Theatre Theatre Futures Page to Stage: Writing, Directing and Dramaturgy Show in a Bag Modes of Making: Socially Engaged Practice
Year three: You’ll be responsible for finding your own placement, with support from the Employability team.
How you’ll study during your professional placement You’ll spend time working in a professional context, as part of a business or organisation. This can be in one role, or up to three, and must be for a minimum of 24 weeks. You’ll develop in-demand workplace skills, deepen your insight into industry and grow your network of contacts, all of which could help you get ahead in your career after graduation.
Throughout this year, you’ll develop a portfolio of work that includes critical self-reflection on what has been learned from the experience. You’ll be required to evidence your experiences, the skills you’ve learned and your professional growth.
Year four: In your final year, you will extend and deepen your techniques and making skills, as well as your personal, social and philosophical approach to theatre. You will work towards becoming a proactive, independent and entrepreneurial practitioner, who is resilient, able to transfer your skills to other disciplines and able to manage a sustainable career.
Using your critical and reflective skills, you’ll research and write a paper on an area of theatre making that inspires and interests you. You’ll also develop performance materials individually and in companies, honing creative process skills through delivering scratch work (‘test’ performances) in several different contexts.
You will finish the year developing and performing your own professional work for public production to industry specialists and audiences. You’ll also take on a professional development project, where you’ll prepare for the industry by learning about how its infrastructure functions, and how to develop a career as a performer, theatre maker or company.
Modules Creating Companies Professional Development The Thinking Practitioner: Student-led Research Master Classes: Physical, Vocal & Digital Professional Production
As part of our process of continuous improvement, we routinely review course content to ensure that all our students benefit from a high-quality and rewarding academic experience. As such, there may be some changes made to your course which are not immediately reflected in the content displayed on our website. Any students affected will be informed of any changes made directly.
The Theatre & Performance course assessment approach reflects and enables an incremental, developmental learning experience.
The assessment for the Award consists of 100% coursework, including:
Practical Assessment (group, individual)?– which includes in-class presentations, discussions, demonstrations/process showings, studio-based practice, productions, and final year performances. Written and reflective assessment?– including essays, research writings, digital/physical portfolios, critical reviews and live discussions. Regular giving and receiving of feedback during practical work enables effective individual and group critique and reflection.?
A range of disciplined practical activities (workshops, demonstrations, seminars, lectures, tutorial supervision) are used to develop skills and abilities and demonstrate outcomes including workshops and lectures with professional performers, companies and directors.
These opportunities will help develop independently minded practitioners and are designed to help you prepare for the range of activities you will engage in as graduates: to be able to demonstrate expertise in negotiation and pursuing shared goals; handling creative, personal and interpersonal issues; and communicating through a variety of media and platforms.
Showing 25 reviews
2 years ago
The Student Union sends regular email updates.
2 years ago
My course has a group chat where we can talk anytime.
2 years ago
Even though I am studying a course that is equal in length to an in-person 3 year BA Hons, because I am studying online, I don't have access to a maintenance loan which does have a financial impact. This isn't really the fault of the university, it's an issue that should be raised with Student Fi...
2 years ago
I have an Independent Learning Plan set up by the accessibility team, and that does work well for me, however I don't have access to regular support catch-ups or meetings with a mentor which may have been helpful for me week to week.
2 years ago
I study online, and the online learning platform works really well however it can sometimes be tricky to navigate, e.g. more than one section with the same name.
2 years ago
The structure of the course works really well for me. All the lectures are recorded so you can watch them back in your own time. I like that each week is broken down into individual steps, this helps me to stay on track and understand what I am supposed to be doing during the week.
The NSS is an annual survey where final-year students are asked to rate different aspects of their course and university experience.
Here you can see ratings from Falmouth University students who took the Theatre & Performance with Professional Placement course - or another course in the same subject area.
Select an option to see a detailed breakdown
Teaching on my course
98%
high
How often does your course challenge you to achieve your best work?
97%
high
How good are teaching staff at explaining things?
100%
high
How often do teaching staff make the subject engaging?
100%
high
How often is the course intellectually stimulating?
97%
high
Learning opportunities
94%
high
To what extent have you had the chance to bring together information and ideas from different topics?
86%
med
How well does your course introduce subjects and skills in a way that builds on what you have already learned?
100%
high
How well has your course developed your knowledge and skills that you think you will need for your future?
97%
high
To what extent have you had the chance to explore ideas and concepts in depth?
93%
med
To what extent does your course have the right balance of directed and independent study?
93%
high
Assessment and feedback
81%
med
How well have assessments allowed you to demonstrate what you have learned?
90%
med
How fair has the marking and assessment been on your course?
80%
med
How often does feedback help you to improve your work?
87%
med
How often have you received assessment feedback on time?
57%
low
How clear were the marking criteria used to assess your work?
90%
high
Academic support
95%
med
How easy was it to contact teaching staff when you needed to?
93%
med
How well have teaching staff supported your learning?
97%
high
Organisation and management
85%
high
How well were any changes to teaching on your course communicated?
87%
high
How well organised is your course?
83%
high
Learning resources
93%
high
How well have the IT resources and facilities supported your learning?
90%
high
How well have the library resources (e.g., books, online services and learning spaces) supported your learning?
97%
high
How easy is it to access subject specific resources (e.g., equipment, facilities, software) when you need them?
93%
high
Student voice
87%
high
How clear is it that students' feedback on the course is acted on?
80%
high
To what extent do you get the right opportunities to give feedback on your course?
90%
high
To what extent are students' opinions about the course valued by staff?
90%
high
How well does the students' union (association or guild) represent students' academic interests?
88%
high
Other NSS questions
During your studies, how free did you feel to express your ideas, opinions, and beliefs?
93%
med
How well communicated was information about your university/college's mental wellbeing support services?
73%
med
See who's studying at Falmouth University. These students are taking Theatre & Performance with Professional Placement or another course from the same subject area.
Facts and figures about Falmouth University graduates who took Theatre & Performance with Professional Placement - or another course in the same subject area.
Graduate statistics
50%
In a job where degree was essential or beneficial
85%
In work, study or other activity
60%
Say it fits with future plans
25%
Are utilising studies
Top job areas
25%
Elementary occupations
15%
Teaching Professionals
10%
Administrative occupations
10%
Artistic, literary and media occupations
Graduate statistics percentages are determined 15 months after a student graduates
Earnings from Falmouth University graduates who took Theatre & Performance with Professional Placement - or another course in the same subject area.
Earnings
£16.4k
First year after graduation
£20.4k
Third year after graduation
£23k
Fifth year after graduation
Shown here are the median earnings of graduates at one, three and five years after they completed a course related to Theatre & Performance with Professional Placement.
Note: this data only looks at employees (and not those who are self-employed or also studying) and covers a broad sample of graduates and the various paths they've taken, which might not always be a direct result of their degree
Students are talking about Falmouth University on The Student Room.
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