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Radio, Broadcast & New Media

Course details
  • 1 Study option
  • Undergraduate
Course location
2 Campuses
Awarded by:
Middlesex University

Course summary

.This hands-on course mentors and equips you with the skills to create, produce, and broadcast content across FM radio, DAB, and podcasts. You’ll develop expertise for roles like content creator, producer, scheduler, marketer, live events broadcaster, and head of music. Real industry briefs and production for Kane FM provide practical experience in presentation, content creation, management, entrepreneurship, and production. You'll collaborate with creative peers on innovative broadcasts, run your own shows, and market content from renowned providers, while networking with industry professionals for valuable insights into music, broadcasting, and creative industries.

The course covers broadcasting across FM, DAB, and online platforms, licensing regulations, and broadcast technology, with a visit to a real communications tower. You'll learn to operate broadcast equipment, from mixing desks to recording and editing tools, and produce radio shows with features and live content. Presentation skills are developed through audience engagement, improvisation, interviews, and demo creation. The course also focuses on building an audio-visual brand identity for business-to-consumer and business-to-business goals. In podcasting, you'll master planning, branding, live and recorded interviews, audience growth, and technical setup for audio and video production, gaining all the skills needed for a successful career in modern broadcasting and content creation.

Modules

Our tripartite commitment to our students’ academic, professional and personal development is recognised in a brand new curriculum, specifically purposed to bridge the gap between what industry needs and what education has traditionally provided. ACM's pioneering Creative Industries Future programme framework treats our students as individuals. We build bespoke programmes of study for each of them, based on their own history and aspirations for the future, with over 100 different modules and numerous unique module combinations to choose from. On UCAS, we actively publish a certain number of career destinations that are commonly stated as aspirational by our applicants and desirable by our industry, advising you as to which module combinations you might want to consider in pursuit of those particular career goals. If you’d like to pursue something different, however, it’s also completely possible to build and personalise your own programmes, as you see fit. Of course, we also understand that not everybody has a specific career destination yet, and so for those of you who haven’t quite made up your mind, the first thing we ask you to think about and choose from is one of six broad study routes. These study routes are described as Musician, Creative Artist, Producer, Management & Entrepreneurship, Games Development and Live Production and Sound. Choosing a route will dictate a selection of route-specific modules that you will study. Further into your course, in addition to the route-specific modules, you can then select from a suite of zero-credit elective modules and credit-bearing elective modules as you start to formulate your ambitions for the future more clearly. We also believe that there are some things that every Creative professional needs to learn about and understand. Things such as copyright, who the main players in Industry are and how the various sectors of artist management, records, publishing and live are changing in an ever more digital world. That’s why our Creative Industries Futures qualification also includes a small number of mandatory modules that every student must engage with. Whether students choose to focus on music performance, songwriting, production, live sound and production, games development and business management, we pride ourselves on delivering an immersive creative industry education in which we match the highest quality of teaching and learning with an unparalleled student experience. With its students representing every corner of the field they one day hope to work in, ACM is a microcosm of the creative industry in which they really can work together and learn by doing. We’re interested in our students’ careers as much as their studies, dedicating an entire department to supporting their professional development and helping them take their first steps into the creative industry. ACM’s Industry Link team ,through regular networking events, work placements, performance and audition opportunities, students are able to showcase their knowledge and talent to music industry executives (from labels, publishers, management companies and more) and gain first-hand feedback from those in the know. The department connects students to a network of top-tier industry partners in the music and wider creative industries, and also offers regular tutorial and masterclass opportunities with visiting guests. ACM students also enjoy an access all areas pass to Europe’s largest recording complex, in which the likes of Queen, Adele, Amy Winehouse, Will.i.am and countless others have recorded, and some still record, today. This joining of educational and professional environments, where over 50% of the UK Music chart is recorded, mixed or mastered in an average year, has created a unique end-to-end proposition for those wanting to pursue a career in the music and wider creative industries, not to be found anywhere else in music education.

How to apply

Application codes

Course code:
RBNM
Institution code:
A48

This course may be available at alternative locations, please check if other course options are available.

Course options

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Entry requirements

There are no specific entry requirements for this course.

Historical entry grades data

This section shows the range of grades students (with UK A-Levels or Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diplomas) who received offers were previously accepted with (learn more). It is designed to support your research but does not guarantee whether you will or won't get a place. Admissions teams consider various factors, including interviews, subject requirements, and entrance tests. Check all course entry requirements for eligibility.

Not enough data available

We are unable to show previous accepted grades for this course. This could be because the course is new, it's a postgraduate course, there isn't enough historical data, or the provider has opted out of sharing their entry grades data for this course - learn more.

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