Work experience placements for Year 10 (STEM)
We believe it's important for young people to be able to develop their skills in the workplace while learning more about different course and career options.
Applications for Year 10 work experience placements closed on the 31 January 2025.
If you are interested for programmes in 2026, then please complete this expression of interest form to receive an email in Oct 2025 when applications reopen again. Email address for queries is: UoB-workexperience@bristol.ac.uk
About the work experience placements
Dates and times
How to apply
Eligibility
About the work experience placements
The STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths) work experience weeks have been designed to allow Year 12 students to build their self-confidence, immerse themselves in a scientific environment and gain a better understanding of what science skills, courses and careers are available.
The following work experience programmes are available to apply for:
Are you creative or do you enjoy problem-solving? Join us as we showcase Technicians' exciting and important roles across the University of Bristol. Explore with real-life Technicians the many different paths that may lead to a technical career.
Find out:
- what type of activities Technicians are carrying out
- what their working day looks like
- what a technical career looks like
Through a variety of hands-on practical sessions such as histology, tissue culture, earthquake structural resilience testing, soil and water analysis or the tour of anatomy, you will see how many different technical roles exist and learn which Technician you are.
Activities vary but will cover areas from Science and Engineering, Health and Life Sciences and the Arts (STEAM). For instance, what goes on in our specialist research and teaching facilities? What are 3D printers and laser cutters used for? How are ideas turned into real-life items such as underwater cameras? What does music and audio engineering involve? What is it like to complete a technical apprenticeship?
Life in the lab - Biological Sciences Technical
All too often people have the misconception that universities are just about students and lecturers. But what about the hundreds of support staff who keep their schools ticking along?
Based in the Biological Sciences teaching laboratories, you will experience the skills required, and the diversity involved in working in a busy laboratory environment alongside the lab technicians who work there.
Activities will vary from year to year but are likely to include microscope skills; media/reagent preparation; working aseptically; basic equipment servicing; field collection techniques; plant propagation; aquarium duties; assisting in outreach activities and electron microscope work.
Throughout the week you will explore the building blocks of life, cells and molecules, with hands-on experience in biochemistry, immunology and microbiology.
Biochemistry explores chemical processes related to living organisms and is a science that combines biology and chemistry. Biochemists study the structure, composition, and chemical reactions of substances in living systems. Immunologists explore the cells and molecules which protect us from infection, while microbiologists study microbes, which may be helpful or harmful to the body.
This week will allow you to try some exciting lab techniques and experiments to help develop your science knowledge, experience and skills. Get hands-on with diagnosing diabetes or using forensic DNA fingerprinting to uncover the CSI crime scene culprit. Investigate the immune response to COVID-19 and meet some amazing microbes. You will also get the opportunity to gain a greater understanding of university life, meet current students and get equipped with information and insights for your future options.
Animal Minds: evolution and behaviour
We often think about animal diversity in terms of physical traits like size and colour, but the diversity of animal behaviour is just as striking and poses unique challenges to document, understand and explain. So how do scientists understand why animals behave the way they do? And how are these behaviours produced?
We’ll take you on a tour of how biologists study evolution, then introduce how we can approach complex traits such as behaviour, with hands-on practical sessions. This will include practical work ranging from analysing how neurons and brains function to investigating the social networks of dolphins.
Green planet and the environment
The history of life on earth has been shaped largely by the evolution of plants, and now the future of our climate depends on preserving diverse forest ecosystems.
We’ll introduce you to the amazing diversity of plants, how they develop and work, and their importance in shaping our climate. We’ll also consider how human activity is affecting natural forest dynamics and how this will impact our efforts to prevent climate change. This will include practical work ranging from plant development through to ecosystem structure and understanding climate modelling.
Earth Sciences is the nexus of many STEM subjects, and we will use physics, chemistry, biology and maths skills to answer big societal or environmental questions.
We will work in a chemistry lab, use geophysics equipment, look at volcanic hazards, talk about ocean acidification, explore evolution, and/or look at ore samples to think about natural resources.
Activities include lectures, laboratory exercises and, usually, a local field trip. You will also learn essential report writing and presentation skills and have the opportunity to meet current Earth Sciences students and staff.
Do you want to make a difference in the world? Are you interested in technology and how it will affect our future? Are you thinking about studying A-level Mathematics after your GCSEs?
To find out how you can apply your creative problem-solving skills to address some of the critical issues humanity faces, join us for a week of hands-on workshops and activities using mathematics, computing, and engineering skills.
Throughout the week you will gain an insight into subjects taught in the faculty of Engineering alongside developing important employability skills like communication and teamwork, as well as hearing first-hand from our students, alumni and industry partners about life at university and the careers beyond.
Throughout the week, you will understand the research process in Geography, learn the key skills required to create new knowledge and use geographical software, and learn how to undertake research in an area of interest to you.
Are you interested in urban inequality? Migration? Poverty? We will help you develop a research question and use some new tools to answer them.
This will be an excellent opportunity for anyone interested in geography either at university or as a career and will give you a real insight into what universities do.
We hope it will be a rewarding experience that will strengthen your interest in geographical sciences and help develop valuable skills for future studies and career paths. You will also have the opportunity to engage in a range of other activities at the university level, from working with the Exams Officer to identify plagiarism to meeting with PhD students, listening to colleagues present their research and attending lectures and seminars.
Experience studying Physics and Mathematics at university and find out what it is like to work as a researcher.
You will take part in computational activities, a tour of the lab, lab experiments, and lectures on a variety of topics.
Learn about different research areas, such as quantum engineering technologies, particle physics, materials physics, nuclear physics, and astrophysics. You will also take part in sessions about careers, study skills and science ethics.
Dates and times
Dates/times: Year 10 work experience placements will take place from 30 June - 4 July 2025 (approximately 9.30 am – 4.30 pm)
Location: In person at the University of Bristol Clifton Campus
How to apply
Applications for work experience placements closed on the 31 January 2025 and all places have been allocated out.
Eligibility
Due to limited spaces, priority will be given to students from widening participation backgrounds.
When allocating places, certain criteria will be taken into consideration as we aim to encourage applications from students currently under-represented at the University. Therefore, applicants will be more likely to gain a place if they:
- are from an ethnic group that is under-represented at the University of Bristol: Asian Pakistani, Asian Bangladeshi, Black Caribbean, Black African, mixed backgrounds featuring one or more of these groups;
- are the first in their family to go to university;
- live in an IMD (Indices of Multiple Deprivation) quintile 1 area as defined by their home postcode;
- are or have been eligible for free school meals;
- attend a school or college listed by the University as an aspiring state school or college;
- have spent three or more months in local authority care;
- have a disability.
Please read our Access and participation plan 2025-26 to 2028-29 summary (PDF, 146kB) for further information as it sets out how higher education providers will improve equality of opportunity for underrepresented groups to access, succeed in and progress from higher education.