Find UK courses - part time courses, undergraduate, postgraduate courses

What would you like to learn?

* mandatory
Hotcourses - unbiased reviews, articles, recommendations and opinions on home study undergraduate engineering courses in the UK

3 colleges run Undergraduate Home Study engineering courses

Engineering courses relate to a distinct number of disciplines, including civil engineering, electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, aerospace engineering and even biomedical engineering. You can work in infrastructure, the built environment, aircraft construction, automotive design, synthetic organ and prosthetic manufacturing, telecommunications, electronic infrastructure, and even motorsports. Engineering programmes will require you to possess a high level of technical competency, with an aptitude for numbers and problem solving.

Introduction to Open University

More about

Close Visit websiteRequest info

open university profile who offer Undergraduate Home Study Engineering courses  in the UK

More about

169 reviews

Open University

View 6 Undergraduate Home Study Engineering courses

Engineering (B65) BEng (Hons) view course
Engineering and Small Worlds, Micro and Nano Technologies (T356) Credits from The Open University view course
Engineering, Mechanics, Materials, Design (T207) Credits from The Open University view course

With over 250,000 students each year, we’re Britain’s favourite university. Make 2012 the year you get on the right path to...more

Some of the courses below will include those you can study at home or courses that you can arrange to suit your needs.

Angus College

View 1 Undergraduate Home Study Engineering course

Engineering (Flexible) HNC view course

1 reviews

Queen Mary, University of London (Times ranking for engineering: 10)

View 1 Undergraduate Home Study Engineering course

Materials Science and Engineering MEng (Hons) view course

18 reviews

  • Engineering articles
  • Undergraduate articles

Tips and Traps for the First year
We at Hotcourses have our fair share of university experiences between us, so here are some things we wish we’d read before we started the first year of University First year work ethic Being a student requires more careful time management than at school – as well as having lectures scattered all over your timetable, you will be expected to spend a lot of study hours reading and doing assignments, and you will have to organise all this yourself. Whilst this can seem like an annoying distraction from the important first year business of making friends and generally having a good time, it’ll...



See related Home study Undergraduate Engineering courses in UK