Overview
We are currently only accepting applications for Year 3 entry. If you wish to apply for Year 1 please consider our new five-year Master's in Optometry with Independent Prescribing.
Optometrists detect sight problems and prescribe and fit glasses, contact lenses, and other visual aids. They also detect and manage a variety of eye conditions such as glaucoma, dry eye, and age-related macular degeneration.
GCU’s Optometry degree course is designed to provide the theoretical and practical training to equip our graduates with the skills needed to work as independent eyecare professionals in an advanced clinical role in Scotland.
Our students receive training in basic vision science as well as clinical care, to help them become critical-thinking optometrists. Our students benefit from our state-of-the-art, on-campus clinical training facilities. Students develop their skills, under expert supervision, in our modern Vision Centre, located at the heart of the campus. They gain experience in specialist clinics, which include contact lenses, myopia, low vision, learning disability, visual stress, and dry eye.
Optometrists in Scotland have an extended healthcare role compared to elsewhere in the UK. The higher-level knowledge and clinical skills that you will need to fulfil this role are at the centre of our optometry degree course. Employment prospects are excellent, and our graduates are highly rated by employers throughout the UK. Opportunities include private optometric practice, hospital eye services, teaching, and research.
Your career
GCU has been the hub for non-medical eye-care education in Scotland since 1971. Employment prospects are excellent and our graduates are highly rated by employers throughout the UK. Opportunities include private optometric practice, hospital eye services, teaching and research.
GCU’s Optometry course is approved by the General Optical Council (the regulator for optical professions in the UK). The course is part of the route to registration for Optometrists in the UK.
Graduates of GCU’s BSc(Hons) Optometry course who achieve at least a 2:2 honours classification and meet the required standards of clinical competence are eligible to progress to a salaried pre-registration training position, under the supervision of a registered Optometrist.
Upon successful completion of the pre-registration training period, graduates are able to register with the General Optical Council as qualified Optometrists.
What you
will study
93% of students at Glasgow Caledonian University responded that staff teaching this subject are good at explaining things in the National Student Survey 2024