Course overview
The first year of the degree explores fundamental sciences linked to food and human nutrition. You will develop knowledge in physiology, biochemistry and biomedical sciences alongside an introduction to health and food behaviours. The second year builds on these foundations while also exploring the effects of dietary nutrients on health and human development across the life cycle, food chemistry and food processing. You will evaluate the latest scientific literature in the fields of nutrition and food science and relate this to developments in the discipline area. In the second year of the course you will choose between two streams: Nutrition or Food Science.
The Nutrition stream further develops your understanding of the evidence behind the associations between diet and health outcomes. You will explore the social and cultural influences that impact dietary decisions within the population, and conduct a nutrition research project. Graduate nutritionists typically undertake further study to specialise in a professional area, including dietetics, research, food science and technology, health promotion or teaching.
In the Food Science stream you will focus on the nature and chemical composition of foods, ingredient behaviour under different processing conditions, and the application of this knowledge of food science to improve the safety and quality of food. Nutrition and food scientists are also involved in the research and development of new food products and new technologies in the processing of foods. You will also undertake a work placement with an external organisation which may be a government, research or food industry organisation.
Course record
Career Opportunities
Majors
Food Science
Other Information
Professional recognition:
Graduates of the Food Science stream will be eligible to apply for professional membership of the Australian Institute of Food Science and Technology.
Graduates of the Nutrition stream will be eligible to apply for membership to the Public Health Association of Australia and as an Associate Nutritionist with the Nutrition Society of Australia.
Entry requirements
Switch between domestic ATAR data and international qualification equivalents.
IB Diploma
24-26Admission is assessed against the qualification, prerequisite and English requirements for the course.
If the student's current English result is below the direct-entry requirement, consider the university's recognised English language pathway or ELICOS package. When the student successfully completes the approved pathway at the required level, the university may accept that pathway for English entry without requiring a new IELTS, TOEFL or PTE result. Always confirm exclusions for professional registration courses and the offer conditions.
View English requirementStudent profile
Campuses & intake dates
Upcoming intakes
- BentleyWAAugust 2026
- BentleyWAFebruary 2026
- BentleyWA
