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Students practice real CSI skills

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University of Bradford postgraduate students practised real crime scene investigation skills during a dig on campus.

csi students 2

Students from the MSc in Forensic Archaeology and Crime Scene Investigation programme, were set a task to unearth a series of buried objects, and record their activities using skills commensurate with police CSI practice.

Associate Professor Robert Janaway, a forensic archaeologist with over 35 years experience, who has worked with a number of police forces and delivered training both here and abroad, said: “We run a mixture of simulated crime scene experience days. On this occasion, students were involved in an early excavation to recover a number of buried objects. The techniques they use are the same that would be used in a police investigation, both in terms of recording and recovering material. They also have to carry out and record things like witness statements.

He added: “Students from this course go on to a variety of things - some undertake PhDs, others go on to work as professional archaeologists and the police.”

Student Emily Dobson, who was on the dig, said: “It’s really interesting to be able to get hands-on experience, especially with things we have learned about in the classroom.”

Fellow student Marie-Clare Gilbertson added: “These exercises enable us to gain practical skills and things like that are valuable when you come to apply for a job.”

Chloe-Jade Carr, also on the course, said: "The lecturers make the practicals and content of the lectures so relevant and engaging that the skills I have learned can help me when I apply to become a detective after I have completed my masters." 

The MSc in Forensic Archaeology and Crime Scene Investigation is accredited by The Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences.

The University of Bradford has been awarded a coveted Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education for its world-leading work in developing archaeological technology and techniques and its influence on practice, policy and society.