Course Portfolio
Our programme is renowned for its rigorous and intellectually challenging courses and at the centre of our ethos is small-group teaching.
To achieve the interactive educational culture we believe is so important on the Pembroke Cambridge Summer Programme, we usually cap each lecture group at 30 students and each seminar group at 15.
We offer subjects that reflect both Cambridge’s strengths and the intellectual interests of the instructors who develop the courses. Each one is designed to be challenging but accessible, and most have no entry requirements.
We also recommend you read through our Choosing Courses page for guidance.
Please do not contact lecturers directly about their course, if you have any questions, please send us an email.
Arts and Humanities | Economics, Business, Finance and Management
Science and Mathematics | Social Sciences | Independent Supervision
Arts and Humanities
- Alfred Hitchcock and Film Theory
- Cambridge and its Writers 1209 - Present
- Imagining War: The Art and Literature of Conflict
- 'Infinite Variety': Shakespearean Drama
- Literary London: from Shakespeare to Sherlock
- Living the Good Life: Moral Philosophy and Today's Problems
- Reading Jane Austen
Economics, Business, Finance and Management
- Advanced Microeconomic Theory
- Industrial Organisation
- Macroeconomic Theory and Policy
- The Economics of Inequality, Discrimination, Poverty and Exploitation
- The Economics of Growth and Development
- The Political Economy of Natural Resource Management
Science and Mathematics
- Contemporary Issues in Neuroscience
- Lego Robotics Workshop - new for 2024!
- Materials Science: the Essential Evolution of Materials
- Mathematics Workshop: the Art of Discovery
- Stem Cells and Brain Development: How Does Your Brain Grow?
- Sustainability
Social Sciences
- AI: Friend or Foe? - new for 2024!
- Crime and Criminal Justice
- Cyber Security: the Basics of Ethical Hacking
- Forensic Psychology
- Negotiating Peace in a Changing Political Landscape
- Understanding World Politics: a Critical Overview of Core Issues and Theories