Hi,
Its funny I came across your post actually - I never usually look in this section.
I am at graduate school now in the USA doing theoretical physics but I did my undergrad. at Leicester. I took the 4 year Physics with Space Technology degree.
Sadly I would absolutely NOT recommend Leicester.
The courses are superficial and will not give you any real understanding of physics.
The expectations from you are far too high.
The books they use are TERRIBLE.
Let me expand a little.
Your mathematical training will consist of 2 weeks per important subject.
eg - 2 weeks on ODE's, 2 weeks on PDE's, 2 weeks on Fourier Analysis. Each 2 week period you will meet a math grad student ONCE and he will ask you if you had any problems with the work and no one will admit it and you will leave after 30 minutes.
In the states they devote ENTIRE courses to things like ODE's. I hadn't even heard of linear algebra or a complex integral until I came over here and realized how insanely behind my American colleagues I was. I have spent the last 3 years trying to go over all the mathematics I should have had at Leicester.
I think its safe to say that when I left Leicester I didn't have the first clue what an eigenvector was, I couldn't dot 2 vectors together and I couldn't for the life of me solve an ODE - even the most basic. Oh, and forget learning any new integration techniques.
Now - at the same time you will be taking a plethora of courses. eg, atomic phys, QM, SR. The lectures are terrible. They take you through the formal development of the theory. There is NO homework and NO problems to solve. I don't remember anything from any of those course. The books they reccomend for us beginners (most of us where 18 and very new to physics) where terrible. Instead of something sane like the Griffiths books for EM and QM they recommended Linus Paulings book on quantum chemistry and Paul davies Book on QM (which is way too challenging for a beginner in my opinion).
Oh - let me tell you about the labs. Those too are far too demanding. I'd barely written my first Fortran code when I was asked to write a bloody java based code which is something to do with objects and classes. I was still new to 'do' loops for goodness sake.
For the GR course I took the prof. decided to go through 11 classes talking about GR and then in the 12th lecture he gave us a brief 1 hour intro to tensors! Wrong way around...
Ah, and the exams. The exams are cycled through. For a small cost you can purchase from the physics department secratary the past 10 yrs exams and their solutions.
These questions are largely repeated year after year - thus, passing your exams becomes an exercise in memorization.
So - with no homework, no real exam study structure other than memorization and completely poor expectations of what an 18-22 year old can realistically understand I would give Leicestere a big NO.
Believe me, I went their and I REALLY wanted to learn physics. But without the correct guidance, good suggestions of books, a homework load designed to give you a working knowledge of calculations and with no real training in advanced mathematics I can safely say that I left that place with very very very little.
As I said - I was fortunate enough to make it onto a PhD program. I came to the states as I knew it was a 5 yr program with courses in the first 2 yrs. I knew I needed these badly. It has been a huge struggle. Obviously the PhD program expects you to know things like the expansion of \frac{1} {1-x} or how to dot 2 bloody vectors together - or how to solve and ODE (errr the schrodinger eqtn). Sadly I could do none of this and spent the 1st year having a nervous breakdown, and the rest of the time realizing how poor my undergraduate training was thus forcing me to sit in on undergraduate classes and learning everything I should have known for the first time.
Since I've been in the states I've sat in on, or audited the following extra UNDERGRADUATE classes:
Cal 2, Cal 3, Advanced Cal 1, Advanced Cal2, ODE's, PDE's, Complex variables, Linear algebra.
I've also spent a lot of time teaching myself undergraduate Quantum mechanics, Electromagnetics and particle physics thanks to Griffiths who has been my saviour.
Needless to say I did not get much out of Graduate classes due to having a poor foundation and I will probably end up sitting in on most of them again.
You may argue that I did take a course in physics 'with space science'. But believe me, the 'with space science' part was in fact something small like 1 elective class a semester - very insignificant. It was really a physics degree with a little extra flavoring.
I am very angry with Leicester and often wander how much much better a physicist I would have been today if I had been given a decent undergraduate education. Instead I have been forced to sit in on classes like calculus 2 which is aimed at 18/19 year kids and I am a 27 yr old Phd candidate. Very embarrasing.
Fortunately I am catching up on lost ground slowly but surely - but I am still far behind my American peers.
I DO NOT RECCOMEND THAT PLACE.