Course code: 2130
This double degree is designed to equip students with the knowledge, skills and
understanding of the role of science and communication in society.
There is an increasing need for scientists to be able to communicate their work
and its importance to colleagues in other rapidly diverging fields, and to
grant-awarding bodies as well as to industry and the community in general.
There is also a need for people with specialised and flexible communication
skills to make science accessible to the general public.
A
candidate for the double degree must fulfil the following requirements to
receive the awards of Bachelor of Science/Bachelor of Arts (Communication):
(a) complete a total of 192 but not more than 216 points, comprising at
least 96 points from each of the Faculty of Science and the School of
Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
(b) complete the prescribed communications sequence (58 points) and an
arts minor sequence (28 points) offered by the School of Humanities,
Communications and Social Sciences
(c) complete the following six-point science core subjects: SCI1010 (How
science works), SCI1020 (The design of science)
(i) a science major sequence (excluding computing) of at least 48 points,
structured as follows:
Level 1 |
Level 2 |
Level 3 |
Level 4 | ||||
12 |
+ |
18 |
+ |
24 |
= |
54 | |
or |
12 |
+ |
12 |
+ |
24 |
= |
48 |
or |
12 |
+ |
18 |
+ |
18 |
= |
48 |
(ii) a science minor sequence in a second discipline, consisting of 12 points
at level 1 and 12 points at level 2
(iii) at least one level 1 subject from the following groups: physical
processes, life processes, earth process (this subject is to be drawn from a
different group from those which include the two chosen science discipline
sequences in (i) and (ii) above
(d) undertake additional prescribed studies within the Faculty of Science
and the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences to complete
the 192 points needed for the degrees.
The science discipline sequences may be chosen from biochemistry, chemical sciences, mathematics and modelling, microbiology, psychology, applied statistics, resource and environmental management, and computing (minor only).
The arts minor may be chosen from community studies, gender studies, history-politics, Indonesian, journalism, Koorie studies, sociology or writing (details on each discipline are provided under the entry for the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences).