Monash University: University Handbooks: Undergraduate Handbook 2001: Subjects indexed by faculty
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Undergraduate degrees


The faculty requires entrants to these courses to have obtained a study score of at least 25 in two units of mathematics, chosen from units 3 and 4 of Mathematical Methods, Specialist Mathematics, or an equivalent.
The Clayton campus of the Faculty of Business and Economics offers the following degrees and double degrees.

Bachelor degrees
Double degrees

Note that following a review of undergraduate courses in the faculty, the Bachelor of Commerce, the Bachelor of Commerce tagged and the Bachelor of Economics degrees were restructured with effect from 2000. Students first enrolled prior to 2000 have the option of completing their degree under the structure in force when they first enrolled, or under the new structure. For information about the old structure, students should refer to the 2000 university handbook.

Bachelor of Accounting

The Bachelor of Accounting is a specialist degree, based on a cooperative education scheme with scholarships sponsored by industry. It is available only to school leavers who are citizens or permanent residents of Australia.

Bachelor of Commerce

The generalist Bachelor of Commerce offers the choice of a wide range of subjects related to commerce and management. It allows specialisations in the areas of accounting, business law, economics, finance, management, marketing, quantitative studies and taxation, as well as some opportunity to include subjects from outside the faculty such as computing, a language, mathematics, or psychology.
The three specialised Bachelor of Commerce degrees (specialising in accounting and finance, or business statistics, or management) are similar to the generalist Bachelor of Commerce except that they allow greater specialisation in the selected major field of study and have fewer compulsory first-year subjects.

Bachelor of Economics

The Bachelor of Economics allows for greater emphasis on social science and less on business orientation than is possible in the Bachelor of Commerce. Students must pursue a major study in economics or econometrics, and can include supporting studies in accounting and finance, business law, taxation, quantitative studies, economic history, management and marketing. It also has the flexibility to allow students to take up to one-third of their course from subjects offered by other faculties.

Double degrees

Since most other faculties are based on the Clayton campus, a wide range of double degrees is offered with the faculties of Arts, Information Technology, Education, Engineering, Law, Pharmacy, and Science. In addition, the combined Bachelor of Commerce/Bachelor of Economics degree allows a substantial number of subjects from other faculties to be included.
The faculty requires entrants to these courses to have obtained a study score of at least 25 in two units of mathematics, chosen from units 3 and 4 of Mathematical Methods, Specialist Mathematics, or an equivalent.

Areas of study

To ensure cohesion, depth and breadth in their program of studies, students in the Bachelor of Commerce and Bachelor of Economics must include in their course a major specialisation and supporting studies. A major requires students to complete 48 points of study in a single discipline or field of study with at least 12 points at each of second and third-year level (disciplines are defined by department prefixes and fields of study are those sets of related subjects that may be defined in the handbook). Majors are available in the departments of Accounting and Finance, Business Law and Taxation, Economics, Econometrics and Business Statistics, Management or Marketing. All subjects taken as part of the major specialisation and the subjects taken as supporting studies are limited to subjects taught by these departments on the Clayton campus (ie the third character of the subject code is C). It is possible to undertake the same major sequence of study in more than one of these degrees

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