Monash University: University Handbooks: Postgraduate Handbook 2003: Units indexed by faculty
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Studies in education

Education is one of the central functions of a university. It is not surprising, therefore, that one of Monash's first-established faculties should have been the Faculty of Education. This faculty is concerned with both the professional education of teachers and related professionals and with research into the many-faceted ways in which education is conducted in society and in which education, society and individuals interact with each other.

The faculty's tradition of scholarly research, professional education and community service is substantial, having been built up since its foundation in 1964, and the faculty is constantly revising its courses and their constituent units and exploring new research opportunities.
While many students enrolled with the faculty are intending to teach in schools or in early childhood settings or are teachers already, there are an increasing number of students who wish to study education for other reasons. Education takes place in the community in many ways and in many institutions other than schools. The faculty's courses have become increasingly attractive to educators in the fields of health, business, nursing, social work, industrial training, commerce, law, public service, professional associations, tertiary institutions and community fields generally.
Undergraduate preservice courses are offered on all three campuses. These programs include double-degree programs and stand-alone three and four-year degrees. Preservice graduate diploma of education courses are also offered on each campus.
All campuses offer graduate and postgraduate certificates and diplomas by coursework and degrees by both coursework and research. Many of these courses are available in off-campus mode or in multi-mode. Postgraduate courses cater mainly for students who have had some years of professional experience. For these students the faculty offers a wide range of units, many of which have a flexibility that encourages students to define their own interests and to draw on their considerable professional and life experience. These opportunities reflect a recognition that there is a mutuality and reciprocity in the contributions to learning that are made by both staff and students.
The faculty's usual research degrees - the Master of Education and the Doctor of Philosophy - may be taken on any campus by students who wish to engage in individually supervised courses of research leading to the submission of a thesis, the prime purpose of which is the extension of knowledge for its own sake. The MEd degree may be undertaken by thesis or a mixture of thesis (67 per cent minimum) and coursework (33 per cent).

The faculty also offers a professional doctorate (the Doctor of Education (EdD) which requires up to four years of full-time or up to eight years of part-time study. This degree program offers experienced and appropriately qualified educators the opportunity to upgrade their professional qualifications by engaging in study at a level equivalent to that of the PhD but involving a combination of coursework and research culminating in the production of a thesis, the prime purpose of which is to use novel research findings to improve professional practice.

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