The Department of Psychology in the School of Psychology, Psychiatry and
Psychological Medicine, offers an undergraduate program for students who intend
to specialise in psychology by completing a 60-point major sequence which is
accredited by the Australian Psychological Society (APS) and recognised by the
Singapore Psychological Society, and approved for registration purposes by the
Psychologists Registration Board of Victoria. This program provides an avenue
to further study in psychology and to the training required to practise as a
psychologist with the option of proceeding to a degree with honours, or into
postgraduate programs of study. The 60-point accredited major sequence may be
taken in the Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Behavioural Neuroscience,
Bachelor of Behavioural Science, Bachelor of Psychology and
Management/Marketing, Bachelor of Arts and some Bachelor of Arts degrees with
specialisations. A 48-point major in psychology may be sufficient to satisfy
the requirements for a major sequence in any of the Bachelor of Arts or
Bachelor of Science, single or double degrees, but is not APS accredited and
will not permit entry to fourth-year programs in psychology.
The Department of Psychology offers a common curriculum across all campuses and
modes of study. The undergraduate psychology program is taught on-campus at
Caulfield, Clayton and South Africa. Caulfield offers some evening as well as
day classes. Psychology is also taught in the off-campus learning mode, with
compulsory on-campus attendance requirements. At Gippsland, all psychology units
will be taught in this mode from 2005. The psychology program is also offered
in Singapore through the off-campus mode. The first year of the program is
taught on-campus at Peninsula and in flexible learning mode at Berwick campus,
(with on-campus laboratory classes and unit content taught through study notes
and web-based material). However, second and third-year study must be
undertaken at another campus or in the off-campus mode.
The department's curriculum development is based on the principle that training
in the discipline of psychology should follow the scientist-practitioner model,
where learning about professional practice is taught within the scientific
perspective. Students are then able to make informed choices about
psychology-related careers and further training at the fourth year and
postgraduate level.
Students wishing to take the APS-accredited major sequence in psychology must complete 10 six-point units (nine core units and one elective unit) from the list below. The core units are available by on-campus, flexible learning and off-campus learning. Some electives are available in the off-campus learning mode.
Students may take an elective unit at second year, and up to four elective units at third year (ie it is possible for students to study 100% psychology units in third year). Some third-year electives may be undertaken at second year, providing prerequisites and corequisites are met. The electives offered may vary from year to year depending on staff availability.
This course is offered to undergraduates who wish to complete an APS-accredited undergraduate major in psychology while undertaking a concurrent Monash undergraduate degree. The course is available only to students enrolled in degrees where it is not possible to study the 60-point APS-accredited major sequence. Students must enrol in the diploma in their first year, or not later than the first semester of the second year of their concurrent degree.
This course is offered to graduates who have completed an undergraduate degree in any discipline and who wish to complete an APS-accredited undergraduate major in psychology. The course structure is identical to the 60-point APS-accredited undergraduate major sequence in psychology.
Students completing a degree with a 60-point APS-accredited undergraduate major sequence in psychology will be eligible to apply for entry to a fourth year in psychology through an honours year, or the Postgraduate Diploma of Psychology. Masters and doctoral degrees are available by coursework and/or research after completion of a fourth year of study in psychology.
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