courses
2970
Students who commenced study in 2012 should refer to this course entry for direction on the requirements; to check which units are currently available for enrolment, refer to the unit indexes in the the current edition of the Handbook. If you have any queries contact the managing faculty for your course.
This course entry should be read in conjunction with information provided in the 'Faculty information' section of this Handbook by the Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences
Managing faculty | Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences |
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Abbreviated title | MBiomedSc (Part 1) |
CRICOS code | 039994J |
Total credit points required | 48 |
Standard duration of study (years) | 1 year FT, 2 years PT |
Study mode and location | On-campus (Alfred Hospital, Baker Institute, Bendigo, Box Hill Hospital, Burnet Institute, Caulfield, Clayton, Howard Florey Institute, Monash Health Research Institute, Monash Medical Centre, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Peter McCallum Cancer Institute, Prince Henry's Institute, Southbank, Sunway, St Vincent's Institute, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute) |
Admission, fee and application details | http://www.monash.edu/study/coursefinder/course/2970 |
Contact details | Research Degrees Office, telephone +61 3 9905 4313; email med-research.degrees@monash.edu or visit http://www.med.monash.edu.au/pgrad/research/ |
Course coordinator |
Notes
The Master of Biomedical Science (Part 1) is a qualifying degree. Candidates conduct a prescribed program of research for a specified period under the direct supervision of a member of the academic staff. The supervisor, in consultation with the candidate, is responsible for developing the research program to be followed by the candidate, and for reporting at regular intervals on the candidate's progress. Candidates submit a thesis in addition to a prescribed coursework component. The work undertaken as part of this degree must contribute to the knowledge and understanding of the chosen research field, and must demonstrate the capacity of the candidate to carry out independent research. This course may be undertaken in any of the areas of research offered by the faculty. For information about research in the faculty visit http://www.med.monash.edu.au/research
Students who have completed the course will demonstrate a thorough understanding of relevant research techniques in their field through a review of the relevant literature. They will demonstrate their ability, under supervision to apply relevant research techniques to their chosen field of study. Students will be able to present high-quality written work suitable for publication in appropriate scholarly journals, and be able to critically evaluate both their own and others' written work in their chosen field.
Students will also be able to:
75 per cent
The total permissible period of candidature is one year full-time, or its equivalent in part-time candidature up to a maximum of two years part-time, after which the candidature will lapse.
Full-time candidates must be able to devote the equivalent of a minimum of four days a week to the pursuit of their research project; all part-time candidates must devote at least two full days a week to their studies. In the Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, part-time candidates in laboratory disciplines must undertake at least one and a half of their study days during normal working hours/week days. For those part-time students in non-laboratory disciplines, at least one of their study days must be a week day.
Full-time candidates are permitted, with the approval of their main supervisor, to undertake a strictly limited amount of paid employment throughout the year, being no more than 15 hours of work per week on average. Up to a maximum of six hours only on average of this employment may be undertaken during normal working hours (9 am to 5 pm, Mondays to Fridays), however, this may be extended to a maximum of eight hours if the employment is limited to one weekday. The candidate's supervisor(s) must be satisfied that any part-time work undertaken does not interfere with the candidate's study program and progress. International students need to be aware that the employment restrictions outlined above apply even though a student visa permits students to work up to 20 hours a week.
Candidates will be required to undertake a major research program constituting 75 per cent of the entire course including the submission of a thesis. The remaining 25 per cent of the course will comprise coursework such as a literature review and/or statistics classes, and is specified by the enrolling department.
The thesis should embody the results of the candidate's investigation, which demonstrates independence of thought and the candidate's ability to carry out research in that discipline.
The work presented for examination must be the original work of the candidate, except where due reference is made in the text. A candidate may include published work which is directly relevant to the argument of the thesis, provided such work has been written during the period of candidature. Candidates may not present in, or in support of, a thesis any work which the candidate has presented for any other degree or diploma at this University, or any other institution, except with the permission of the faculty's Research Degrees Committee.
50 per cent
70 per cent
The Master of Biomedical Science (MBiomedSc) (Part 1) is not an awardable degree. Students who achieve a grade of H2A or above will be eligible to apply for a higher degree by research program offered by the faculty such as the 0047 Doctor of Philosophy, 2977 Master of Biomedical Science or 3438 Master of Philosophy.
Students who pass this course but do not wish to continue or do not achieve class 2A honours or above will be offered the exit award of the Postgraduate Diploma in Biomedical Science.