The Faculty of Arts at Monash University is one of the largest, most diverse and dynamic arts faculties in Australia. We deliver arts programs across six campuses: Berwick, Caulfield, Clayton, Gippsland, Malaysia and South Africa. Our courses are increasingly available via off-campus learning over the internet. We also offer intensive units at our Monash Prato Centre in Italy that students can take as part of their degree.
Our offerings include a broad range of humanities, languages and social sciences, from history to human rights, Japanese to journalism and philosophy to politics. Courses offered range from undergraduate diplomas and degrees, through to postgraduate coursework and research degrees. Monash Arts is justly proud of the research capacity of its staff. Our lecturers are working at the cutting edge of scholarship in their fields, and they carry their expertise and their enthusiasm into their teaching.
The Faculty of Arts is composed of eight schools as well as a number of centres, including:
Visit the faculty website for more information about arts at Monash.
From 2011 all postgraduate arts units moved to the APG generic prefix coding. Prior to this, Arts units had individual prefix codes to identify individual Arts disciplines. For further information and a translation table consult the faculty's 'Unit code conversion utility' at http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/current/unit-code-conversion.
The chief officers of the faculty are the dean and the faculty manager. The dean is a professor of the faculty and presides over meetings of the faculty, the faculty board and its committees, and is especially concerned with staffing and finance. In addition, the faculty has four associate deans whose areas of responsibility include education, graduate research, research and international affairs.
The faculty manager is responsible for the administration of the faculty, including superintendence over student administration and services, and provision of advice on policy and planning matters.
Students wishing to bring any relevant matters to the attention of the student members of the faculty board should feel free to do so. The student members can be contacted via the office of the faculty manager, Faculty of Arts, first floor, Menzies building, Clayton campus.
The Faculty of Arts has divided its administration of courses into two main areas: the Arts Research Graduate School and the Arts Coursework Office. The course information section is divided into the same two sections: research and coursework.
Throughout their university course, students are strongly encouraged to seek advice regarding any problems they experience with studies or workload with their tutors and lecturers, or their supervisor. The faculty also has experienced course advisers who can assist students with administrative inquiries or direct them to the correct service for academic difficulties. Refer to the faculty website for details on how to make an appointment with a faculty course adviser, or follow the link in your my.monash portal. Students are also strongly encouraged to observe the relevant course requirements listed in this handbook to avoid getting into course-related difficulties, which can result in a delay in completing their course.
As well as seeking course advice, students can make use of Arts Academic Language and Learning Unit (AALLU), which assists students with problems concerning study, learning and the use of English.
Contact: Caulfield +61 3 9903 1196; Clayton +61 3 9905 5069; or visit the AALLU website.
In addition to faculty services, the University offers a wide variety of support services for students. For a comprehensive list of these services visit the Student life and support services website.
Graduate research students are admitted to the university to conduct research on a specific area of interest at masters or PhD level. Students select their research topics in line with the faculty's research strengths. Students then work under the guidance of an academic supervisor or supervisors to produce a thesis which is presented for examination. Advanced coursework and training may also be undertaken or required to enhance each student's research training experience.
The Faculty of Arts at Monash attracts one of the largest enrolments of higher degree by research candidates of any arts faculty in Australia. The faculty provides a diverse, stimulating and supportive environment for graduate researchers and in conjunction with the Monash Institute of Graduate Research, offers a range of funded support for higher degree candidates to undertake research. Master's by research and PhD candidates in Arts have access to a full suite of Monash research resources both in Australia and overseas, and to specialist resources within the faculty.
In addition to expert and attentive supervision in a wide range of specialisations, the faculty provides an impressive range of research training seminars and activities to support and strengthen research practice, advance discipline knowledge and equip students for a future beyond their higher degree. The training activities cover a range of topics and skills and complement the professional skills training offered through the University's Skills Essentials program.
The Faculty of Arts also recognises the importance of providing its graduate students with professional experience of various kinds. The faculty has a long tradition of employing its own graduate research candidates as sessional teachers, casual research assistants and in other capacities. In addition to providing candidates with additional income while they pursue their research degrees, this employment also facilitates the acquisition of a range of transferable skills. During their time in the faculty, students will also have the opportunity to develop and extend their research and communication skills in their chosen field, and also to acquire a range of additional skills in other areas.
Graduate researchers in the Faculty of Arts are encouraged and supported to participate in a professional research culture. To further promote publication by research students, the faculty runs a special program, Graduate Researchers in Print (GRiP). GRiP participants are assisted by a facilitator who enables and informs participants in various aspects of publishing including identifying appropriate journals, preparing submissions, responding to reviewers' reports and providing critical feedback on draft material.
Monash Arts is well known for high quality research in the humanities and social sciences. Our research is innovative, fully engaged with diverse communities and international in its scope and recognition. More information about the faculty's research strengths is available on the Arts research priorities website.
A range of research scholarships are available to support graduate researchers while they pursue their research and candidature.
The university and Faculty of Arts provide a range of grants and awards to support research-related travel and activities, to support publication of thesis material and to recognise the quality of research and outputs produced by our graduate researchers. We appreciate the valuable contribution that such students make to our research endeavour.
There have been a number of changes to the requirements for higher degrees over the years in respect to duration, thesis length and any coursework or training requirements. Students who commenced their Higher Degree by Research prior to 2014 should refer to the archived Handbook for the first year of enrolment in their course.
All matters concerning the PhD and master's by research degrees are governed by the Graduate Research Committee of the Univerity's Academic Board.
The regulations, policies and protocols pertaining to graduate research degrees at Monash University are publishing in the handbooks for doctoral and research master's degrees. These Handbooks contain critical and comprehensive information for graduate research students and should be the first point of reference for information relating to candidature for PhD or research master's degrees.
The faculty offers a wide range of postgraduate coursework degrees designed to add to, or build on, knowledge acquired in a bachelor’s degree. 'Coursework' is used to describe all arts courses in which the bulk of work completed is selected from a list of offered units. Students enrolled in postgraduate coursework programs normally have set classes and an outline for each unit. Most courses allow students to enrol in a research project, where they can specialise in their own area of interest, under academic supervision.
There are currently more than 700 students undertaking coursework postgraduate programs in the Faculty of Arts. Prospective coursework students can choose from a variety of courses.
A master's degree by coursework is a unit-based program that provides graduates with the opportunity to enhance their career prospects, update or add to their skills, or simply follow their interest in an area of the arts.
The Faculty of Arts currently offers 96-point master's by coursework programs in three different disciplines, and four different 96-point double master's programs. Candidates normally complete their master's program in 2 years of full-time study, or 4 years of part-time study, including a 12 or 24-point research project if desired.
The Faculty of Arts currently offers 72-point master's by coursework programs in 15 different disciplines. Candidates normally complete their master's program in 18 months of full-time study or three years of part-time study, including a 12 or 24-point research project if desired.
Students can exit from these programs with a graduate diploma after successful completion of 48 points, or with a graduate certificate after completing 24 points.
For information on scholarships available to postgraduate coursework students at Monash, refer to the Monash Scholarships website.
The faculty may award credit for postgraduate work completed at Monash University or at another tertiary institution, including overseas universities. Applicants may be granted specific credit in equivalent units or unspecified credit towards electives. A maximum of 50 per cent credit may be granted in line with course requirements and structure. Credit will not normally be granted for units undertaken in a course where the student has subsequently taken out a degree or an award of any kind. Irrespective of credit granted, students will normally be required to complete any core units specified for their program. In all cases, the granting of credit is at the final discretion of the course coordinator.
Application forms are available online or from the Arts faculty office on any campus.
Applicants for the Master of Bioethics who have already completed a unit in ethics equivalent to APG5393 (Ethics), with at least a distinction result, may apply for exemption with credit for that unit. Normally, the equivalent unit cannot have been part of a degree on the basis of which the entry requirement for the course are met; if this is the case, an exemption without credit may be given for APG5393.
Credit must normally be applied for at the time of entry into the program and will not normally be granted retrospectively. Applicants must provide certified copies of academic transcripts for all previous studies to be considered as well as unit/course syllabuses which indicate the number of points each unit is worth, the total number of points for the whole course and what percentage the unit in question was of the total course.
NOTE: The course details provided in the entries below are for those students who began their studies in 2014 - students who commenced their studies prior to this date should consult the archived Handbook edition for the year in which they started their course.
*By research and coursework
*By research and coursework
Students enrolled in the following courses should refer to the handbook entry for the year in which they commenced the course, available at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/handbooks: