Key facts
Domestic students course information. This course is currently not available to international students.
Entry is based on completed pre-service teaching qualifications (with additional criteria for a Music specialisation).
View full entry requirements- 1.5 years full-time
- Up to 6 years part-time
Start Dates and Campus | Trimester 1 – February 2024 | Trimester 2 – June 2024 | Trimester 3 – October 2024 |
---|---|---|---|
Online | Offered | Offered | Offered |
Armidale Campus | Not Offered | Not Offered | Not Offered |
Sydney Campus | Not Offered | Not Offered | Not Offered |
Course information
Download course brochureWhether you are looking to re-train to become a Primary or Secondary school teacher, teach different subjects or upgrade your teaching accreditation, the UNE Bachelor of Education (In-Service Conversion) provides a flexible pathway to pivot and grow as an in-demand education professional. Upskill and enhance your on-the-pulse skills for the benefit of your career, your students and the profession at large. Stay relevant and pave the way for a successful teaching career in a supportive, flexible environment.
Please note: those studying music must pass an audition or be granted an audition waiver to gain entry into this course. Find out more.
Why study the Bachelor of Education (In-Service Conversion) with UNE?
The career opportunities for multi-skilled teachers are increasing every year, not just in metropolitan, regional and rural Australia, but also globally. The UNE Bachelor of Education (In-Service Conversion) is uniquely placed to help you respond to these opportunities by enhancing your relevancy and career options in a rapidly evolving profession. With UNE, you’ll hone your resourcefulness, your skills, and your expertise to become an in-demand teacher — with the freedom to choose your next direction.
What makes our course different?
Whether you’re an accredited in-service teacher looking to switch from secondary to primary, or primary to secondary, this degree gives you the option to upskill to a new sector of teaching.
- Learn from the UNE School of Education, an expert team with decades of experience, backed by significant research expertise.
- If you are a currently accredited secondary teacher, you can upskill to teach a broad range of subjects across the spectrum of Ancient History, Business Studies, Information Processes and Technology, Drama, Economics, English, Geography, Languages, Legal Studies, Mathematics, Modern History, Society and Culture, Studies of Religion, Teaching English as an Additional Language or Dialect (EAL/D), Agriculture, Biology, Chemistry, Earth and Environmental Science, Physics or Music.
- If you are a conditionally accredited three-year-trained teacher, you can upgrade to four-year trained, placing you in a strong position to advance your options and safeguard your future career.
- Develop your knowledge and hone your skills in leadership, critical thinking, intercultural competence, classroom management, evaluation and assessment — all essential to the role of an effective teacher.
- Complete the course in as little as 1.5 years (full-time) or up to 6 years (part-time).
- Put your skills into practice with 20 days of placement.
- Balance your learning with your work and other commitments by studying online.
At UNE, we are a leader in the provision of online learning for aspiring and qualified teachers. Students consistently award us 5-star ratings for Overall Experience and Student Support in The Good Universities Guide.
Music auditions
Please note, those studying music are required to complete an audition as part of the entry requirements to this course. For more information, visit our Study Music page or apply to audition. Applications for 2024 will close at midday for the following trimesters:
- Trimester 1: Wednesday 7 February 2024
- Trimester 2: Wednesday 5 June 2024
- Trimester 3: Not offered
Study online
Most of our students choose to study online across three study periods with 24/7 tutor support* and fit study around work and family commitments. Uniquely, our online students are mostly over 30 and bring valuable experience with them. They form a community of adults juggling the same challenges and priorities and who bring their life and work experience together at UNE in order to become future-fit and better respond to a rapidly changing world.
Study on campus
Many of our students choose to take advantage of the on-campus lifestyle in Armidale, in the beautiful New England region, with access to unparalleled support, accommodation and sporting facilities. These students are often starting their first degree and have left school recently. Through access to academic and career support they get a fantastic start to their careers.
* 24/7 tutor support includes: essay feedback (within 24 hours); live chat 24/7 for generic feedback on academic writing; and subject-specific help at a foundation or first-year level for subjects including mathematics, chemistry, biology, physics, business, accounting, microeconomics, macroeconomics and statistics. There are also a wide range of workshops, resources and courses available in academic skills support to assist you and help you to succeed.
Entry requirements
Select the option that best describes your experience.
You are currently studying Year 12 (school or TAFE) or have done so within the past 2 years.
This course has specific criteria which this admission option cannot meet. Please select other admission options to find out how you can become eligible to apply for this course.
Please note: all admissions are subject to UNE’s Admission, Credit and Enrolment Policy. Please read and familiarise yourself with the details of the policy. See our Glossary for help with university terms.
These requirements are in addition to the entry requirements above.
When applying you may be required to show how you satisfy the English Language Requirements for this course.
For applicants who are attempting the Schedule B Physics major only.
By applying for this course, we assume that you have sound knowledge equivalent to calculus studied at a Year 12 level (or overseas equivalent).
> Learn more about Assumed Knowledge
You should only accept an offer for this course if you meet the following Fit for Practice requirements. You must:
- abide by UNE policies, such as Student Behavioural Misconduct Rules;
- abide by School of Education policies, such as the Professional Experience Policy for professional placements;
- exercise sound judgment, based on cognitive, mental and physical health, and be able to respond appropriately to the demands of teaching situations;
- show personal resilience and persistence to cope and maintain wellbeing under stressful situations;
- uphold UNE’s integrity and show duty of care to students/children while completing professional experience;
- show personal maturity to ensure that a professional relationship is established with students/children;
- communicate with students/children with clarity and in a manner appropriate to their age/profile;
- have and model the literacy and numeracy skills expected of teachers in interactions both inside and outside the classroom;
- be able to create, evaluate and reflect on the physical and emotional safety of students/children in various situations and environments; and
- be able to establish and maintain effective professional relationships with colleagues and broader school/early childhood communities.
If you have or develop a disability that could prevent you from meeting these requirements, please contact UNE’s Student Services team to see how we can help you succeed. If you find that you have difficulties meeting the requirements above during your studies, please contact the Office for Professional Learning for assistance.
Mandatory intensive schools on campus may be a requirement of some of the units in this course. Please see the UNE Course Handbook for the specific requirements of each unit.
You have studied at UNE or other higher education institutions, completed or otherwise.
This course is offered under five Schedules, each with its own entry requirements. Please seek out the Schedule that will fulfil your needs and review the entry requirements relevant to you.
Schedule A: Adding a Secondary Teaching Area in Ancient History, Business Studies, Information Processes and Technology, Drama, Economics, English, Geography, Languages, Legal Studies, Mathematics, Modern History, Society and Culture, Studies of Religion, Teaching English as an Additional Language or Dialect (EAL/D). You must meet one of the admission rules below:
- Rule A: You have completed a four-year pre-service qualification (AQF Level 7) at a recognised tertiary institution.
- OR Rule B: You have completed a Bachelor qualification (AQF Level 7) and a one- or two-year pre-service teaching qualification (AQF Level 7, 8, or 9) at a recognised tertiary institution.
Please see the Schedule A Course Structure (Program of Study).
Schedule B: Adding a Secondary Teaching Area in Agriculture, Biology, Chemistry, Earth and Environmental Science, or Physics. You must meet one of the admission rules below:
- Rule A: You have completed a four-year pre-service qualification (AQF Level 7) at a recognised tertiary institution.
- OR Rule B: You have completed a Bachelor qualification (AQF Level 7) and a one- or two-year pre-service teaching qualification (AQF Level 7, 8, or 9) at a recognised tertiary institution.
Please see the Schedule B Course Structure (Program of Study).
Schedule C: Adding Music as a Secondary Teaching Area. You must meet one of the admission rules below:
- Rule A: You have completed a four-year pre-service qualification (AQF Level 7) at a recognised university or tertiary institution.
- OR Rule B: You have completed a Bachelor qualification (AQF Level 7) and a one- or two-year pre-service teaching qualification (AQF Level 7, 8, or 9) at a recognised tertiary institution.
You must also meet all of the following entry requirements:
- Rule C: You have a minimum performing standard of or equivalent to Grade 6 of the Australian Music Examinations Board (AMEB). You may demonstrate this via music performance qualifications or via audition.
- AND you have a minimum musical theory standard of, or equivalent to Grade 4 of the AMEB. You may demonstrate this via music performance qualifications or you may undertake a music theory test set by the Music discipline.
Please see the Schedule C Course Structure (Program of Study).
Schedule D: Converting from Secondary to Primary Teaching. You must meet one of the admission rules below:
- Rule A: You have completed a four-year pre-service qualification (AQF Level 7) at a recognised tertiary institution.
- OR Rule B: You have completed a Bachelor qualification (AQF Level 7) and a one- or two-year pre-service teaching qualification (AQF Level 7, 8, or 9) at a recognised tertiary institution.
Please see the Schedule D Course Structure (Program of Study).
Schedule E: Fourth Year Upgrade Program. You must meet all of the admission rules below:
- Rule D: You have completed a three-year pre-service teaching qualification from a recognised tertiary institution
- AND you are conditionally accredited to teach by the NSW Education Standards Authority (NESA), or interstate equivalent or hold a Diploma in Teaching or equivalent and have verification from your state authority that you require the Fourth Year Upgrade.
Please see the Schedule E Course Structure (Program of Study).
Please note: all admissions are subject to UNE’s Admission, Credit and Enrolment Policy. Please read and familiarise yourself with the details of the policy. See our Glossary for help with university terms.
These requirements are in addition to the entry requirements above.
When applying you may be required to show how you satisfy the English Language Requirements for this course.
For applicants who are attempting the Schedule B Physics major only.
By applying for this course, we assume that you have sound knowledge equivalent to calculus studied at a Year 12 level (or overseas equivalent).
> Learn more about Assumed Knowledge
You should only accept an offer for this course if you meet the following Fit for Practice requirements. You must:
- abide by UNE policies, such as Student Behavioural Misconduct Rules;
- abide by School of Education policies, such as the Professional Experience Policy for professional placements;
- exercise sound judgment, based on cognitive, mental and physical health, and be able to respond appropriately to the demands of teaching situations;
- show personal resilience and persistence to cope and maintain wellbeing under stressful situations;
- uphold UNE’s integrity and show duty of care to students/children while completing professional experience;
- show personal maturity to ensure that a professional relationship is established with students/children;
- communicate with students/children with clarity and in a manner appropriate to their age/profile;
- have and model the literacy and numeracy skills expected of teachers in interactions both inside and outside the classroom;
- be able to create, evaluate and reflect on the physical and emotional safety of students/children in various situations and environments; and
- be able to establish and maintain effective professional relationships with colleagues and broader school/early childhood communities.
If you have or develop a disability that could prevent you from meeting these requirements, please contact UNE’s Student Services team to see how we can help you succeed. If you find that you have difficulties meeting the requirements above during your studies, please contact the Office for Professional Learning for assistance.
Mandatory intensive schools on campus may be a requirement of some of the units in this course. Please see the UNE Course Handbook for the specific requirements of each unit.
You have undertaken VET study through a Registered Training Organisation (RTO), e.g. TAFE.
This course has specific criteria which this admission option cannot meet. Please select other admission options to find out how you can become eligible to apply for this course.
Please note: all admissions are subject to UNE’s Admission, Credit and Enrolment Policy. Please read and familiarise yourself with the details of the policy. See our Glossary for help with university terms.
These requirements are in addition to the entry requirements above.
When applying you may be required to show how you satisfy the English Language Requirements for this course.
For applicants who are attempting the Schedule B Physics major only.
By applying for this course, we assume that you have sound knowledge equivalent to calculus studied at a Year 12 level (or overseas equivalent).
> Learn more about Assumed Knowledge
You should only accept an offer for this course if you meet the following Fit for Practice requirements. You must:
- abide by UNE policies, such as Student Behavioural Misconduct Rules;
- abide by School of Education policies, such as the Professional Experience Policy for professional placements;
- exercise sound judgment, based on cognitive, mental and physical health, and be able to respond appropriately to the demands of teaching situations;
- show personal resilience and persistence to cope and maintain wellbeing under stressful situations;
- uphold UNE’s integrity and show duty of care to students/children while completing professional experience;
- show personal maturity to ensure that a professional relationship is established with students/children;
- communicate with students/children with clarity and in a manner appropriate to their age/profile;
- have and model the literacy and numeracy skills expected of teachers in interactions both inside and outside the classroom;
- be able to create, evaluate and reflect on the physical and emotional safety of students/children in various situations and environments; and
- be able to establish and maintain effective professional relationships with colleagues and broader school/early childhood communities.
If you have or develop a disability that could prevent you from meeting these requirements, please contact UNE’s Student Services team to see how we can help you succeed. If you find that you have difficulties meeting the requirements above during your studies, please contact the Office for Professional Learning for assistance.
Mandatory intensive schools on campus may be a requirement of some of the units in this course. Please see the UNE Course Handbook for the specific requirements of each unit.
You left high school more than two years ago or did not finish Year 12.
This course has specific criteria which this admission option cannot meet. Please select other admission options to find out how you can become eligible to apply for this course.
Please note: all admissions are subject to UNE’s Admission, Credit and Enrolment Policy. Please read and familiarise yourself with the details of the policy. See our Glossary for help with university terms.
These requirements are in addition to the entry requirements above.
When applying you may be required to show how you satisfy the English Language Requirements for this course.
For applicants who are attempting the Schedule B Physics major only.
By applying for this course, we assume that you have sound knowledge equivalent to calculus studied at a Year 12 level (or overseas equivalent).
> Learn more about Assumed Knowledge
You should only accept an offer for this course if you meet the following Fit for Practice requirements. You must:
- abide by UNE policies, such as Student Behavioural Misconduct Rules;
- abide by School of Education policies, such as the Professional Experience Policy for professional placements;
- exercise sound judgment, based on cognitive, mental and physical health, and be able to respond appropriately to the demands of teaching situations;
- show personal resilience and persistence to cope and maintain wellbeing under stressful situations;
- uphold UNE’s integrity and show duty of care to students/children while completing professional experience;
- show personal maturity to ensure that a professional relationship is established with students/children;
- communicate with students/children with clarity and in a manner appropriate to their age/profile;
- have and model the literacy and numeracy skills expected of teachers in interactions both inside and outside the classroom;
- be able to create, evaluate and reflect on the physical and emotional safety of students/children in various situations and environments; and
- be able to establish and maintain effective professional relationships with colleagues and broader school/early childhood communities.
If you have or develop a disability that could prevent you from meeting these requirements, please contact UNE’s Student Services team to see how we can help you succeed. If you find that you have difficulties meeting the requirements above during your studies, please contact the Office for Professional Learning for assistance.
Mandatory intensive schools on campus may be a requirement of some of the units in this course. Please see the UNE Course Handbook for the specific requirements of each unit.
Some courses require you to provide documentary evidence, or interviews to support your application. The following documents are required to support your application:
- Any supporting documents related to your admission pathway. For example, if you apply based on previous study, upload evidence of your study so we can assess eligibility.
- Confirmation of teaching accreditation. You must provide a Statement of Accreditation or other relevant confirmation of accreditation to teach by the NSW Education Standards Authority (NESA) or interstate equivalent.
- If you are applying for admission into the Music Specialisation/Major you will need to submit a Music application form which will include a personal statement and music audition information. This is separate from your application for admission to this course.
Advanced Standing is credit or recognition of your previous study, work and/or life experience. This can reduce the cost and length of your studies.
Course Entry Advanced Standing
Some entry rules come with Advanced Standing or Articulation Programs that are assessed automatically without the need for you to fill in an additional application. Simply apply for your course and we’ll look after the rest.
- If you are undertaking Schedule A (Secondary Teaching – Ancient History, Business Studies, Information Processes and Technology, Drama, Economics, English, Geography, Languages, Legal Studies, Mathematics, Modern History, Society and Culture, Studies of Religion, Teaching English as an Additional Language or Dialect (EAL/D) you will be granted 90 credit points of Block Advanced Standing.
- Please note: To satisfy NSW Education Standards Authority (NESA) requirements, language units must be completed at a post-introductory level (i.e. 200-level or above).
- If you have not yet completed introductory language unit/s (100-level), you can still obtain a teaching area in a language. To accommodate this, you may contact us to reduce the amount of Advanced Standing you receive, which will enable you to study these introductory language units and meet the eligibility requirements to study a teaching area in a language. These introductory language units must be completed in addition to the standard Course Structure (Program of Study).
- Please note: To satisfy NSW Education Standards Authority (NESA) requirements, language units must be completed at a post-introductory level (i.e. 200-level or above).
- If you are undertaking Schedule B (Secondary Teaching – Agriculture, Biology, Chemistry, Earth and Environmental Science, or Physics) you will be granted 78 credit points of Block Advanced Standing.
- If you are undertaking Schedule C (Music Specialisation/Major) you will be granted 78 credit points of Block Advanced Standing.
- If you are undertaking Schedule D (Primary Teaching) you will be granted 90 credit points of Block Advanced Standing.
- If you are undertaking Schedule E (Fourth Year Upgrade program) you will be granted 90 credit points of Block Advanced Standing.
Individual Unit Advanced Standing
If you are admitted into this course and believe you have already completed the equivalent of one or more of the units in your Course Structure (Program of Study) within the last ten years, you can apply for Individual Unit Advanced Standing.
Please note: Advanced Standing cannot be granted for the following units:
- PREX304 Professional Experience 4 (20 days)*
- PREX304-6 Professional Experience 4 (20 days)*
- Language units
*You are able to complete these units as In-Service placements within a school in which you are already employed, subject to the placement setting meeting the Teaching Area and School Stage requirements.
Course structure
To qualify for the award a candidate must pass units to the value of 144 credit points including 20 days of professional experience in the designated teaching areas/teaching specialisations and including not more than 24 credit points at 100-level; and 24 to 42 credit points at 300-level subject to discipline area and as specified in Schedule A or Schedule B or Schedule C or Schedule D or Schedule E.
144 credit points
For candidates wishing to obtain a secondary teaching area from ONE of the following: Ancient History; Business Studies; Information Processes and Technology; Drama; Economics; English; Geography; Languages; Legal Studies; Mathematics; Modern History; Society and Culture; Studies of Religion; Teaching English as an Additional Language or Dialect (EAL/D).90 credit points
90 credit points block advanced standing granted for those candidates wishing to follow the Primary Methods or Secondary Methods (excepting Biology, Chemistry, Earth and Environmental Science, Music or Physics) specialisations.6 credit points
Complete the following unit:- Professional Experience 4 (20 days) (PREX304-6) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete 12 credit points from ONE of the following curriculum areas: Students who have completed EDSS311 and are planning to undertake a second teaching area in HSIE must complete EDSS312 and the relevant curriculum unit12 credit points
Students who have completed EDSS311 and are planning to undertake a second teaching area in HSIE must complete EDSS312 and the relevant curriculum unit.- Secondary Education: Society and Environment Curriculum 1 (EDSS311) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Education: History (EDSS329) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Students who have completed EDSS311 and are planning to undertake a second teaching area in HSIE must complete EDSS312 and the relevant curriculum unit.- Secondary Education: Society and Environment Curriculum 1 (EDSS311) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Education: Business Studies, Commerce, Work Education (EDSS321) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
- Secondary Education: Drama 1 (EDAE336) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Education: Drama 2 (EDAE337) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Students who have completed EDSS311 and are planning to undertake a second teaching area in HSIE must complete EDSS312 and the relevant curriculum unit.- Secondary Education: Society and Environment Curriculum 1 (EDSS311) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Education: Economics, Commerce, Work Education (EDSS322) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
- Secondary English Curriculum 1 (EDEE330) – 6 credit points
- Secondary English Curriculum 2 (EDEE331) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Students who have completed EDSS311 and are planning to undertake a second teaching area in HSIE must complete EDSS312 and the relevant curriculum unit.- Secondary Education: Society and Environment Curriculum 1 (EDSS311) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Education: Geography (EDSS323) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
- Teaching Secondary Computing Studies: Foundation (EDIT301) – 6 credit points
- Teaching Secondary Computing Studies: Advanced (EDIT302) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
- Languages Teaching I (EDLA385) – 6 credit points
- Languages Teaching II (EDLA386) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Students who have completed EDSS311 and are planning to undertake a second teaching area in HSIE must complete EDSS312 and the relevant curriculum unit.- Secondary Education: Society and Environment Curriculum 1 (EDSS311) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Education: Legal Studies, Commerce (EDSS326) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
- Junior Secondary Mathematics Education 7-10 (EDME392) – 6 credit points
- Senior Secondary Mathematics Education 11-12 (EDME394) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Students who have completed EDSS311 and are planning to undertake a second teaching area in HSIE must complete EDSS312 and the relevant curriculum unit.- Secondary Education: Society and Environment Curriculum 1 (EDSS311) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Education: History (EDSS329) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Students who have completed EDSS311 and are planning to undertake a second teaching area in HSIE must complete EDSS312 and the relevant curriculum unit.- Secondary Education: Society and Environment Curriculum 1 (EDSS311) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Education: Society and Culture (EDSS325) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Students who have completed EDSS311 and are planning to undertake a second teaching area in HSIE must complete EDSS312 and the relevant curriculum unit.- Secondary Education: Society and Environment Curriculum 1 (EDSS311) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Education: Studies of Religion (EDSS327) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
- Teaching English as an Additional Language or Dialect I (EDLA387) – 6 credit points
- Teaching English as an Additional Language or Dialect II (EDLA388) – 6 credit points
36 credit points
Complete ONE Major from the following:6 credit points
Complete 6 credit points in Medieval or Modern History by completing any 300-level HIST-coded unit in either Medieval or Modern History.
For a list of units please refer to the Modern History Program of Study for available History units - Medieval History units are: HIST111, HIST300, HIST301, HIST303, HIST308.
30 credit points
Complete 30 credit points with not more than 12 credit points at 100-level (including the Prescribed Unit) and at least 12 credit points at 300-level from the following units: Note: You may choose only ONE of the following units: ANCH109 or ARPA100 or ARPA314. Note: If the prescribed HIST-coded unit is at 100-level, you are not permitted to take more than one 100-level ANCH-coded unit from below.- Of Gods, Heroes and Monsters: Foundation Myths of Antiquity (ANCH109) – 6 credit points
- From Solon to Socrates (ANCH110) – 6 credit points
- Introduction to Ancient Rome (ANCH111) – 6 credit points
- Society and the Individual in Classical Greece (ANCH304) – 6 credit points
- Greek Democracy and its Enemies (ANCH305) – 6 credit points
- Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic World (ANCH307) – 6 credit points
- Rome of the Caesars (ANCH312) – 6 credit points
- Augustus and the Roman Revolution (ANCH313) – 6 credit points
- The Shadow of Vesuvius: Pompeii and Herculaneum (ANCH315) – 6 credit points
- Bronze Age Greece and the Aegean (ANCH322) – 6 credit points
- The Art and Architecture of the Ancient Greek and Roman World (ANCH326) – 6 credit points
- Towns and Cities of the Ancient World (ANCH328) – 6 credit points
- Great Excavations: Key Discoveries in Archaeology (ARPA100) – 6 credit points
- Human Evolution and Archaeology (ARPA314) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete the following units:- Accounting and Finance for Business (AFM320) – 6 credit points
- Small Business Management (AFM324) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
Complete 24 credit points from the following units:
Note: You may choose only ONE of the following units: MM221 or MM333.
- International Business (BUS202) – 6 credit points
- Employment Relations (MM353) – 6 credit points
- Introduction to Business Law (LSSU251) – 6 credit points
- Communication for Business (MM105) – 6 credit points
- Fundamentals of Marketing (MM110) – 6 credit points
- Management Practices in Responsible Organisations (MM203) – 6 credit points
- Human Resource Management (MM221) – 6 credit points
- Managing Change (MM320) – 6 credit points
- Business Ethics (MM322) – 6 credit points
- Workforce Planning and Employee Development (MM333) – 6 credit points
18 credit points
Complete the following units:- Introduction to Programming and the UNIX Environment (COSC110) – 6 credit points
- Object Oriented Programming (COSC120) – 6 credit points
- Operating Systems (COSC240) – 6 credit points
6 credit points
Complete 6 credit points from the following units:- Database Management Systems (COSC210) – 6 credit points
- Web Programming (COSC260) – 6 credit points
- Management Information Systems (COSC372) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete 12 credit points from the following units:- Software Development Studio 2 (COSC220) – 6 credit points
- Software Project Management (COSC310) – 6 credit points
- Computer Networks and Network Security (COSC340) – 6 credit points
- User Experience and Interaction Design (COSC370) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete 12 credit points from the following units:- Performance From Ritual to Realism (THEA110) – 6 credit points
- Making Theatre New (THEA111) – 6 credit points
- Australian Theatre (THEA317) – 6 credit points
- The Role of the Director (THEA330) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
Complete 24 credit points from the following units:- The Classic Play and Performance Now (THEA304) – 6 credit points
- Major Creative Project (THEA305) – 6 credit points
- The Actor's Craft (THEA307) – 6 credit points
- Writing for Performance: Stage and Screen (THEA321) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete 12 credit points from the following units:- Introductory Microeconomics (ECON101) – 6 credit points
- Introductory Macroeconomics (ECON102) – 6 credit points
- Economics for Management (ECON123) – 6 credit points
- Australian Economic Institutions and Performance (ECON143) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
Complete 24 credit points from the following units:- Intermediate Microeconomics (ECON201) – 6 credit points
- Intermediate Macroeconomics (ECON202) – 6 credit points
- Australian Economic Institutions and Performance (ECON243) – 6 credit points
- The International Economy (ECON244) – 6 credit points
- Banking and Finance (ECON303) – 6 credit points
- Contemporary Macroeconomic Issues (ECON311) – 6 credit points
- International Trade and Finance (ECON317) – 6 credit points
- International Political Economy (ECON320) – 6 credit points
- Benefit-Cost Analysis (ECON326) – 6 credit points
- Efficiency and Productivity Analysis (ECON377) – 6 credit points
- Economics of Development (ECON390) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete 12 credit points from the following units:- Engaging with Literature (ENGL101) – 6 credit points
- Approaches to Literature and Society (ENGL102) – 6 credit points
- Introduction to Literature: Children's Books (ENGL103) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
Complete 24 credit points, with at least 12 credit points from ENGL coded units, from the following units: Note: You may choose not more than ONE of the following units: COMM301, COMM382, COMM385, ENGL304, ENGL381, ENGL382, LING350, LING353, WRIT304.- Film Techniques and Digital Effects (COMM301) – 6 credit points
- Hollywood Cinema (COMM382) – 6 credit points
- Australian Screens (COMM385) – 6 credit points
- Gothic Fiction (ENGL302) – 6 credit points
- Imagining Fantasy Literature (ENGL304) – 6 credit points
- Science Fiction (ENGL306) – 6 credit points
- Graphic Novels as Literature (ENGL308) – 6 credit points
- The Worlds of Children's Literature (ENGL310) – 6 credit points
- Renaissance Matters (ENGL341) – 6 credit points
- Perspectives on Shakespeare (ENGL342) – 6 credit points
- Victorian Literature and Culture (ENGL351) – 6 credit points
- Australia and Oceania in Literature (ENGL372) – 6 credit points
- Modern and Contemporary Literature (ENGL381) – 6 credit points
- Literature and the Environment (ENGL382) – 6 credit points
- Reading Crime (ENGL384) – 6 credit points
- Communicating in Culturally Diverse Contexts (LING350) – 6 credit points
- The English Language (LING353) – 6 credit points
- Writing Short Fiction (WRIT304) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete 12 credit points from the following units:
In order to meet NESA subject content knowledge requirements for this teaching area, candidates must complete units in both Human and Physical Geography.
Note: You may choose only ONE of the following units: GEPL106 or GEPL111.
- Earth Surface Systems (GEPL106) – 6 credit points
- Earth in Crisis? (GEPL111) – 6 credit points
- Where in the World? Australia's Human Geography (GEPL112) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
Complete 24 credit points from the following units:- Water in the Environment (GEPL306) – 6 credit points
- Climate Change and Future Planning (GEPL307) – 6 credit points
- Environmental Change in Australia (GEPL308) – 6 credit points
- Natural Hazards (GEPL309) – 6 credit points
- Catchment to Coast (GEPL311) – 6 credit points
- Urban Living (GEPL316) – 6 credit points
- Population, Health and Environment (GEPL321) – 6 credit points
- Cradle to Grave: Population Geography (GEPL322) – 6 credit points
- Rural Planning and Resource Management (GEPL324) – 6 credit points
- Environmental Biogeography (GEPL341) – 6 credit points
- Community Planning and Participation (GEPL361) – 6 credit points
- Place-making for People and the Environment (GEPL370) – 6 credit points
36 credit points
Complete the following units for an Additional Teaching Area:- Chinese Language 1A (CHIN101) – 6 credit points
- Chinese Language 1B (CHIN102) – 6 credit points
- Chinese Language 2A (CHIN201) – 6 credit points
- Chinese Language 2B (CHIN202) – 6 credit points
- Chinese Language 3A (CHIN304) – 6 credit points
- Intermediate Chinese: Listening (CHIN305) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
And complete 12 credit points from the following units if exempted from completing 100-level units or completing as a First Teaching Area:- Advanced Chinese: Writing (CHIN310) – 6 credit points
- Social Culture in Chinese Reading I (CHIN350) – 6 credit points
- Social Culture in Chinese Reading II (CHIN370) – 6 credit points
36 credit points
Complete the following Units for an Additional Teaching Area:- Introduction to Classical Languages (CLLA101) – 6 credit points
- Classical Languages Through Reading (CLLA102) – 6 credit points
- Intermediate Classical Languages (CLLA201) – 6 credit points
- Intermediate Classical Texts (CLLA202) – 6 credit points
- Advanced Classical Languages (CLLA301) – 6 credit points
- Advanced Classical Texts (CLLA302) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
And complete 12 credit points from the following units if exempted from completing 100-level units or completing as a First Teaching Area:- Classical Prose Texts (CLLA303) – 6 credit points
- Classical Verse Texts (CLLA304) – 6 credit points
36 credit points
Complete the following Units for an Additional Teaching Area:- French Language 1A (FREN101) – 6 credit points
- French Language 1B (FREN102) – 6 credit points
- French Language 2A (FREN201) – 6 credit points
- French Language 2B (FREN202) – 6 credit points
- French Language 3A (FREN301) – 6 credit points
- French Language 3B (FREN302) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
And complete 12 credit points from the following units if exempted from completing 100-level units or completing as a First Teaching Area:- French Through Contemporary Culture (FREN204) – 6 credit points
- Women in French Texts (FREN306) – 6 credit points
- Modernity Through French Literature and Visual Culture (FREN307) – 6 credit points
36 credit points
Complete the following Units for an Additional Teaching Area:- German Language 1A (GRMN101) – 6 credit points
- German Language 1B (GRMN102) – 6 credit points
- German Language 2A (GRMN201) – 6 credit points
- German Language 2B (GRMN202) – 6 credit points
- German Language 3A (GRMN307) – 6 credit points
- German Language 3B (GRMN308) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
And complete 12 credit points from the following units if exempted from completing 100-level units or completing as a First Teaching Area:- German Reading Skills (GRMN210) – 6 credit points
- German Conversational Skills: Listening, Speaking and Pronunciation (GRMN309) – 6 credit points
- Beyond "Inspector Rex": German Crime Fiction (GRMN310) – 6 credit points
36 credit points
Complete the following Units for an Additional Teaching Area:- Indonesian Language 1A (INDN101) – 6 credit points
- Indonesian Language 1B (INDN102) – 6 credit points
- Indonesian Language 2A (INDN201) – 6 credit points
- Indonesian Language 2B (INDN202) – 6 credit points
- Indonesian Language 3A (INDN301) – 6 credit points
- Indonesian Language 3B (INDN302) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
And complete 12 credit points from the following units if exempted from completing 100-level units or completing as a First Teaching Area:- Contemporary Indonesian Culture (INDN315) – 6 credit points
- A History of Indonesian and its Role in Society (INDN330) – 6 credit points
- Islam, Society and the State in Contemporary Indonesia (INDN331) – 6 credit points
36 credit points
Complete the following Units for an Additional Teaching Area:- Italian Language 1A (ITAL101) – 6 credit points
- Italian Language 1B (ITAL102) – 6 credit points
- Italian Language 2A (ITAL201) – 6 credit points
- Italian Language 2B (ITAL202) – 6 credit points
- Italian Language 3A (ITAL301) – 6 credit points
- Italian Language 3B (ITAL302) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
And complete 12 credit points from the following units if exempted from completing 100-level units or completing as a First Teaching Area:- Introduction to Contemporary Italy (ITAL203) – 6 credit points
- The Crowns of Italian Literature: Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio (ITAL311) – 6 credit points
- Italian Renaissance Literature (ITAL409) – 6 credit points
- The Italian Detective Novel (ITAL417) – 6 credit points
36 credit points
Complete the following Units for an Additional Teaching Area:- Japanese Language 1A (JAPN101) – 6 credit points
- Japanese Language 1B (JAPN102) – 6 credit points
- Japanese Language 2A (JAPN201) – 6 credit points
- Japanese Language 2B (JAPN202) – 6 credit points
- Japanese Language 3A (JAPN301) – 6 credit points
- Japanese Language 3B (JAPN302) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
And complete 12 credit points from the following units if exempted from completing 100-level units or completing as a First Teaching Area:- Introduction to Japanese Language in Society (JAPN215) – 6 credit points
- Extensive Reading in Japanese (JAPN235) – 6 credit points
- Introduction to Japanese Popular Culture (JAPN345) – 6 credit points
- Written Japanese (JAPN412) – 6 credit points
36 credit points
Complete the following Units for an Additional Teaching Area:- Introductory Spanish I (SPAN101) – 6 credit points
- Introductory Spanish II (SPAN102) – 6 credit points
- Intermediate Spanish Language I (SPAN201) – 6 credit points
- Intermediate Spanish Language II (SPAN202) – 6 credit points
- Advanced Spanish Language (SPAN301) – 6 credit points
- Talking Cine: Spanish Conversation on Film (SPAN302) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
And complete 12 credit points from the following units if exempted from completing 100-level units or completing as a First Teaching Area:- The Sound of Spanish: Diction, Dialects and Diversity (SPAN203) – 6 credit points
- Hispanic Culture and Heritage (SPAN204) – 6 credit points
- Travellers' Tales: The Invention of Latin America (SPAN303) – 6 credit points
- Theory and Practice of Translation (SPAN304) – 6 credit points
- Latin American Rhythms and Politics: From Tango to Rock (SPAN306) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete the following units:- Foundations of Law (LAW100) – 6 credit points
- Criminal Law (LAW162) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
Complete 24 credit points with at least 12 credit points at 300-level from the following units: Note: You may choose only ONE of the following units: LAW260, LAW325, LAW349, LAW361, LAW391- World Legal Systems (LAW260) – 6 credit points
- Interviewing for Advocacy (LAW270) – 6 credit points
- International Trade Law (LAW325) – 6 credit points
- International Environmental Law (LAW349) – 6 credit points
- International Law (LAW361) – 6 credit points
- International Criminal Law (LAW391) – 6 credit points
- Introduction to Business Law (LSSU251) – 6 credit points
- Fundamentals of Evidence Law (LSSU261) – 6 credit points
- Introduction to Procedure Law (LSSU262) – 6 credit points
- Commercial Law I: Principles of Australian Law (LSSU350) – 6 credit points
- Principles of Corporation Law (LSSU391) – 6 credit points
- Principles of Taxation Law (LSSU392) – 6 credit points
- Issues in Commercial and Financial Services Law (LSSU394) – 6 credit points
36 credit points
Complete 36 credit points from the following units, with not more than 12 credit points at 100 level:- Probability and Simulation (MATH260) – 6 credit points
- Calculus and Linear Algebra 1 (MTHS120) – 6 credit points
- Calculus and Linear Algebra 2 (MTHS130) – 6 credit points
- Multivariable Calculus (PMTH212) – 6 credit points
- Linear Algebra (PMTH213) – 6 credit points
- Introduction to Topology (PMTH331) – 6 credit points
- Abstract Algebra (PMTH332) – 6 credit points
- Complex Analysis (PMTH333) – 6 credit points
- Number Theory (PMTH338) – 6 credit points
- Differential Equations (PMTH339) – 6 credit points
6 credit points
In order to meet NESA subject content knowledge requirements for this teaching area, candidates must complete 6 credit points in Ancient or Medieval History. Complete 1 ANCH coded unit or 1 of the following Medieval History units: HIST111 Medieval Europe HIST300 Sex, Sin and Heresy in Early Medieval Europe HIST301 Power and Propaganda in the European Reformations HIST303 Witch Hunting, 1400–1700 HIST308 Crusader Europe, 1095–14536 credit points
Complete 6 credit points from the following units:- Colonial Australia (HIST150) – 6 credit points
- Modern Australia (HIST151) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
Complete 24 to 30 credit points from the following units: Note: If you complete HIST111 you are NOT permitted to take HIST113.- Early Modern Europe: From Reformation to Revolution (HIST113) – 6 credit points
- Being Bad: Sinners, Crooks, Deviants and Psychos (HIST310) – 6 credit points
- Ashes to Ashes: Weimar and Nazi Germany, 1918-1945 (HIST324) – 6 credit points
- Modern Europe in War and Peace: 1918 to Yesterday (HIST328) – 6 credit points
- Australia and the World: An International History (HIST329) – 6 credit points
- Local and Community History (HIST330) – 6 credit points
- War and Australian Society in the 20th Century (HIST331) – 6 credit points
- Australian Frontiers: Rural and Regional Histories (HIST338) – 6 credit points
- The Family in History (HIST339) – 6 credit points
- Convict Australia (HIST351) – 6 credit points
- Aboriginal History Since the Late 18th Century (HIST354) – 6 credit points
- War, Nations and Empires: Modern Europe, 1789-1914 (HIST357) – 6 credit points
- The Spanish Empire, 1474-1700: Rise and Decline (HIST369) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete the following units:- Introduction to Sociology (SOCY100) – 6 credit points
- Social Research Methods (SOCY345) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
Complete 24 credit points from the following units, with not more than 6 credit points at 100 level:- Human Rights on Screen (COMM389) – 6 credit points
- Understanding Crime (CRIM100) – 6 credit points
- Criminological Perspectives (CRIM244) – 6 credit points
- Policing and Social Control (CRIM314) – 6 credit points
- Introduction to Indigenous Australia (PAIS104) – 6 credit points
- Global Indigenous Experiences (PAIS105) – 6 credit points
- International Relations of the Asia Pacific (PAIS113) – 6 credit points
- China and the World (PAIS313) – 6 credit points
- Australia’s Relations with the Asia Pacific (PAIS318) – 6 credit points
- Indigenous Politics and Public Policy (PAIS322) – 6 credit points
- Indigenous Peoples and Colonisation: Land and Nature (PAIS324) – 6 credit points
- Dragon in Chains? Contemporary Chinese Politics (PAIS380) – 6 credit points
- The City and Social Change (SOCY300) – 6 credit points
- Democracy in Danger? Comparative Populism in Question (SOCY303) – 6 credit points
- Australian Social and Public Policy (SOCY313) – 6 credit points
- Popular Culture (SOCY332) – 6 credit points
- Sociology of the Modern Family (SOCY336) – 6 credit points
- Interpreting Modernity (SOCY340) – 6 credit points
- Australian Studies (SOCY350) – 6 credit points
- The State, Power and Violence (SOCY356) – 6 credit points
- Power and Inequality (SOCY360) – 6 credit points
- Sex, Gender and Social Change (SOCY382) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete the following units:- World Religions Today (RELS182) – 6 credit points
- Magic and the Supernatural in History and Culture (RELS184) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
Complete 24 credit points from the following units:- Religion in Australia (EDCX377) – 6 credit points
- Epistemology: The Enlightenment and Beyond (PHIL303) – 6 credit points
- New Religions, Media and Popular Culture (RELS300) – 6 credit points
- Chinese and Japanese Religion: A History (RELS381) – 6 credit points
- Religions of the Ancient Near East (RELS384) – 6 credit points
- Women, Gender and the World's Religions (RELS385) – 6 credit points
- Earliest Christianity: Social Context and Sacred Text (RELS387) – 6 credit points
- The Pagan Religions of Ancient Greece and Rome (RELS388) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete the following units:- Introduction to Linguistics (LING101) – 6 credit points
- Foundations of Linguistics (LING102) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
Complete 24 credit points from the following units:- Meaning in Language (LING305) – 6 credit points
- Communicating in Culturally Diverse Contexts (LING350) – 6 credit points
- The English Language (LING353) – 6 credit points
- Second Language Acquisition (LING362) – 6 credit points
- First Language and Literacy Acquisition (LING364) – 6 credit points
- Phonetics and Phonology (LING365) – 6 credit points
- Morphology and Syntax (LING369) – 6 credit points
144 credit points
For candidates wishing to obtain a secondary teaching area from ONE of the following: Agriculture; Biology; Chemistry; Earth and Environmental Science; Physics.78 credit points
78 credit points block advanced standing granted for those candidates wishing to follow the Secondary Methods (Agriculture, Biology, Chemistry, Earth and Environmental Science or Physics) specialisations.6 credit points
Complete the following unit:- Professional Experience 4 (20 days) (PREX304-6) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete 12 credit points from one of the following curriculum areas:12 credit points
Complete the following units:- Secondary Education: Agricultural Technology 7-10 (EDSE346) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Education: Agriculture 11-12 (EDSE347) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete the following units:- Science Education 11-12: Plan, Assess and Report (EDSE358) – 6 credit points
- Science Education 7-10: Foundation for Teaching (EDSE361) – 6 credit points
48 credit points
Complete ONE Major from the following:24 credit points
Complete the following units:
- Fundamentals of Agriculture (AGFN100) – 6 credit points
- Agricultural Plants: Adaptation and Physiology (AGRO200) – 6 credit points
- Animal Handling (ANSC101) – 6 credit points
- Animal Production Systems and Products (ANPR211) – 6 credit points
24 credit points
And complete 24 credit points from the following units:- Plant Protection (AGRO311) – 6 credit points
- Crop Production (AGRO321) – 6 credit points
- Grazing Systems (AGSY300) – 6 credit points
- Sustainable Agricultural Water Management (AGWT300) – 6 credit points
- Animal Function, Health and Welfare (ANPR321) – 6 credit points
- Feedlot Management (ANPR340) – 6 credit points
- Precision Agriculture (PA335) – 6 credit points
- Poultry Production (PLTY301) – 6 credit points
- Productive Soil Systems (SOIL311) – 6 credit points
- Fundamentals of Sheep and Wool Production (WOOL300) – 6 credit points
48 credit points
Complete 48 credit points, with not more than 24 credit points at 100 level and at least 12 credit points at 300 level or above, from the following units: Note: To meet NESA Subject Content Knowledge Requirements for Biology students must complete four units in Biology*, two of which must be at 200 level or above. *Biology units include: BIOL110 BIOL120 BOTY203 MICR220 EM353- Introductory Molecular Biology and Biochemistry I (BCHM210) – 6 credit points
- Introduction to Biology: Cells and Life (BIOL110) – 6 credit points
- Organisms and the Diversity of Life (BIOL120) – 6 credit points
- Plant Diversity (BOTY203) – 6 credit points
- Chemistry I (CHEM110) – 6 credit points
- Chemistry II (CHEM120) – 6 credit points
- Ecology of Plant Populations (ECOL307) – 6 credit points
- Conservation Biology (EM353) – 6 credit points
- Introductory Genetics (GENE210) – 6 credit points
- Introductory Microbiology (MICR220) – 6 credit points
- Human Physiology (PSIO411) – 6 credit points
- Vertebrate Zoology - Evolution and Diversity (ZOOL203) – 6 credit points
- Animal Behaviour (ZOOL326) – 6 credit points
48 credit points
Complete 48 credit points, with not more than 18 credit points at 100 level and at least 12 credit points at 300 level or above, from the following units: Note: To meet NESA Subject Content Knowledge Requirements for Chemistry students must complete four units in Chemistry, two of which must be at 200 level or above.- Introductory Chemistry (CHEM100) – 6 credit points
- Chemistry I (CHEM110) – 6 credit points
- Chemistry II (CHEM120) – 6 credit points
- Biological and Organic Chemistry (CHEM204) – 6 credit points
- Inorganic Chemistry (CHEM220) – 6 credit points
- Analytical Chemistry (CHEM250) – 6 credit points
- Organic Synthesis and Catalysis (CHEM302) – 6 credit points
- Medicinal Chemistry (CHEM303) – 6 credit points
- Applied Physical and Materials Chemistry (CHEM305) – 6 credit points
- Materials Chemistry (CHEM306) – 6 credit points
- Forensic and Analytical Chemistry (FSC310) – 6 credit points
48 credit points
Complete 48 credit points, with not more than 24 credit points at 100 level and at least 12 credit points at 300 level or above, from the following units: Note: To meet NESA Subject Content Knowledge Requirements for Earth and Environmental Science* students must complete four units in Earth and Environmental Science, two of which must be at 200 level or above AND one unit of Biology**. *Earth and Environmental Science units are: EM311 RSNR301 RSNR302 RSNR303 **Biology units are: BIOL110 BIOL120- Introduction to Biology: Cells and Life (BIOL110) – 6 credit points
- Organisms and the Diversity of Life (BIOL120) – 6 credit points
- Our Blue Planet (GEOL110) – 6 credit points
- Dynamic Earth (GEOL120) – 6 credit points
- Aquatic Ecology (ECOL308) – 6 credit points
- Ecology - Populations to Ecosystems (ECOL203) – 6 credit points
- Ecology of Plant Populations (ECOL307) – 6 credit points
- Land Assessment for Sustainable Use (EM311) – 6 credit points
- Principles of Hydrology (ENGT352) – 6 credit points
- Evolution and Biogeography (EVOL211) – 6 credit points
- Introductory Palaeontology (GEOL202) – 6 credit points
- Environmental Geology (GEOL313) – 6 credit points
- Pollution Management (RSNR301) – 6 credit points
- Integrated Water Resource Management (RSNR302) – 6 credit points
- Sustainable Land Management (RSNR303) – 6 credit points
- Soil Science (SOIL222) – 6 credit points
48 credit points
Complete 48 credit points, with not more than 24 credit points at 100 level and at least 12 credit points at 300 level or above, from the following units: Note: To meet NESA Subject Content Knowledge Requirements for Physics students must complete four units in Physics, two of which must be at 200 level or above.- Introduction to Astronomy and Astrophysics (ASTY221) – 6 credit points
- Calculus and Linear Algebra 1 (MTHS120) – 6 credit points
- Calculus and Linear Algebra 2 (MTHS130) – 6 credit points
- Applied Physics I (PHYS131) – 6 credit points
- Applied Physics II (PHYS132) – 6 credit points
- Electromagnetism 1 (PHYS204) – 6 credit points
- Sensors and Signal Processing (PHYS213) – 6 credit points
- Microscopic to Macroscopic Physics and Chemistry (PHYS301) – 6 credit points
- Digital Electronic Systems (PHYS311) – 6 credit points
- Applied Photonics (PHYS313) – 6 credit points
144 credit points
For candidates admitted under Rule (c) wishing to obtain Music as a secondary teaching area.78 credit points
78 credit points block advanced standing granted for those candidates wishing to follow the Secondary Methods (Music) specialisation.6 credit points
Complete the following unit:- Professional Experience 4 (20 days) (PREX304-6) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete the following units:- Secondary Music Pedagogy Y7-10 (EDAE395) – 6 credit points
- Secondary Music Pedagogy Y11-12 (EDAE397) – 6 credit points
48 credit points
Complete the following:48 credit points
Complete 48 credit points, with not more than 24 credit points at 100 level and at least 12 credit points at 300 level or above, from the following units: Note: To meet NESA Subject Content Knowledge Requirements for Music students must complete units meet all of the requirements outlined below: (i) musicological study (music history and analysis) in a range of musical styles; periods and genres with a strong component of contemporary western art music; (ii) compositional techniques; (iii) music performance studies (a minimum of four units) Students must complete at least 12 credit points at 300 level from the Listed Units that make up Musicology, Composition/Music Technology and Performance. Complete the following units:- Music Theory and Analysis 1 (MUSI110) – 6 credit points
- Cross-Cultural Music Concepts and Analysis (MUSI131) – 6 credit points
- Music Performance: Processes, Creativity and Audiences (MUSI204) – 6 credit points
- Songwriting for Contemporary Performance (MUSI221) – 6 credit points
6 credit points
Complete 6 credit points from the following units: Note: Students must complete at least 12 credit points at 300 level from the Listed Units that make up Musicology, Composition/Music Technology and Performance.- Popular Music (MUSI235) – 6 credit points
- Early European Music (MUSI236) – 6 credit points
- Music in the Age of Empires and Nations (MUSI237) – 6 credit points
- Music in the Modern Age and Beyond (MUSI338) – 6 credit points
- Global Music History (MUSI339) – 6 credit points
6 credit points
Complete 6 credit points from the following: Students must complete at least 12 credit points at 300 level from the units that make up Musicology, Composition/Music Technology and Performance.- Electronic Music Production (MUSI260) – 6 credit points
- Creative Music Production (MUSI361) – 6 credit points
12 credit points
Complete 12 credit points from the following: Note: Students must complete at least 12 credit points at 300 level from the units that make up Musicology, Composition/Music Technology and Performance. Note: Students attempting MUSI140 and MUSI240 must complete the performance strand within these units.- Fundamentals of Creative Music Practice (MUSI140) – 6 credit points
- Collaborative Music Creation (MUSI240) – 6 credit points
- Music Performance: Production, Media and Innovation (MUSI321) – 6 credit points
- Ensemble Leadership (MUSI353) – 6 credit points
144 credit points
For candidates wishing to convert from secondary to primary teaching.90 credit points
90 credit points block advanced standing granted for those candidates wishing to convert from Secondary to Primary teaching.54 credit points
Complete the following units:- Creative Arts Key Learning Area (EDAE303) – 6 credit points
- Primary English 2: Language, Literature, Literacy (EDEE329) – 6 credit points
- English in the Primary Years 1 (EDEE351) – 6 credit points
- Primary Mathematics 2A: Space, Measurement and Number (EDME358) – 6 credit points
- Primary Mathematics 2B: Statistics, Algebra and Number (EDME369) – 6 credit points
- Health and Physical Education in the Primary School (EDPE314) – 6 credit points
- Teaching Primary Science and Technology (EDSE359) – 6 credit points
- Primary School Society and Environment Teaching (EDSS379) – 6 credit points
- Professional Experience 4 (20 days) (PREX304-6) – 6 credit points
144 credit points
For candidates admitted under Rule (d) completing a Fourth Year Upgrade Program.90 credit points
90 credit points block advanced standing granted for those candidates admitted under rule (d) completing the Fourth Year Upgrade Program.54 credit points
Complete the following units:
Students may substitute up to 12 credit points of alternative Education units at 300/400 level in areas of interest, with permission from the Course Coordinator.
Please note when considering a substitution that all students would be expected to have met the six NESA Priority Areas https://educationstandards.nsw.edu.au/wps/wcm/connect/603968d0-871e-4f0e-820f-98d6dfc736ff/elaboration-in-priority-areas.pdf?MOD=AJPERES&CVID= either through completion of units in their previous qualification, or within those units below.
- Aboriginal Education (EDCX313) – 6 credit points
- Literacies and Numeracies in Context (EDEE300) – 6 credit points
- Introduction to Learning with Technology (EDIT426) – 6 credit points
- Planning for Effective Learning (EDLT500) – 6 credit points
- Educating Students in Inclusive Environments (EDSP300) – 6 credit points
- Positive Behavioural Support (Special and Inclusive Education) (EDSP352) – 6 credit points
- Autism: Evidence Based Intervention (EDSP354) – 6 credit points
- Teaching for Cultural Diversity - EAL/D Students (EDUC303) – 6 credit points
- Professional Experience 4 (20 days) (PREX304-6) – 6 credit points
See UNE Handbook for more details. The Handbook contains detailed course information designed for enrolled students, including course plans, exit awards, intensive schools, and work placement requirements.
Fees and scholarships
How much will it cost?
Estimated fees for your first year of study in this course are:
Fee type | Cost |
---|---|
Commonwealth Supported Place | $5,924* |
Estimated amenities fee per year if studying full-time | $351 |
What are the course fee payment options?
A Commonwealth Supported Place (CSP) is a government subsidised place in a university course. The government pays part of your tuition fees, and you pay the remainder.
If you have a CSP in either an undergraduate or postgraduate (coursework) degree, you may be eligible for a HECS-HELP Loan, which allows you to defer payment of your fees until you are earning above the threshold.
UNE scholarships are open for all to apply and offer financial help while you are studying. There are scholarships for students with high academic achievement, from rural areas, studying specific degrees, in disadvantaged groups, experiencing financial hardship, who excel at sport or want to live in a UNE residential college.
UNE scholarship applications are free and confidential. You may apply for more than one scholarship.
Your career
You will graduate with new teaching and critical thinking skills, ready to adapt to a rapidly evolving education field. Your career options include:
- primary and high school teaching and associated education professions
Upon completion of this course, you will be able to satisfy the seven elements prescribed by the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership in a discipline and/or sector different from that for which you are already qualified.
Course outcomes
- satisfy the seven elements prescribed by the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership in a discipline and/or sector different from that for which they are already qualified:
- know their students and how students learn;
- know their subject/content and how to teach that content to their students;
- plan for and implement effective teaching and learning;
- create and maintain supportive and safe learning environments;
- assess, provide feedback and report on student learning;
- continually improve by engaging in professional learning; and
- continually engage professionally with colleagues, parents/carers and the community.
- Knowledge of a Discipline
Graduates will have acquired broad and coherent knowledge to effectively plan and deliver education in one of a Primary or Secondary school setting.They will be able to demonstrate intercultural competence by responding flexibly to the needs of students, colleagues, families and community members.
- Communication Skills
Graduates will be able to communicate effectively, both orally and in writing, with students, colleagues, parents and other stakeholders.
- Problem Solving
Graduates will be able to exercise critical thinking and judgement in identifying and solving problems with intellectual independence.
- Information Literacy
Graduates will be able to demonstrate knowledge and understanding of digital resources and tools and their safe, legal and ethical use, and be able to apply this knowledge in the school setting.
- Ethical Conduct and Social Responsibility
Graduates will have developed responsibility for others and an understanding that personal beliefs and actions impinge on others. They will demonstrate this through their ethical conduct and by being sensitive and responsive to the needs of children, colleagues, families and the community.
- Lifelong Learning
Graduates will understand the importance of life-long learning and will be equipped with the skills to pursue professional and personal development.
- Independence and Collaboration
Graduates will be able to work independently and collaboratively with others to achieve educational and professional goals.
A five-star experience
Five Stars,
18 Years in a Row
UNE is the only public uni in Australia awarded 18 straight years of five stars for Overall Experience
Good Universities Guide 2007-2024No.1 in NSW for
Student Experience
QILT (government-endorsed) ranks UNE as the top public NSW uni for Student Experience
QILT Student Experience SurveyFive Stars for
Teaching Quality
UNE rates among the top 20 per cent of universities in Australia for Teaching Quality
Good Universities Guide 2024Studying online
At UNE we know it takes more than just being online to be a great online university. It takes time and experience. We pioneered distance education for working adults back in the 1950s, so we’ve been doing this longer than any other Australian university.
We understand the challenges faced by busy adults studying at home. We know that a vital part of online study is your engagement with the learning community. Communication with your classmates, teaching staff and university support staff will enhance your study experience and ensure that your skills extend beyond the subject matter. UNE’s teaching staff are experts in their field which is why UNE consistently receives five stars from students for teaching quality, support and overall experience.*
*The Good Universities Guide
Stay connected
Register your interest and we'll keep you updated
Why study with us?
I feel as though UNE treats me as a person, not just a student number.
How to apply
Preparing to apply
You should always provide the details of past or current studies in your application. You may also need to include documents to support your application.
The kind of documents you need will depend on:
- Your preferred course/s
- Your personal circumstances
Important Dates
If you are applying to undertake the Music program, the following early closing dates apply:
- Trimester 1 2024 – Wednesday 7 February 2024
- Trimester 2 2024 – Wednesday 5 June 2024
- Trimester 3 2024 – This program is not offered in Trimester 3
Important Notice for Prospective Students
For accurate, up-to-date details on entry requirements, course structure, and other essential information, please consult the UNE Student Handbook before applying or enrolling. The Handbook provides comprehensive guidance to assist in your decision-making process. We apologise for any inconvenience.