Admission and Unit Information - Graduate Certificate in Social Science

Advanced Standing

Applications for advanced standing will be assessed in accordance with current UWS policy.

Admission

Applicants must have successfully completed an undergraduate degree or postgraduate qualification in any discipline.

or

Have a minimum of three years full-time equivalent work experience in education, community welfare, social work, psychology, criminology, social policy, social research, employment relations or community development/capacity building.

Applicants seeking admission on the basis of work experience MUST support their application with a Statement of Service for all work experience listed on the application.

Statement of Service

Applicants from Australian and NZ citizens and holders of permanent resident visas must be made via the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC).

Applicants who have undertaken studies overseas may have to provide proof of proficiency in English. Local and International applicants who are applying through the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC) will find details of minimum English proficiency requirements and acceptable proof on the UAC website. Local applicants applying directly to UWS should also use the information provided on the UAC website.

http://www.uac.edu.au

Overseas qualifications must be deemed by the Australian Education International - National Office of Overseas Skills Recognition (AEI-NOOSR) to be equivalent to Australian qualifications in order to be considered by UAC and UWS.

Course Structure

Core Units

Qualification for this award requires the successful completion of 40 credit points including 20 credit points of core units in the Master of Social Science:

Research for Practice

Research for Practice explores the role of research in generating professional bodies of knowledge and the epistemological, ethical, political, theoretical and methodological underpinnings of such knowledge. Students select approaches to research relevant to their practice domains and apply them, conceptually, to contemporary research problems.

Theories for Critical Practice

This unit examines social and practitioner theories that inform and provide critical perspectives upon a range of disciplines and professions. Students will reflect upon the relationships between theory, social practice and professional practice. The unit examines these relationships by deploying such key constructs as: subjectivity, agency and identity; power and resistance; class, economy and consumption; social change; globalisation and nationhood; gender and sexuality; race and colonisation; governmentality and social discipline; mobilities and place. Students will consider the social, political and discursive processes through which theories are made and applied, and how theories limit and create possibilities for research and practice.

Choose one of

Integrated Project

This unit builds on the work undertaken in the previous units 101887 Research for Practice and 101888 Theories for Critical Practice. It is designed to extend students’ critical practice in their specialist field through an integrated project. The project will demonstrate students’ knowledge, understanding and skills in bringing together theory and research and practice in their professional field of work. Students will have the opportunity to work together to support each other and extend each other’s work

20 credit points from units within the specialisations included in the Master of Social Science or (in consultation with the Academic Course Advisor) from other postgraduate level units offered across the university.