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Bachelor of Environments (B-ENVS)
Bachelors DegreeYear: 2020 Delivered: On Campus (Parkville)
About this course
Contact
Currently enrolled students:
Future students:
- Further information: https://futurestudents.unimelb.edu.au
- Contact: https://futurestudents.unimelb.edu.au/contact
Coordinator
Associate Professor Andrew Hutson
Overview
Award title | Bachelor of Environments |
---|---|
Year & campus | 2020 — Parkville |
CRICOS code | 058839G |
Fees information | Subject EFTSL, level, discipline and census date |
Study level & type | Undergraduate Coursework |
AQF level | 7 |
Credit points | 300 credit points |
Duration | 36 months full-time or 72 months part-time |
THERE IS NO FURTHER ENTRY INTO THIS COURSE.
THE COURSE STRUCTURE BELOW ONLY APPLIES TO RE-ENROLLING STUDENTS WHO COMMENCED THEIR STUDIES PRIOR TO 2016
The Bachelor of Environments is an innovative initiative from the University of Melbourne. It provides students with the skills needed to be creative thinkers and to solve twenty-first century problems. The degree brings together expertise from a range of discipline areas across the University to provide leadership in the study of the built, natural, social and virtual environments, and is unique within Australia. This three year degree will give students a broad understanding across diverse environments, whilst providing them with the opportunity to focus on an area of specialisation of their choosing.
The foundation of the degree is the inter-disciplinary nature of real-world projects, where professionals work together to bring projects to fruition. Only through innovative and integrated thinking that is an integral part of the Bachelor of Environments, will current challenges like sustainable urban growth and protection of threatened natural resources become attainable. Graduates of the Bachelor of Environments will be able to think about the environment beyond the short term, and play an active role in maintaining, imagining, designing and constructing sustainable areas in which to live, work and visit.
Links to further information
Last updated: 8 November 2024