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Master of Ageing (MC-AGEING)
Masters (Coursework)Year: 2021 Delivered: Online
This course is discontinued and no longer available for admissions
About this course
Coordinator
Lena Gan
Contact
Melbourne School of Professional and Continuing Education
Email: continuing-education@unimelb.edu.au
Phone: + 61 3 8344 0149 Monday to Friday 8am to 9pm. Weekends and University of Melbourne observed Public Holidays 10am to 5pm.
Further Information: https://study.unimelb.edu.au/find/courses/graduate/master-of-ageing/
Overview
Award title | Master of Ageing |
---|---|
Year & campus | 2021 |
Fees information | Subject EFTSL, level, discipline and census date |
Study level & type | Graduate Coursework |
AQF level | 9 |
Credit points | 150 credit points |
Duration | 18 months full-time or 36 months part-time |
The Master of Ageing is designed to produce leaders in the emerging field of Ageing. The subjects proposed for this course adopt an interdisciplinary, international and intergenerational approach to respond to the complex and growing challenges of an ageing worldwide population. This is the first course of its kind and is influenced by national and global politics, economics, ethics and social equity. It is grounded in a material analysis of the ways in which medicine, finance, technology and design can support healthy ageing for both individuals and populations.
This course provides specialised knowledge and skills to understand ageing as more than health related experiences. The innovative subjects are taught by academics from across the University of Melbourne in public health, medicine, physiotherapy, social work, architecture and design, engineering, economics and business along with internationally known professionals in the field. All of the instructors bring outstanding pedagogical skills, substantive knowledge and practical experience.
Students from around the globe work together to address the worldwide implications of ageing, including workforce and retirement challenges, increased demand on health care spending and how recent technological advancements can revolutionise the future of ageing. This new course opens up the possibilities of ageing with significant implications for older adults, clinicians, health care administrators, urban planners, service providers, policymakers, and researchers.
The Master of Ageing course requires completion of a total of 150 points of study and is structured to suit individual needs and study preferences. Students to have the option of enrolling in a Master degree (150 points) or one of the nested awards Graduate Diploma (100 points), Graduate Certificate (50 points) or Specialist Certificate (25 points).
This course is designed to be available to students at different stages in their careers, including career starters, career changers and career enhancers, along with those who currently work and wish to further their qualifications. The coursework responds to all three groups of students by allowing individual tailoring to find the optimal approach.
Last updated: 8 November 2024