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Master of Ageing (MC-AGEING) // Attributes, outcomes and skills
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/
Intended learning outcomes
The Master of Ageing is designed to prepare students to become leaders in the emerging field of Ageing. The learning outcomes reflect this aim by providing graduates with a solid interdisciplinary foundation in ageing in order to have the knowledge and skills needed to respond to the complexity involved in an ageing worldwide population.
Upon completion of this Master of Ageing, graduates will be able to:
- Describe and appraise systems, structures and policies in Australia and other countries that address ageing;
- Describe and critically access strategies aimed to promote healthy and productive ageing across the lifespan (i.e. legislation, policy and community development);
- Articulate the ways in which age, gender, ethnicity and Indigenous status, society, culture, geography, the environment, disability and socio-economic status influence the ageing experience;
- Identify and discuss current and key challenges in ageing from a global perspective;
- Apply comprehensive knowledge of the ageing experience from conceptual and practical dimensions of the course to develop solutions to complex ageing issues;
- Design and manage a detailed investigation of an ageing issue in a substantial project and/or piece of scholarship, with a high level of personal autonomy and accountability
- Critically review and reflect on individual performance or processes undertaken in the management of a substantial project and/or piece of scholarship in ageing.
Generic skills
Students who complete this course should develop a number of generic skills that will enhance their capacity in:
- Integrating a range of disciplines to take a comparative and global perspective;
- Research through competent use of advanced information sources and retrieval of appropriate information;
- Critical and theoretical thinking through presentations, research papers, conceptualising theoretical problems, forming arguments from conflicting evidence, and by critical analysis;
- Time management and planning through organising workloads and substantial projects;
- Team work through team projects, online discussions and peer feedback.
Graduate attributes
Students will embody a number of the key graduate attributes of the University of Melbourne. In particular, they will have a deep understanding of their social and civic responsibilities in the domain of public policy, health care provision and as private individuals. With the ability to recognise, explore and critically analyse issues of ageing and their proposed solutions from an informed perspective, students will be confident in contributing to a meaningful public discourse in this field.
- Academically excellent across disciplines The Master of Ageing will be subject to a continuous cycle of review through constant refinements in teaching and learning principles and approaches, particularly in adapting to the latest technical advancements in online learning design. Subject coordinators are members of the Master of Ageing Steering Committee, which meets regularly to ensure appropriate integration and complementary teaching and learning approaches. In addition, the mandatory completion of an integrated suite of five core subjects that span multiple disciplines, an optional capstone experience, along with a choice of elective subjects taught by several different faculties at the University of Melbourne all lead to strong interdisciplinary experience. All of the instructors involved with the Master of Ageing subjects bring outstanding pedagogical skills, substantive knowledge and practical experience.
- Leaders in communities The Master of Ageing facilitates the development of excellent interpersonal and communication skills through subject content and assessment practices, and through commitment to small-group interactive teaching and learning environments. The provision of research and knowledge transfer opportunities enables the development of public discourse skills and an extensive awareness of community issues and global needs.
- Attuned to cultural diversity The Master of Ageing offers students a sustained and detailed education in aspects of cultural diversity and identity. One of the elective subjects, Ageing in Society, is concerned specifically and analytically with cross-cultural perspectives on how prevailing social contexts shape ideas, relationships and practices with implications for older people. In addition, the subjects in the Master of Ageing course include international examples of policies, case studies and strategies and generally include students from different parts of the world. Students will have ample opportunity to learn from experiences outside their own immediate culture
- Active global citizens Active global citizens Master of Ageing graduates will be equipped to be active global citizens by virtue of their academic excellence, their interdisciplinary knowledge, their community leadership capabilities and their cultural awareness.
Last updated: 8 November 2024