Bachelor of Fine Arts (Film and Television) (B-FAFILMTV) // Attributes, outcomes and skills
You’re currently viewing the 2024 version of this course
About this course
Coordinator
Andrew Blogg
Contact
Students currently admitted in this course:
Future students:
This course is available in My Course Planner
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of this course, graduates should be able to:
- demonstrate a distinctive creative voice in the making of stories for the screen;
- apply technical screen directing skills and knowledge at a professional level;
- apply professional level screenwriting skills to conceive, develop and produce written short film work;
- implement effective leadership and management of creative film projects;
- work collaboratively with artists and technicians from a range of disciplines as creative leaders and team members;
- research and evaluate film and television production practices;
- identify and explore potential career pathways within existing and emerging screen-based industries.
Generic skills
On completion of this course, students should be able to:
- work autonomously, employing judgement and responsibility as both practitioner and learner;
- show initiative and openness in new situations;
- work collaboratively, responsibly, and flexibly across disciplines;
- effectively communicate, interpret and analyse with a capacity for critical thinking;
- determine clear and attainable project goals;
- network, mentor and lead others in problem solving;
- facilitate effective collaboration through self-regulation and successfully navigate challenges and manage conflict;
- demonstrate resilience (working under pressure).
Graduate attributes
Graduates of the Bachelor of Fine Arts (Film and Television) will have developed the following skills and attributes that allow them to be:
Artistically excellent:
- demonstrate a flexible and innovative approach to the national and international challenges for the professional artist/practitioner in the 21 Century;
- have a strong sense of intellectual integrity and of the ethics of artistic practices and scholarship;
- have in-depth knowledge of their specialist discipline(s);
- reach a high level of achievement in artistic practice, writing, generic research activities, problem-solving and communication;
- be critical and creative thinkers, with an aptitude for continued self-directed learning;
- be adept at learning in a range of ways, including through information and communication technologies.
Knowledgeable across disciplines:
- critically examine, synthesise and evaluate knowledge across a range of disciplines;
- expand their analytical and cognitive skills through learning experiences in diverse subjects;
- have the capacity to participate fully in collaborative learning and to confront unfamiliar problems;
- have a set of flexible and transferable skills for different types of employment.
Leaders in communities:
- initiate and implement constructive change in their communities, including professions and workplaces;
- have excellent interpersonal and decision-making skills, including an awareness of personal strengths and limitations;
- mentor future generations of learners;
- engage in meaningful public discourse, with a profound awareness of community needs.
Attuned to cultural diversity:
- value different cultures and their cultural forms of practice;
- be well-informed citizens able to contribute to their communities wherever they choose to live and work;
- have an understanding of the social and cultural diversity in our community;
- respect Indigenous knowledge, cultures and values.
Active global citizens:
- understand their relationship with and responsibility to their cultural environment and society;
- accept social and civic responsibilities;
- be advocates for improving the sustainability of the environment;
- have a broad global understanding, with a high regard for human rights, equity and ethics.
Last updated: 21 February 2025