Graduate Certificate in Design for Health and Wellbeing (GC-DHW)
Graduate CertificateYear: 2024 Delivered: Mixed Attendance Mode (Parkville)
About this course
Contact
Email: continuing-education@unimelb.edu.au
Phone: + 61 3 8344 0149
Contact hours: https://unimelb.edu.au/professional-development/contact-us
Coordinator
Christhina Candido
Overview
Award title | Graduate Certificate in Design for Health and Wellbeing |
---|---|
Year & campus | 2024 — Parkville |
Fees information | Subject EFTSL, level, discipline and census date |
Study level & type | Graduate Coursework |
AQF level | 8 |
Credit points | 50 credit points |
Duration | 12 months part-time |
The Graduate Certificate in Design for Health and Wellbeing introduces concepts including why space matters, spatial research methods and how users’ health and wellbeing are impacted by their environments. Design practice will enable learners to put theory into practice guided by evidence-based insights. Students will be equipped with the skills needed to brief and critically evaluate the spaces that we inhabit and impact our health and wellbeing; and interpret and critique visual communication techniques in various forms, including plans, sketch models, and 3D digital renderings. Students will be encouraged to develop strong written, oral and visual communication skills within the core subjects.
This course is intended for both designers and non-designers. For many students, including design professionals, the specific approaches used in designing for health and wellbeing will be new and or possibly misunderstood. This course will introduce the principles and processes of user-experience (UX), design thinking and evidence-based design to enable students to correctly and creatively apply these concepts to design problems within their own contexts. The collaborative nature of this course, will allow students to work in interdisciplinary design teams of designers and non-designers, drawing on their diverse skills, knowledge and interests to enrichen the design process and enhance the end design product.
Entry requirements
1. In order to be considered for entry, applicants must have completed either:
- an undergraduate degree, or equivalent: or
- a minimum of five years documented relevant work experience, including two referee reports.
Meeting these requirements does not guarantee selection.
2. In assessing applications, the Selection Committee will consider:
- prior academic performance; and
- the work experience as demonstrated by a CV: and
- referee reports
3. The Selection Committee may seek further information to clarify any aspect of an application in accordance with the Academic Board rules on the use of selection instruments.
4. Applicants are required to satisfy the University's English language requirements for post graduate courses. For those applicants seeking to meet these requirements by one of the standard tests approved by the Academic Board, a performance band of 6.5 is required.
Note:
Relevant work experience includes human factors, design and built environment fields, health settings, local or state government roles, education, industry management roles.
Inherent requirements (core participation requirements)
Inherent requirements are the abilities, knowledge and skills needed to complete this course that must be met by all students. For information on the inherent requirements specific to this course contact the course/program coordinator. In some circumstances reasonable adjustments may be available to enable students to meet these requirements while still preserving the academic integrity of the university's learning, assessment and accreditation processes. For more information on how to seek these adjustments refer to the Student Equity and Disability Support website: https://services.unimelb.edu.au/student-equity/home
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of this course, graduates will be able to:
- Demonstrate knowledge of research evidence, debates, policies and practices related to design for health and wellbeing;
- Demonstrate awareness of the impact of spatial considerations (including landscape) for user health and wellbeing;
- Use design practice skills, tools and knowledge to simply interpret data and ideas in a diverse range of formats, for specialist audiences;
- Integrate information from multi-disciplinary contexts to enhance design, design thinking and design analysis;
- Inform policy and practice related to design for health and wellbeing;
- Plan and execute an evaluation project related to a chosen topical health or wellbeing issue.
Generic skills
- Research through competent use of advanced information sources and retrieval of appropriate information;
- Critical, spatial and theoretical thinking through presentations, research papers, conceptualising theoretical problems, forming arguments from conflicting evidence, and by critical analysis;
- A knowledge of research and design-research methodologies and methods including empirical research methods drawn from the sciences and humanities relevant to the built environment;
- Time management and planning through organising workloads and substantial projects;
- Team work through online discussions and peer feedback.
Graduate attributes
The main focus of the Graduate Certificate in Design for Health and Wellbeing is an understanding of how the built environment impacts the health and wellbeing of users.
Skills that will contribute to the improvement of our built environment for user health and wellbeing:
- A grounding in evidence based built environment design related to health and wellbeing;
- An understanding of systems, structures and policies in Australia and other countries that impact built environment decisions related to health and wellbeing;
- The skills to communicate effectively with designers and non-designers and to work within teams;
- The ability to identify and discuss current and key challenges in design for health and wellbeing from a global perspective; and
- The ability to direct decision-making related to design and policy in order to improve built environments for the benefit of users' health and wellbeing.
Course structure
Students will complete 3 core subjects:
Code | Name | Study period | Credit Points |
---|---|---|---|
ABPL90428 | Designing WELL | Term 3 (Online) |
12.5 |
ABPL90426 | Applied Design Thinking | Term 1 (Online) |
12.5 |
ABPL90427 | UX Design for Health and Wellbeing | Term 4 (Online) |
12.5 |
Students will select one of the following electives:
Online:
Code | Name | Study period | Credit Points |
---|---|---|---|
ABPL90377 | Design for Ageing | Not available in 2024 | 12.5 |
On-campus:
Code | Name | Study period | Credit Points |
---|---|---|---|
ABPL90321 | Building the Brief: People Process Place | Not available in 2024 | 12.5 |
HORT90011 | Therapeutic Landscapes | Not available in 2024 | 12.5 |
POPH90299 | Healthcare Environment Evaluation | October (On Campus - Parkville) |
12.5 |
Last updated: 21 February 2025