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Disciplined Inquiry Capstone Part 1 (EDUC91372)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5Not available in 2025
About this subject
Overview
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Please note: this subject is delivered wholly online and only open to students enrolled in the wholly online Master of Education (MC-EDMO). Subjects in this course are delivered in an online accelerated learning model and therefore, students typically enrol in one 12.5 credit point subject per online teaching term.
This subject is the first part of a two-subject sequence, taught over two consecutive study periods. Students are required to enrol in EDUC91372 Disciplined Inquiry Capstone Part 1 (12.5 points) and EDUC91373 Disciplined Inquiry Capstone Part 2 (12.5 points), consecutively, for a total enrolment of 25 points.
An overall result for the subject is given following completion of the two-subject sequence.
Assessment, Subject Intended Learning Outcomes, and Total Time Commitment applies to the entire enrolments across Parts 1 and 2 of the subject.
The Total Time Commitment for the subject is approximately 340 hours, inclusive of the two study periods.
This subject involves students undertaking a substantial project directly related to their own professional practice and/or within their area of specialisation. Students will draw on theory, knowledge and skills developed through their degree to design and complete their professional Capstone project.
The Capstone project will entail a gradual process of problem definition and mapping, and it will produce a research-informed plan (a Knowledge Mobilisation Strategy or KMS) to inform action. The experience will provide students with concepts, methods and skills to implement their project in a future professional or policy context.
The word “problem” does not imply a deficit view, and indeed a project can focus on opportunities and potentials. In all cases, however, students will be encouraged to treat their inquiries in a rigorous way, “problematising” their assumptions and considering counterarguments and other disciplinary perspectives.
The project will involve the following activities:
- Identification of a context - this can be an existing context of professional practice or a more generic future context. The context can also be understood more abstractly as a particular debate or trend in education policy.
- Iterative, reflective and dialogic cycles of problem definition, redefinition and expansion.
- Mapping of stakeholders and forms of knowledge: who should be involved? What diverse forms of knowledge should be mobilised? What forms of evidence should be generated? What methods should be used?
Students will present their KMS in a conference presentation format in Part 2 that facilitates peer learning and fosters professional alliances and networks.
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of Part 1 and Part 2 of this subject, students should be able to:
- Define a substantially complex educational problem or issue directly related to their own professional practice and/or within their area of specialisation
- Demonstrate an interdisciplinary, global and inclusive understanding of an educational problem, grounded in theoretical and practical literature
- Mobilise knowledge through a partnership model, involving and giving voice to direct and indirect stakeholders
- Plan and evaluate research-informed strategies to explore and address their problems in their area of professional expertise
- Communicate their strategies effectively to diverse stakeholders and audiences.
Generic skills
- Leadership skills
- Knowledge transfer skills
- Ability to deal with complexity
- Communication and persuasion skills
- Critical thinking skills
Last updated: 6 November 2025