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Curtin University
Courses Handbook 2014

This handbook contains information for courses and units at Curtin in 2014.
Information for the previous year's courses and units is available at Courses Handbook 2013.

307120 v.3 Anthropology and Sociology Double Degree Major


Major/Stream Overview

This major/stream is part of a larger course. Information is specific to the major/stream, please refer to the course for more information.


This double degree major introduces students to the complementary fields of anthropology and sociology. It enables students to understand how contemporary local, regional and national cultures are affected by, and react to, processes of global change such as industrialisation, urbanisation, increasing inter-ethnic contacts, environmental transformation and new modes of communication.



Major/Stream Organisation

Major/Stream Learning Outcomes

A graduate of this course can:

1. demonstrate an understanding of the theoretical underpinnings of the social sciences

2. demonstrate the ability to think critically, creatively and reflectively within a social science discipline and across disciplinary boundaries

3. demonstrate the ability to locate relevant information from a range of sources and to make decisions about the significance of this information in the development of a disciplined analysis of social life

4. demonstrate the ability to communicate effectively through a variety of written, oral and other formats to diverse audiences in ways appropriate in the two disciplines

5. demonstrate the ability to use a variety of technologies and the ability to decide on their applications appropriately

6. show sustained intellectual curiosity by taking responsibility for one's own learning and intellectual development through the recognition of a range of learning strategies

7. demonstrate the capacity to understand social life in a range of local and global contexts

8. embrace the importance of cultural diversity and of human rights in the making of knowledge in the social sciences

9. understand the importance of appropriate theories and methods for undertaking social research that is both ethical and principled


Course Structure Hrs/Wk Credit
Year 1 Semester 1
311922 v.2   Academic and Professional Communications 100 3.0 25.0
312601 v.3   Self, Culture and Society 111 3.0 25.0
  50.0
Year 1 Semester 2
312602 v.3   Global Change in Australia and its Region 112 3.0 25.0
311926 v.3   Communicating with Asia: Languages and Societies 100 3.0 25.0
  OR  
311925 v.3   Senses of Place 100 3.0 25.0
  50.0
Year 2 Semester 1
312600 v.3   Social Inequality: Possibilities for Change 211 3.0 25.0
  SELECT ELECTIVE UNITS TO THE TOTAL VALUE OF:   25.0
  50.0
Year 2 Semester 2
312603 v.3   Private Lives and Public Issues 212 3.0 25.0
  SELECT ELECTIVE UNITS TO THE TOTAL VALUE OF:   25.0
  50.0
Year 3 Semester 1
  SELECT ELECTIVE UNITS TO THE TOTAL VALUE OF:   25.0
  SELECT OPTIONAL UNITS TO THE TOTAL VALUE OF:   25.0
  50.0
Year 3 Semester 2
  SELECT ELECTIVE UNITS TO THE TOTAL VALUE OF:   25.0
  SELECT OPTIONAL UNITS TO THE TOTAL VALUE OF:   25.0
  50.0
Year 4 Semester 1
312321 v.3   Understanding Social Research 311 3.0 50.0
  50.0
Year 4 Semester 2
312322 v.3   Doing Social Research 312 3.0 50.0
  50.0
Optional Units (No Year Level Specified) Hrs/Wk Credit
312584 v.3   Ethnographies of the City 221 3.0 25.0
312587 v.4   International Political Economy 322 3.0 25.0
312582 v.3   Human Rights and Social Justice 223 3.0 25.0
312597 v.4   Sustainability: Sociocultural Perspectives 223 3.0 25.0
312592 v.3   Islam in Contemporary Asia 225 3.0 25.0
314792 v.1   Contested Knowledges 323 3.0 25.0




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