Overview
Student guidance
Program of study
72 Units
Admission requirements
Aims
Grounded in a human rights approach, this course is focused on promoting the rights of people with disability to inclusive lives and to building the capacity of the workforce to lead practice allied with this aim.
Students may choose from a range of options for specialist study, including policy, trauma responsiveness, course work and research.
The course aims to:
- Provide advanced insights into theoretical and practical matters in disability to improve professional decision making, broadening the professional opportunities for graduates within an evolving policy and practice context
- Assist students to become National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) aware, knowledgeable, effective and respected professionals in their chosen field.
- Prepare graduates with advanced skills and specialised knowledge that can be applied to support the inclusion and citizenship of people with disability in their local communities
- Provide an effective pathway for students who wish to specialise in a specific area of disability study
Develop leadership skills to prepare graduates to positively influence the delivery of quality services for people with disability across a broad range of community settings
Learning outcomes
Student progression rules
Students must have achieved a GPA of at least 5 to be able to undertake the Dissertation topics. Students who do not receive the required GPA will instead take alternative study.
Failure to complete the course within five years or the award of a grade of (F) in the same topic on more than one occasion, may constitute prima facie evidence of unsatisfactory progress for the purposes of the University's Policy on Student Progress.
Note that students who wish to use their masters qualification to satisfy entry into a Flinders University research higher degree program are required to have completed at least an 18 unit postgraduate research component.