Overview

This topic will: Discuss the types of evidence encounteredThe ways in which any forensic science evidence can be evaluatedThe role of the expert witness; the ultimate issueHow evidence transfers from research into operational practiceStyles of reporting evidenceFallacies and pitfallsHow to present evidence in court

Topic availabilities

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Tuition pattern

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Aims

The topic will provide students with an understanding of scientific validation.

Students will explore:

  • Why evidence can be considered in a variety of ways
  • How to compare two hypotheses
  • How to interpret and evaluate scientific information
  • How to author court reports
  • How to present evidence in a variety of formats including as an oral statement

Learning outcomes

On completion of this topic you will be expected to be able to:
1.
Evaluate scientific data in a forensic context
2.
Write a scientific report in the format to present to a court
3.
Present scientific data related to a forensic context in a professional form
4.
Interpret a range of scientific forms of data, especially in a forensic context

Assessments

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Current students should refer to FLO for detailed assessment information, including due dates. Assessment information is accurate at the time of publishing.

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Requisites information

Pre-requisites:

Anti-requisites: