Articles of association, rules, regulations and ordinances are adopted by the Council under the authority of the University Act. In addition to statutory fees, students in the fourth and fifth years of the medical course are required to pay hospital stay fees of $34.00 per month.
Assistant Registrars and Course Advisers Assistant Registrars
MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES Assistant Registrar
RULES AND PROCEDURES
- Change of address or name
- Course overloads
- Enrolment-amendments, withdrawal from course, outstanding obligations
- Enrolment recotd
- Examinations
- Graduation/Commemoration Ceremonies
- Handicapped students
- Medical examination (compulsory)
- Repeating students: applications for exemption from attendance at lectures, tutorials or practical work
- Review of academic progress (Clause 4C)
- Rules
- Scholarships and pdzes
- Status for previous studies
- Student records
- Supplementary examinations
- Tape recording lectures The University's policy is as follows
- Timetables
- Transferring to another undergraduate course The attention of every student is drawn to the followng
Additional information can be found in the brochure, which you can get from the assistant secretary of the faculty in which they are enrolled. Scholarship information is also posted on the bulletin board in the Mitchell Building lobby.
STUDENT SERVICES
- Accommodation
- Barr Smith Library
- Careers and Counselling Centre
- Centre for Physical Health
- Child Care Centre
- Clubs and Societies
- Council for the Welfare of Overseas Students
- Health Service
- Insurance
- Parking
- Radio 5UV
- Reading Room
- Student Loans
- Student Mail
- Students Association
- The Union
- Travel concessions
- Welfare and Education Service Welfare Services
All students enrolled in a degree or diploma program at the university have the right to borrow books from the library. The union also provides annual grants to associated groups, i.e. the Sports Association, the Student Association, the Clubs and Societies Association and the Post-graduate Students Association.
FACULTY OF
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE
REGULATIONS, SCHEDULES AND SYLLABUSES OF DEGREES
BACHELOR OF
AGRICULTURAL couRSE)
REGULATIONS
A candidate who has twice failed the examination in any subject or hall subject may not re-register for the subject or half-subject, except with the permission of the Faculty and under the conditions that the Faculty may prescribe. There shall be three classifications of pass at an annual examination in any subject for the Ordinary degree, as follows: Pass with Honours, Pass with Credit, Pass.
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE (OLD
SCHEDULES
SCHEDULE I: THE ORDINARY DEGREE
The trips are organized by the Faculty Subjects Committee and the candidate can obtain further details of this request from the Dean's Office. When, in the opinion of the Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, there are special circumstances, the Council, with the recommendation of the Faculty in each case, may change the provisions of points 1-1 I above.
SCHEDULE II. THE HONOURS DEGREE
However, those from within the University will be required to satisfy examiners in the subjects wX02 Agriculture II, wX03 ÀAgriculture IIIã and V/X04 Agriculture IV. A candidate possessing an honors degree or diploma with average grade.of 3 or. o Invalid College of Agriculture may be excluded from taking courses in group C and may be admitted to courses in group D at the discretion of the head/. óhuilr-utt of the department in question and with the permission of the Dean of the Faculty' 10 .various farming environments and he must with the Practical Experience Administrator, his plans for the practical experience.
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE (OLD
SYLLABUSES
AGRICULTURAL BIOCHEMISTRY
Assessment: A full written statement of the department's current assessment procedures will be issued to each student at the first lecture in Term I. Assessment: A full written statement of the department's current assessment procedures will be issued to each student at the start of the course.
AGRICULTURE
In addition, practical lessons and assignments on special topics are assessed in terms I and III. If there is any doubt about the candidate's level of performance, an oral examination will be requested.
AGRONOMY
Students taking both Agronomy and Plant Breeding will work on Plant Breeding to compensate for this material which is common to both subjects. Each candidate will be assigned a research project, which will be required to present the results at u itr.ii.
ANIMAL SCIENCES
A candidate for the degree must pass such tests on the chosen subject of study. The assessment is primarily based on the thesis, and the seminar based on the one that describes the year's research.
BIOMETRY
ECONOMICS
ENTOMOLOGY
Candidates may be required to attend such lectures and take such examinations as the chairman of the department may require. A reading course is prescribed by the department chair and must be started during the long vacation preceding the honors year.
ADDITIONAL SUBJECTS
Students wishing to take the Honors degree in Entomology should consult the Chairman of the Department olEntomology some time during their final year. All time not necessarily allocated to lectures and set work must be spent in the laboratory.
GENETICS
Ag.Sc. (Old Course)
PLANT PATHOLOGY
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
SOIL SCIENCE
PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE (NEW
AGRICULTURÄL couRSE)
Ag.Sc. (New Course) DEGREE OF
BACHELOR OF AGRICULTURAL scrENCE (NE\ry COURSE)
SCHEDULE I: ARRANGEMENT OF COURSES
SCHEDULE II: THE ORDINARY DEGREE
- FIRST YEAR SUBJECTS
- SECONDYEARSUBJECTS
- THIRD YEAR SUBJECTS WX73 Agricultural Production
- FOURTHYEARSUBJECTS
No candidate will be allowed to count the degree along with any subject. any other course which, in the opinion of the Faculty, contains a significant amount of the same material; and no subject may be counted twice in the degree.*. When, in the opinion of the Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, there are special circumstances, the Council, with the recommendation of the Faculty in each case, may change the provisions of points 1-1 I above.
SCHEDULE III: THE HONOURS DEGREE
Ag.Sc. (New Course) DEGREE OF
A written statement of the department's current assessment procedures will be issued to each student at the first lecture in Term I. Assessment: A full written statement of current departmental procedures will be issued to each student at the beginning of the course.
Ag.Sc. (New Course)
Assessment: Approximately 250lo based on continuous evaluation of regular written assignments; approximately 25% on the result of an exam (redeemable). A candidate for the diploma is required to pass examinations on the chosen subject of study, as prescribed by the Head of the Section, and to submit a thesis reporting on the work carried out during the year .
BOTANY
Assessment: A clear written statement on current departmental procedures will be issued to each student at the start of the course. Timing and other details of assessment will be discussed with the class during the trst.
GEOLOGY
Prerequisite: A satisfactory standard in SJ03 Genetics III or special permission from the chair of the department. Students wishing to obtain the Honors degree in Genetics must consult the President of the Departmeni of Genetics during the third semester of their third year of the B.Ag.sc.
MATHEMATICS AND MATHEMATICAL
STATISTICS
PLANT PATHOLOGY WPl3 Plant Pathology IIL
Ag.Sc. (New Course) Practical work will consist oflaboratory exercises related to the above topics
A detailed statement on the assessment procedures will be issued to each student at the first lecture in term I. Textbooks: Hillel, D., Ftmdamentals of soil phvsics (Academic Press); Hillel, D., Applications of Soil Physics (Academic Press); Marshall, T.
MASTER OF AGRICULTURE
After completing his duties, the candidate must submit three copies to the Registrar. of his dissertation prepared in accordance with the directions given to candidates from time to time. When (re)submitting the dissertation, the Faculty appoints examiners who can recommend: (i) be accepted subject to any changes that the examiners may propose; or. ii) to be accepted subject to a satisfactory oral examination; or. iii) will not be accepted, but will be returned to the candidate for review and resubmission; or (iv) be rejected.
SCHEDULE I: PRELIMINARY WORK
SCHEDULE II: COURSES OF STUDY AND PROJECT WORK
MASTER OF AGRICULTURE
PEST MANAGEMENT
MASTER OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE
The candidate must submit his thesis no earlier than three terms and, unless the faculty has obtained special permission, no later than nine terms after the faculty's approval of the subject he is investigating. A candidate who meets the above conditions and meets the examination board must, on recommendation from the Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, be
FACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE AND PLANNING
BACHELOR OF ARCHITECTURAL STUDIES
A candidate who does not pass a subject, or who obtains a section II pass and who wishes to take the subject again, must, unless the chairman of the department in question gives full or partial exemption from this, satisfactorily complete such written and laboratory or other occupation. in the subject that may be prescribed. To qualify for the Honors degree, a candidate must comply with the provisions of the Schedules.
SCHEDULE I: SUBJECTS OF STUDY
Mathematical subjects QN22 Applied Mathematics IIA QNl2 Applied Mathematics IIB QA02 Computer Science II. QN03 Applied Mathematics III QF13 Mathematical Physics III QNl3 Applied Mathematics IIIA QT03 Mathematical Statistics III QA03 Computer Science III QM03 Pure Mathematics III QAl3 Computer Science IIIA QM13 Pure Mathematics IIIA.
SCHEDULE II: THE ORDINARY DEGREE
A CANDIDATE FOR THE ORDINARY DEGREE SHALL ATTEND COURSES AND SATISFY EXAMINERS IN NINE SUBJECTS OR THE
- DISTRIBUTION OF SUBJECTS BY YEARS
- APPROVAL OF SUBJECTS
- EXEMPTIONS
- PASS LISTS
- UNACCEPTABLE COMBINATIONS OF SUBJECTST
Assessment methods in this subject will be described early in the year by the lecturer, and the weighting of coursework and tests will be made clear'. Assessment methods in this subject will be described by the lecturer early in the year, and the weighting of coursework and tests will be made clear.
BACHELOR OF ARCHITECTURE
For the purposes of these regulations, a candidate who is refused permission to take an examination in a subject or department of a subject shall be deemed to have failed. Unless approved by the Council on the recommendation of the Faculty, only candidates who started the training for the degree o¡ before the academic year 1979 may register for the training for the degree alter 31.
SCHEDULE III: PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE
A candidate who has been granted permission to progress to Final Honors Architecture will register for RA99 Final Honors Architecture and perform additional work as.
SCHEDULE IV: APPROVAL OF COURSES
Any students who previously attended the B.Arch. old course) still to complete the degree. will be required to complete subjects or parts of subjects of the B.Arch. Syllabus of the third, fourth and fifth year subjects of the B.Arch. old course) is to be found in the 1981 Year Book, Part II.
BACHELOR OF ARCHITECTURE (NEW COURSE)
The names of the candidates in each classification will be published as prescribed in the schedules. To be eligible for the award of the Honors Degree of Bachelor of Architecture a candidate must undertake such studies and attain the standards prescribed in the schedules.
SCHEDULE I: ADMISSION
In preparing these schedules under Rule 5, the Council determined that they would come into force on 1 January 1980.).
SCHEDULE II: QUALIFYING STUDIES
COURSE OF STUDY
- ORDER OF SUBJECTS Core subjects
- ASSESSMBNT
- EXEMPTION
- PASS LISTS
With the permission of the Chair of the Department of Architecture, the elective can be taken up in either the first or second year. At the discretion of the Examination Board, a re-examination may be granted to a candidate who does not satisfy the examiners in the elective subject.
SCHEDULE IV: THE HONOURS DEGREE
Trr.rs¡n
The lecturer will describe the assessment methods for this course at the beginning of the year and clarify the weighting of assignments and tests. The lecturer will describe the assessment methods for this course at the beginning of the year, and the weighting for assignments and tests will be clearly explained.
D¡,vlrcnr
The evaluation methods in this subject will be described by the lecturer at the beginning of the year, and the weighting for course work and tests will be made clear. The evaluation methods in this subject will be described by the lecturer at the beginning of the year, and the weighting for coursework and tests will be made clear.
MASTER OF ARCHITECTURE
MASTER OF PLANNING
The candidate must deposit with the registrar three copies of the thesis prepared in accordance with the instructions given to the candidates from time to time.*. a) The faculty will appoint at least two examiners for the thesis, at least one of whom must be external. When the Faculty is satisfied that a candidate has met the requirements and conditions of the Regulations and that the thesis is acceptable, the Faculty will recommend to the Council that the candidate be admitted to the degree of Master of Planning.
FACULTY OF ARTS
REGULATIONS, SCHEDULES AND SYLLABUSES OF DEGREES AND
BACHELOR OF ARTS
Science subjects
QAl2 Computer science IIC QT02 Mathematical statistics II QM02 Pure mathematics II RS92 Urban and landscape. For the purposes of this clause, the law subjects listed in Schedule I (b) of the Bachelor of Laws Degree shall count as one subject only.
A. Arts
Subject to faculty approval on a case-by-case basis, a candidate may progress to the honors degree in a subject taught in a department of another faculty. Unless permitted by the faculty, a candidate must sit the entire final exam for the honors degree at the one annual exam.
BACHELOR OF ARTS
ANTHROPOLOGY
The lectures will concern the institutions of the people, the aristocracy and the bureaucratic organization of the state, especially in Africa and Asia. Textbooks: Durkheim, L.8., The Elementary Forms of Religious Life (Allen and Unwin); Weber, M., The Protestant Ethic (Allen and Unwin); Weber, M., The Religion of China (Free Press); Gellner, 8., Muslim Association (Cambridge UP); Tambiah, S.,.
THIRD YEAR,
There will be a wide range of possible reading materials for students, and the course coordinator should be consulted before purchasing any. Textbooks: Levi-Strauss, C., The savage mind (Weidenfeld); Dumont, L.' Homo hierarchicus (Chicago UP); McLellan, D', Karl Marx: selected writings (O'U'P'); Weber,.
CENTRE FOR ASIAN STUDIES
A student wishing to enroll for the Honors Degree in Anthropology must have satisfactorily completed:. ii) two silent subjects in Anthropology at second-year level, or its equivalent; and. iii) any two subjects in Anthropology given in the third year. Students wishing to take Honors must consult the Chair of the Department during their third year's work.
COURSES ON ÄSIAN SOCIETIES
The assessment will be based on seminar papers, two essays and a dissertation. ii) the response of Asian societies to their environment in terms of economic growth, international organization and technological development, and the influence of material factors on cultural concepts; iii) those aspects of human relations, both intra- and community-wide, on which Asian peoples have placed value and emphasis. Students in doubt as to their suitability for the course should consult the Chairman of the Center.
OTHER COURSES RELATED TO ASIAN REGIONS
The assessment is ongoing and is based on two practice assignments each semester, one essay each semester and an optional final exam (2 assignments)'. Attention is drawn to the many other courses related to Asian regions offered in the Departments of Anthropology, Economics, Geography, History and Politics, which are likely to be combined with the study of Chinese and/or Japanese.
JOINT HONOURS IN ASIAN STUDIES
CHINESE LANGUAGE
The course consists of lessons in speaking, writing and reading Modern Standard Chinese. Texts studied in the nonfiction reading course include short selections from Mao Zedong, Deng Xiaoping, and others, as well as materials related to the contemporary Chinese world.
CHINESE SOCIETY
INDONESIAN LANGUAGE
One hour per week in terms I and 2 will be devoted to a study of some topic in the social, cultural and political life of modern Indonesia. One hour per week in terms I and 2 will be devoted to a study of some topic in the social, cultural and political life of modern Indonesia.
JAPÁ.NESE LANGUAGE
Assessment will be based on tests carried out in the language laboratory, exercises and essays or tutorial papers. Assessment will be based on tests carried out in the language laboratory, exercises and essays or coursework.
JAPANESE LITERATURE
CLASSICS
LATIN
Assessment is mainly through an unseen translation paper at the end of the year. lor the set texts are also included, together with those obtained in the year-end examination in practical criticism. The marks for the set texts are also included, together with those obtained in the end-of-year examination in practical criticism.
GREEK
The material will be issued during the year for weekly tutorials throughout the year. The work of the Honors Year will consist of: a) the study of Greek and/or Latin literature under set topics, together with study of other material in accordance with the interests of candidates.
CLASSICAL STUDIES
THIRD TERM
The curriculum is the same for the Art and Archeology options listed under AC32 Classical Studies II. Prerequisite: AC92 Classical Art and Archeology Il or ÃC32 Classical Studies II or AC72 Ancient History IL.
DRAMA
The syllabus is as for AC92 Classical Art and Archeology II, but there will be additional work. set for AC93 Classical Art and Archeology III students. Roman art and archeology are presented in even years and Greek art and archeology in odd years.
SUBJECTS IN ECONOMICS AND COMMERCE
THIRD YEAR
ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
Poetry
Fiction
Suggested assessment: Written work completed during the year and/or one exam at the end of the year. Assessment proposal: Written work during the year and one exam at the end of the year.
FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
Assessment: one 3-hour Language Paper; one 2-hour literature paper; one oral examination; and continuous assessment throughout the year. AF02 French II, AF12 French IIA and 4tr03 French III each consist of two components:. a) a language component, consisting of training in speaking and writing French (including translation from English into French) and which is offered approximately 2 hours per week throughout the year (except for AF12 French IIA which is 3 hours per week).
TERM I
Livres d'étude : Hugo, « Ruy B/as (Nouveaux Classiques Larousse) ; Musset, Lorenzaccio (nouveaux classiques Larousse) ; Claudel, l'otage (folio) ; Montherlant, La Reine Morte (folio). viii) SrnNon,rl nno Pnousr (3ème année). Manuels : Stendhal, Z¿ rouge et le noir (Folio) ; Proust, Du côté de chez Swann (Folio);.
TERM II
Manuels : R:amuz, La Grande Peur dans les Montagnes (Broché) ; Giorto, Le Chant du monde (Folio) ; Bosco, Maliuo¡x (Folio); Gracq, Un balcon en bois (J. Corti). Manuel : Fayolle, R., La critique (Armand Colin). viii) Tnn ExIsr¡¡.ltI¡llsr GEnnntloN (2ème et 3ème années).
TERM III
There will be no written examination and assessment will be based on work presented during the year. There will be no written examination and assessment will be based on work presented during the year.
GEOGRAPHY
This course is concerned with the application of biogeographic principles to the conservation and management of communities in human-dominated landscapes. This course is concerned with the application of biogeographic principles to the conservation and management of communities in human-dominated landscapes.
GERMAN L,A.NGUAGE AND LITERATURE
Lrxcu¡cs
Opuor,¡s
Books described: Tume¡, G., Stylistics (Penguin); Lyons, J. ed.), Mew horizons in linguistics (Penguin); Seìfferr, H., Stil heute (Beck Verlag).
THIRD TERM,
Oprrorqs
Prerequisite: Successful completion of AG02 German lI or AGl2 German IIA or AG87 German IIB.
OprroNs
In 1984, Honors students may, after consultation with the Chair, attend a research seminar offered to Postgraduate students. Students may obtain the permission of the Faculty of Arts to combine German with another subject for the Honors degree.
HISTORY
Introductory reading: The most stimulating single book (to which we will refer frequently in terms I and II) is: Moore, 8., The Social Origins of Dictatorship and. Essays in History and Perception (O.U.P.); Southern, R.W., The making of the Middle Ages (Hutchinson); Brown, P., The World of Late Antiquity (Thames and Hudson); Barber, R., Knight and Chivalry (Cardinal).
ITALIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
I dizionari Sønsoni inglese-italiano italiano-inglese (Sansoni); Ragazzini, G., e Biagi, 4°, Dizionario italiano e inglese (Zanichelli-Longman); Reynolds, B. ed.), The concise Cambridge Ilalian Dictionary' (Cambridge UP);. Dizionario Garzanti Italiano-Inglese Inglese-Ilaliano (Garzanti); Melzi, Robert C., Dizionario italiano e inglese The Bantam New College (New York).
MUSIC
Contact åoars History olMusic-2 hours per week: Term 1-1 or 2 hours of lecture per week and 4 tutorials per semester (dates available during the first lecture); Terms 2 and 3-l hours. lecture and one hour of seminar per week together with a programmed listening course. Music History - 2 hours per week: semester 1-1 or 2 hours of lecture per week and 4 tutorials per semester (dates available at first lecture); Terms 2 and 3: 1 hour of lecture and 1 hour of seminar per week together with a programmed listening course.