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Secretary, Letters and Humanities, and Schools Liaison Ulcer, J. Ońcer-in-Charge, Students' Records, E. Director, Student I-Iealth Service, DR. ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS IF THE CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF SOCIAL STUDIES, PROFESSOR V. f A complete list of administrative officers may be found in the University Calendar. The Social Studies course provides professional education for social workers and personnel workers. The Social Studies degree usually requires three years of full-time study, although graduates may be allowed to attempt the course in two years.

A combined course for the Diploma of Social Studies and a pass degree in Arts or Commerce usually takes over four years. The combined course for the Diploma of Social Studies and an Honors Degree of Arts extends over five years. Graduates with a Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Social Studies degree may continue to the degree of Master of Arts specializing in Social Studies according to the regulations set out in the Faculty of Arts Handbook.

Those students who demonstrate a sufficient level of academic achievement will be required to attend a personal interview at the Social Studies Department, 33 Royal Parade, Parkville, Vic. Candidates must have met university entrance requirements, but there are no specific student subjects as prerequisites for the diploma program in social studies. No student may register for any social science subject unless he has been selected in the admission quota and forwards his notice of selection to the Student Record.

In addition, there are many other sources of financial aid specifically for social science students.

Appointments Board

637, or by calling the Housing Office, located at 255 Elgin Street, Carlton, Vie.

Student Facilities

Colleges of the University

The Office of University Housing provides an accommodation service for students who need accommodation other than colleges, halls of residence and hostels. The University fees mentioned above do not include the College fees, which are paid to the Colleges themselves. For further information about the Colleges, students are referred to the sections printed in the University Calendar and College Leaders.

University Halls of Residence

CHAPTER 3

COMBINED COURSES

COMBINED COURSE FOR BACHELOR OF ARTS, DIPLOMA IN SOCIAL STUDIES

Language Part III Australian History Social History or Social Organization B Social Work Part II ar Psychology IIIA. Social biology, psychology IIB and two approved subjects chosen from two of groups 1, 3 and 5 as indicated in the Handbook for the Faculty of Arts.

COMBINED COURSE FOR BACHELOR OF ARTS (DEGREE WITH HONOURS), DIPLOMA IN SOCIAL STUDIES

Honors History C (Later Medieval and Early Modern European) IIonours History D ( f'Iodern Euro-. pean ) Social Biology Social Organization A. 3rd year Social Work Part II Social History Social Organization B Political Philosophy (passed) or Modern Philosophy (passed) . ). In the third semester of the year, the student should consult with the professor of history and the director of social studies about the topic of his thesis, which must be submitted during.

COMBINED COURSE ' FOR BACHELOR OF COMMERCE,**

DIPLOMA IN SOCIÄL STUDIES

COMBINED COURSE FOR BACHELOR OF LAWS, DIPLOMA IN SOCIAL STUDIES

CнArnat 4

LECTURES AND FIELD WORK

AUSTRALIAN HISTORY Prerequisite: A Grade I History subject

BOOKS

EXAMINATION

186-L CRIMINOLOGY A

ECONOMICS A (Arts)

If Economic Geography part I is being taken as part of the course, it must be taken before or at the same time as this course. The nature of the economy; pricing mechanism; consumer and demand theory; firms, production and costs; competition and monopoly; wage theory; national income, unemployment and inflation; the money.

219. ECONOMICS B

220-7. ECONOMICS C7 LABOUR ECONOMICS

I is taken as part of the course, it must be taken before or concurrently with this subject. Theories of wages; the labor supply plan; collective bargaining; conventional forces determining wage rates; the issue of wage-price; equal pay for equal work; general problems with wage determination; principles of wage determination in Australia; problems with workforce planning. G., The Wage-Price Question: A Theoretical Analysis. eds. ), Australian Labor Economics: Readings.

212. PERSONNEL PRACTICE

Economic security - industrial responsibility, the issue of employment guarantees, pension and retirement schemes. They will gain experience in HR work in factories, retail stores, public hospitals, government offices, etc. Students will also have to attend lectures in the Philosophy and Method of Social Work, as specified in Chapter I of the curriculum for the Social Work section. III.).

The examination in this subject consists of essay work, a 3-hour paper and the attainment of such level of proficiency in practical work as may be prescribed. A course of two lectures, one tutorial and one practical of two hours per week throughout the year. Books recommended for additional reading and reference are listed in the General Manual of the Department of Psychology.

Final exams in basic statistical methods and in experimental and related research methods in psychology, and two 3-hour papers at the end of the course. Honors candidates will be required to demonstrate broader and more detailed knowledge in both practical work and examination papers than Pass candidates. A course of two lectures and one tutorial per week with practical work throughout the year.

-lilt, 1963.) (iii) Books recommended for additional reading and reference are detailed in the Department manual and lists.

100-2. PSYCHOLOGY PART IIB

The course contains six units of which four are compulsory and the others can be chosen from a list of options. The four compulsory units include two lectures and one laboratory period per week plus some tutorials. Further details and prescribed texts for optional units are set out in the Departmental Handbook, which students are advised to consult before purchasing texts.

A third-year course that can only be taken concurrently with or after completion of Part IIIA Psychology. The course consists of five units, of which three are compulsory and two are optional.

207, SOCIAL BIOLOGY

This will include economic development; changes in population and class structure; the appearance of the party system of democratic governance; Attention will be paid to public health; education (both schools and universities); maintaining order and criminal detention systems; The Poor Laws and their 'dissolution' in the early twentieth century; political and social thought and the ways in which it may or may not relate to social change: Burke, Paine, Bentham, Mill, Disraeli, Fabians; the role of churches and religious beliefs, and the challenge of science to religion, the theories and practice of town planning considered in relation to the economic and social environment, A special comparative study of the development of social welfare work as sponsored by governments and voluntarily bodies in Britain, the USA and Australia, with particular reference to the emergence of the social work profession and the factors responsible for its changing character from the late nineteenth century to the Second World War. H., England in the Eighteenth Century.

A consideration of social change and social structure in relation to the pattern of development of social services: Commonwealth, State and Local Government welfare services. The Dominance of Public Law Today - A Study of Legal Status, of Standardization of Contracts and of Social Welfare Legislation. The concepts of class, status, elite, mass, mass communication, etc., with particular reference to Australian conditions.

206-1. SOCIAL WORK PART I

UNIVERSITY CALENDAR UNIVERSITY GUIDE

FACULTY HANDBOOKS

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

Economics, Commerce and Public Administration

Science

Physical Education . Complete Set

Referensi

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Section I — Response to Prescribed Text Part B Question 2 Criteria Marks • Demonstrates a perceptive and sensitive understanding of the prescribed text • Demonstrates flair and