Courses & Units

Migrant Families HAA108

Introduction

Australia is a migrant nation, with a rich and diverse mix of peoples, languages and cultures. In Migrant Families, we trace the journeys of ancestors who migrated to and from Australia and New Zealand, and place their lives in the context of global migration over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. We explore the ways governments have shaped populations through migration and citizenship law and policy, and consider how these might have affected your ancestors’ lives. Migrant Families develops your archival research skills in the digital age. We explore where and how to find migration records (in Australia, New Zealand and overseas) and how to use them effectively to tell your family’s migration story. The unit builds on historical research and writing skills developed in the Foundation-level Family History units.

Summary

Unit name Migrant Families
Unit code HAA108
Credit points 12.5
College/School College of Arts, Law and Education
School of Humanities
Discipline History and Classics
Coordinator Doctor Kate Bagnall
Available as an elective? Yes
Delivered By University of Tasmania

Availability

Location Study period Attendance options Available to
Online Term 1 Off-Campus International Domestic

Key

On-campus
Off-Campus
International students
Domestic students
Note

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Key Dates

Study Period Start date Census date WW date End date
Term 1 5/2/2024 19/2/2024 11/3/2024 14/4/2024

* The Final WW Date is the final date from which you can withdraw from the unit without academic penalty, however you will still incur a financial liability (refer to How do I withdraw from a unit? for more information).

Unit census dates currently displaying for 2024 are indicative and subject to change. Finalised census dates for 2024 will be available from the 1st October 2023. Note census date cutoff is 11.59pm AEST (AEDT during October to March).

About Census Dates

Learning Outcomes

  • Use appropriate technologies to locate, identify and access historical records relating to migration and citizenship
  • Read, interpret and evaluate historical information found in migration and citizenship records
  • Research and write a biographical non-fiction account of an individual or family’s experience of migration
  • Situate individual lives within the wider history of migration, particularly in relation to Australia and New Zealand

Fee Information

Field of Education Commencing Student Contribution 1,3 Grandfathered Student Contribution 1,3 Approved Pathway Course Student Contribution 2,3 Domestic Full Fee 4
090305 $2,040.00 $957.00 not applicable $2,040.00

1 Please refer to more information on student contribution amounts.
2 Please refer to more information on eligibility and Approved Pathway courses.
3 Please refer to more information on eligibility for HECS-HELP.
4 Please refer to more information on eligibility for FEE-HELP.

If you have any questions in relation to the fees, please contact UConnect or more information is available on StudyAssist.

Please note: international students should refer to What is an indicative Fee? to get an indicative course cost.

Teaching

Teaching Pattern

Weekly online learning materials (e.g. short video lectures, discussions, readings, activities) (approx. 3 hours)

Online web conference discussion 2 x 1 hour

AssessmentDocument analysis (20%)|Essay (40%)|Online quizzes (40%)
TimetableView the lecture timetable | View the full unit timetable

Textbooks

Required

All learning materials for this unit, including required readings, are provided in our MyLO site. You do not need to purchase a text book.

Recommended

If you would like to read broadly on the topic of Australian and New Zealand migration history, we can recommend the following books:

  • James Belich, Making Peoples: A History of the New Zealanders from Polynesian Settlement to the End of the Nineteenth Century, Penguin, 2007
  • James Belich, Paradise Reforged: A History of the New Zealanders from the 1880s to the Year 2000, University of Hawai’i Press, 2002
  • James Jupp, From White Australia to Woomera, 2nd edn, Cambridge University Press, Melbourne, 2007
  • Eric Richards, Destination Australia: Migration to Australia since 1901, UNSW Press, Sydney, 2008
LinksBooktopia textbook finder

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