Hobart
Introduction
Intending Honours students should first consult the Honours Coordinator and potential supervisors before the end of the final year of their undergraduate course. The Honours course starts either in the first week of February with a thesis being submitted by the end of November or in the first week of August with all requirements being completed by the end of May in the following year (~39 weeks, full-time). Part-time study is also available (~78 weeks). The program consists of the following elements: a literature review, a grant application, verbal presentations and a research project (resulting in a written thesis). Each of these has a number of teaching objectives, not all of which are assessed and used in the final award. The final award is based on an assessment of eleven objectives, six of which come from the thesis. Full information on objectives and assessment criteria are contained in a booklet which is available from the Honours coordinator.
Enrolment consists of four units as follows: KPZ405, KPZ406, KPZ407 and KPZ408.
Summary 2021
Unit name | Biological Sciences 4 (Honours) B |
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Unit code | KPZ406 |
Credit points | 25 |
Faculty/School | College of Sciences and Engineering School of Natural Sciences |
Discipline | Plant Science|Zoology |
Coordinator | Christopher Burridge |
Available as student elective? | No |
Breadth Unit? | No |
Availability
Note
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Units are offered in attending mode unless otherwise indicated (that is attendance is required at the campus identified). A unit identified as offered by distance, that is there is no requirement for attendance, is identified with a nominal enrolment campus. A unit offered to both attending students and by distance from the same campus is identified as having both modes of study.
Special approval is required for enrolment into TNE Program units.
TNE Program units special approval requirements.
* 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 (see withdrawal dates explained for more information).
Learning Outcomes
1 | Select and apply practical and theoretical techniques to conduct an independent and ethical biological science research project |
2 | Design, implement and critically evaluate a biological science investigation to address a research question |
3 | Communicate scientific ideas and biological science research findings to informed professional audiences, both orally and in a written thesis |
Fees
Teaching
Assessment | AT1 - Literature Review (19%) AT2 - Grant Application (10%) AT3 - Research Thesis (57%) AT4 - Research Seminar (14%) |
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Timetable | View the lecture timetable | View the full unit timetable |
Textbooks
Required | None |
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The University reserves the right to amend or remove courses and unit availabilities, as appropriate.