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Search Results for: Faculty Focus

Rendez-vous pour les Aussie engineers

Engineering students from Queensland and France will exchange campuses for part of their study, and emerge with dual qualifications. It’s a fairly common arrangement in many disciplines, but breaks new ground for engineering. UQ’s Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information ...

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Mental health nursing requires specialist training

Mental health nursing requires specialist training 11 May 09 | Print this story | Send this story to a friend Academics and mental health nurses are pushing for specialist postgraduate training as the norm for nurses practising in this demanding area, reports Jeremy Gilling. ...

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Looking for equal footing on uneven ground

A decline in the monopoly on the provision of research and the awarding of degrees, and the competitive pressures of a demand-driven market were looming threats to the survival of non-viable Australian universities. Professor Paul Johnson, vice-chancellor of La Trobe ...

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International briefs

US universities consider ‘tuning’ their degrees Minnesota, Indiana and Utah have each received $US150,000 to examine a new way to evaluate college degrees that would focus more on skills learned than classes taken. The program, ‘Tuning USA’, is an initiative ...

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In the wake of Stern and the GFC

Business education in Australia looks set for its second revolution as educators and industry seek to impart the lessons of climate change and financial meltdown, reports Jeremy Gilling. The Australian Treasury, derided by some for its narrow, conservative and orthodox ...

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Noticeboard

Garton appointed Sydney provost and DVC at UNSW, he began his career as a teaching fellow in the School of Humanities at Griffith University before returning to Sydney in 1988 to lecture in the Department of History. Over the next ...

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Arts not just for arts' sake

It may not be the ideal meal ticket, but the arts degree is a pathway to many careers, reports Jeremy Gilling. Question: What do you say to an arts graduate? Answer: Yes, Prime Minister. UQ’s Deanne Gannaway, principal investigator and ...

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