Table of Contents
1. Time commitment to study
2. Prerequisites
3. Diploma in Arts (Sociology)
4. Requirements for a major
5. Sociology subjects
5.1. First year
5.2. Second/third year and third/fourth year
6. Honours entry
7. Honours requirements
7.1. Pure honours
7.2. Combined honours
8. Further study
9. Career opportunities
10. For more information
Subject Lists
First-year subjects
Second/third-year subjects
Core subjects
Optional subjects
Third/fourth-year subjects
Fourth-year subjects
Director: Dr Tim Marjoribanks
Sociology at the University of Melbourne explores the social patterns characterising contemporary societies. The program also equips students with a range of research skills that allow them to design and carry out data collection and analysis, from in-depth interviewing techniques to computer-based data analysis. Many subjects involve a fieldwork emphasis that underpins the professionally oriented skills that students develop. Majoring students may undertake an internship in a public, corporate or community sector organisation. The program has a strong research identity, with international links to North America, Asia and Europe. Sociology graduates are able to choose a variety of career paths that draw on the substantive areas of their study as well as research skills. Students interested in expanding their interests and knowledge are provided with an articulated structure of higher degree options at the University of Melbourne.
The discipline of sociology involves the study of social practices and relationships. The program at the University of Melbourne focuses on major areas of social change and professional employment. These include the social patterns and issues involved in terrorism, community and place, media and communications, work and organisations, cyberspace, family transformation, youth issues, health and illness, as well as contemporary forms of social policy, social movement and social problems from drug use to poverty. The program in sociology also includes subjects offered through the departments of anthropology, political science, criminology, geography and social theory.
1. Time commitment to study
As well as scheduled contact hours for lectures, tutorial and seminars a considerable additional time commitment is needed to complete the academic requirements of each subject.
A subject-specific time commitment to study will be provided by your lecturer or tutor at the beginning of semester to help you schedule your workload and successfully manage your time during the semester. In addition, general estimates of the total time commitment required to study a 12.5-point single semester subject in the Faculty of Arts can be found on Time commitment to study.
2. Prerequisites
The program commences at first-year and there are no prerequisites for entry at this level.
The general prerequisite for second/third-year subjects in sociology is 25 points of first-year sociology. Students with a 12.5-point sociology subject and another first-year subject from anthropology, criminology, political science or geography may also proceed.
3. Diploma in Arts (Sociology)
The Diploma in Arts (Sociology) is only available to students who are currently enrolled in a degree course at the University of Melbourne. It consists of a three-year sequence of study, and adds one year to the duration of your degree.
Students must complete 25 points of first-year subjects and 75 points of second/third-year subjects selected from the lists below, including at least five core subjects. Alternatively, students who have completed appropriate background studies at first year may complete 100 points of second/third-year subjects from the list below, including at least five core subjects.
4. Requirements for a major
A major in Sociology usually consists of nine 12.5-point subjects, totalling 112.5 points. It comprises:
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two first-year subjects in Sociology (25 points); and
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seven subjects taken at level two or level three (87.5 points), five of which must be chosen from the list of Sociology core units (62.5 points).
5. Sociology subjects
5.1. First year
Students take two of the following first-year subjects towards a major in Sociology.
5.2. Second/third year and third/fourth year
Students must take five of the following subjects at second- or third-year level toward their Sociology major. Subjects offered at third/fourth-year must be taken at level three. Students planning to undertake fourth-year honours should note the honours entry requirements.
6. Honours entry
The prerequisite for entry to fourth-year honours in Sociology is:
For information on how to apply see Applying for Honours.
7. Honours requirements
7.1. Pure honours
Students undertaking pure honours in Sociology must complete:
Honours and postgraduate diploma students who did not complete 166-485 Contemporary Sociological Theory at third-year level must complete this subject as part of their fourth-year studies.
7.2. Combined honours
Students undertaking combined honours in Sociology and another area of study must complete:
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166-528 Sociology Thesis (37.5 points); and
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two honours subjects chosen from the list below; and
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three honours subjects in the combined area of study (37.5 points).
or
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honours thesis in the combined area of study (37.5 points); and
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two honours subjects in the combined area of study (25 points); and
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three honours subjects chosen from the list below (37.5 points).
8. Further study
Masters and doctoral thesis supervision is available, depending on the area of research of the candidate. A coursework masters option in social policy is also available.
9. Career opportunities
Sociologists work in a wide range of areas, in government, private and community sectors. They work on questions such as changing family patterns, changes in ethnic communities, health and employment issues. In the public sector sociologists work in areas such as neighbourhood and community service development, or in social policy in areas dealing with ageing, youth or women's issues and services. They are involved in program implementation and development, in social and environmental impact assessment, and in evaluation in areas such as health programs, urban development or housing policies.
Sociologists also work in the media, public communication and marketing. They are involved in workplace change, employed by union or employer organisations, or work as consultants. They are found in private and public social forecasting organisations. They are involved in community consultations and community relations work, where for example, large organisations such as hospitals have to understand and respond to community concerns or specific groups.
Sociologists are also found in non-government organisations such as social change groups, peak bodies and research and policy organisations such as the Institute of Family Studies.
Sociologists are involved in policy evaluation and program implementation. They are involved in promoting public debate, constructing competing ways of exploring questions facing our society and culture. In a whole range of areas, sociologists are employed in jobs that are part of shaping and making sense of the world we live in.
10. For more information
Dr Tim Marjoribanks
Director, Sociology
School of Political Science, Criminology and Sociology
Fourth Floor, John Medley Building
The University of Melbourne
Victoria 3010
Tel. +61 3 8344 7942
Fax. +61 3 8344 7906
First-year subjects
166-111 Australian Society
166-107 Media, Politics and Society
166-109 Cyberspace: The Last Frontier?
166-130 Globalisation, the Self & Society
Second/third-year subjects
Core subjects
166-081 Quantitative Social Research
166-082 Work, Management & Globalisation
166-083 Sociology of Youth & Youth Policy
166-085 Global Movements: Emerging Paradigms
166-086 Qualitative Research Strategies
166-089 Sociology Internship
166-090 Love, Family and Sexuality
166-091 Medicine, Health and Illness
166-210 Political Communication
166-216 Terrorism: Shifting Paradigms
121-017 Society and Environments
136-074 Modernity Revolution to Social Movements
191-008 Sociology of Crime and Deviance
Optional subjects
121-015 Development and the Third World
121-060 Power, Ideology and Inequality
121-457 Ethnic Nationalism and the Modern World
136-073 Critical Theories
166-004 Change & Conflict in Australian Society
191-003 Crime and Public Policy
Third/fourth-year subjects
166-485 Contemporary Sociological Theory
191-415 Youth Crime and Society
191-417 Corporate and White Collar Crime
191-422 Women, Gender and Crime
191-434 Victims
Fourth-year subjects
166-528 Sociology Thesis
166-410 Approaches to Political & Social Inquiry
166-413 Network Society
166-414 Comparative Social Policy
166-415 Organisations, Power and Society
166-516 Social Policy and Development
166-518 Policy Research Methods
166-525 Globalisation and Social Policy
121-503 Research Methods and Design
131-471 Postcolonial and Indigenous Histories
136-531 Genetics in Society
136-532 Reading Texts in Social Theory
136-533 Theories of Modernity
136-534 Imagined Societies
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