Understanding the diversity of non-specialised units within Australian property degrees


Autoria(s): Susilawati, Connie; Armitage, Lynne
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

Building on the recommendations of the Bradley Review (2008), the Australian Federal government intends to promote a higher level of penetration of tertiary qualification across the broader Australian community which is anticipated to result in increased levels of standardisation across university degrees. In the field of property, tertiary academic programs are very closely aligned to the needs of a range of built environment professions and there are well developed synergies between the relevant professional bodies and the educational institutions. The strong nexus between the academic and the professional content is characterised by ongoing industry accreditation which nominates a range of outcomes which the academic programs must maintain across a range of specified metrics. Commonly, the accrediting bodies focus on standard of minimum requirements especially in the area of specialised subject areas where they require property graduates to demonstrate appropriate learning and attitudes. In addition to nominated content fields, in every undergraduate degree program there are also many other subjects which provide a richer experience for the students beyond the merely professional. This study focuses on the nonspecialised knowledge field which varies across the universities offering property degree courses as every university has the freedom to pursue its own policy for these non-specialised units. With universities being sensitive to their role of in the appropriate socialisation of new entrants, first year units have been used as a vehicle to support students’ transition into university education and the final year units seek to support students’ integration into the professional world. Consequentially, many property programs have to squeeze their property-specific units to accommodate more generic units for both first year and final year units and the resulting diversity is a feature of the current range of property degrees across Australia which this research will investigate. The matrix of knowledge fields nominated by the Australian Property Institute for accreditation of degrees accepted for Certified Practising Valuer (CPV) educational requirement and the complementary requirements of the other major accrediting body (RICS) are used to classify and compare similarities and differences across property degrees in the light of the streamlining anticipated from the Bradley Review.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/46331/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/46331/1/2011011691_Full_Paper.pdf

http://www.prres.net/papers/Susilawati_and_Armitage_Non_specialised_property_subjects.pdf

Susilawati, Connie & Armitage, Lynne (2011) Understanding the diversity of non-specialised units within Australian property degrees. In The17th Pacific Rim Real Estate Society Conference.

Direitos

Copyright 2011 (please consult the authors).

Fonte

Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; School of Urban Development

Palavras-Chave #120503 Housing Markets Development Management #130212 Science Technology and Engineering Curriculum and Pedagogy #Property Education in Australia #Professional Accrditation #Non-specialised Subjects #Undergraduate Transition #HERN
Tipo

Conference Paper