Bachelor of Health Sciences/Bachelor of Arts

2024 Deakin University Handbook

Year

2024 course information

Award granted

Bachelor of Health Sciences/Bachelor of Arts

Deakin course codeD391
Faculty

Faculty of Health

CampusOffered at Burwood (Melbourne), Waurn Ponds (Geelong)
OnlineYes
Duration4 years full-time or part-time equivalent
Course Map - enrolment planning tool

This course map is for new students commencing from Trimester 1 2024

This course map is for new students commencing from Trimester 2 2024

Course maps for commencement in previous years are available on the Course Maps webpage or please contact a Student Adviser in Student Central.

CRICOS course code035503K Burwood (Melbourne), Waurn Ponds (Geelong)
Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF) recognition

The award conferred upon completion is recognised in the Australian Qualifications Framework at Level 7

Note - Online is not available to international students.

Course sub-headings

Course overview

Build a degree tailored to your interests with a Bachelor of Health Sciences/Bachelor of Arts. This flexible and diverse degree will equip you with a unique skill set that will unlock wide-ranging career opportunities and give you a competitive edge in the job market. With over 35 major options, you will develop specialist knowledge in your chosen disciplines and learn how to apply critical, creative and strategic thinking to solve real-world issues.

Explore meaningful ideas that matter to you with your arts studies. Get the critical thinking, communication and leadership skills needed to address current and emerging global challenges in a rapidly changing world. Along with your research, analysis and problem-solving skills you will be highly employable in many areas and prepared for a successful career in the largest and fastest-growing employment sector in Australia, with employment in Health Care and Social Assistance projected to grow by 15.8% by 2026.^

Are you looking to develop a cross-disciplinary skill set that empowers you to design your own future?

This combined degree gives you the freedom to choose majors based on your interests to connect and expand your career prospects. You will study equal parts health sciences and arts, ensuring you graduate with a well-developed skill set in both disciplines.

Build a solid foundation in health while developing your skills across a range of arts, communications, humanities and social science disciplines. Create original course combinations by choosing majors including (but not limited to):

  • strategic advertising
  • criminology
  • disability and inclusion
  • education
  • family, society and health
  • food studies
  • health, nature and sustainability
  • health promotion
  • indigenous studies
  • international relations
  • sport journalism
  • media and communication
  • physical activity and health
  • politics and policy studies
  • public health
  • sociology
  • sport and society.

You will select either the Global Challenges sequence or the Employability sequence which enable you to develop the required skills for your dream career. Learn to respond to the evolving and dynamic landscape of work, society and the environment using your own innovative, inspiring and enthusiastic responses.

Do you have a desire to make a difference in the world or want to make an impact in your community? Then the Global Challenges sequence may be for you. You will learn how to approach, understand and respond to the large challenges that face us today. Advance your creativity and critical thinking whilst taking your communications skills to the next level. You will become a future leader ready to problem solve the challenges you face.

The Employability sequence provides real life experience during your course to develop the kinds of skills you will need in the workplace and demonstrating how to translate the skills you learn in your course into a successful career. Customisable to suit your interests, you can focus on leaderships skills, developing your entrepreneurial mindset or how to craft persuasive communications. It will give you an insight into how different organisations work, provide networking opportunities and real industry engagement that are tailored to your individual career aspirations.

Further opportunities to pursue work-integrated learning experiences and industry practicums are available throughout the course, including the Health practicum offered in the health promotion major, giving you the option to complete 120 hours of work experience in a health-related organisation.

You will gain invaluable experience by immersing yourself in your chosen field – whether it’s helping to design public relations campaigns for major food companies or working at grassroots level in the community through health education programs.

You may also have the opportunity to experience different cultures by taking your studies abroad. Various in-country and authentic virtual global experiences can be undertaken as part of your studies. Gain a global perspective that will give you an international outlook and a competitive edge.

^2021 Employment Projections – for the five years to November 2026, Australian Government, Jobs and Skills Australia.

This course sits as part of a larger group of courses. For more information refer to the Health group.

Indicative student workload

As a student in the Faculty of Health you can expect to participate in a range of teaching activities each week. This could include lectures, seminars, practicals and online interaction. You can refer to the individual unit details in the course structure for more information. You will also need to study and complete assessment tasks in your own time.

Career opportunities

Blend creativity and empathy to make a positive impact and fortify your future health career with a solid grounding in the arts. Gain the skills to bridge gaps between art, culture, and well-being. Your career opportunities from this degree will vary depending on the majors you have selected. You will be curating your future career from day one and graduating with a variety of career paths that you could pursue.

Studying health sciences could lead you into careers in areas such as:

  • community health
  • counselling
  • disability and inclusion
  • environmental health
  • health education
  • health promotion
  • nutrition
  • regional health service planning
  • sports development.

An arts degree provides you with solid transferable skills that can be applied across diverse industries and careers. Depending on your majors, you could find yourself in fields such as:

  • advertising and marketing
  • criminology, sociology and policy
  • culture and creative arts
  • education
  • government and NGO’s
  • language and international relations
  • media, writing and communication
  • international relations and politics.

Your majors can also help you pursue careers where your degrees overlap. Careers such as health media, food writing, international relations and public relations for health and food organisations all require the skills acquired from both health science and arts degrees.

At Deakin, you will feel supported as you shape your future career, whether you want to work in a specific sector or industry, an emerging job of the future or even create a dream career that might not yet exist – a world of opportunity awaits.

Mandatory student checks

Any unit which contains work integrated learning, a community placement or interaction with the community may require a police check, working with children check or other check. Please refer to the relevant unit guide.

Pathways

This course provides a pathway to higher degree by research courses and other postgraduate coursework programs in a wide range of areas including public health, health economics, public health nutrition.


Alternative exits

Bachelor of Health Sciences (H300)
Bachelor of Arts (A310)

Articulated courses

Bachelor of Arts (Honours) (A400)
Bachelor of Communication (Honours) (A451)
Bachelor of Creative Arts (Honours) (A450)
Bachelor of Film, Television and Animation (Honours) (A452)
Bachelor of Health Sciences (Honours) (H400)

Fees and charges

Fees and charges vary depending on the type of fee place you hold, your course, your commencement year, the units you choose to study and their study discipline, and your study load.

Tuition fees increase at the beginning of each calendar year and all fees quoted are in Australian dollars ($AUD). Tuition fees do not include textbooks, computer equipment or software, other equipment or costs such as mandatory checks, travel and stationery.

Use the Fee estimator to see course and unit fees applicable to your course and type of place. For further information regarding tuition fees, other fees and charges, invoice due dates, withdrawal dates, payment methods visit our Current students website.

Course Learning Outcomes

See course entry for Bachelor of Health Sciences (H300) or Bachelor of Arts (A310)

Course rules

To complete the Bachelor of Health Sciences/Bachelor of Arts students must attain 32 credit points. Most units (think of units as 'subjects') are equal to 1 credit point. In order to gain 32 credit points you will need to study 32 units (AKA 'subjects') over your entire degree. Most students choose to study 4 units per trimester and usually undertake two trimesters each year.

You must fulfil the requirements of each of the two degrees in your course of study.

The course comprises a total of 32 credit points which must include:

  • 16 credit points from the Faculty of Health including 6 compulsory core units in the Bachelor of Health Sciences PLUS one major (6 credit points) and one minor (4 credit points)
  • 16 credit points from the Faculty of Arts comprising of core units in either the Global Challenge sequence (3 credit points) or Employability sequence (3 credit points) PLUS one major sequence (8 credit points) as described under course A310 Bachelor of Arts. The remaining credit point(s) may be used to undertake a Bachelor of Arts minor sequence or to take additional elective units chosen from the Bachelor of Arts. A minimum of 4 credit points at level 3 of Arts coded units.

All commencing Faculty of Health Undergraduate course work students are required to complete DAI001* Academic Integrity in their first trimester of study (0 credit point compulsory unit).

Students are required to meet the University's academic progress and conduct requirements.

Major sequences

Health Majors - Major and minor sequence available unless stated otherwise

Arts Majors - Major and minor sequence available unless stated otherwise

Course structure

Core units

The course structure includes 16 credit points from each of the two component courses. The 16-unit maximum size of the component degrees of combined courses does not permit students in D391 to complete two major sequences within the Health Sciences degree. For this reason, they are restricted to a major sequence and a minor sequence.

The sixteen credit points within the Health Sciences component of the combined course are made up of:

  • The six core units of the Bachelor of Health Sciences;
  • A major sequence of six credit points consisting of the specified units at Levels 1, 2 and 3
  • A minor sequence of four credit points, consisting of at least one unit at Level 1 and no more than one unit at Level 3 (subject to pre-requisite requirements) from the set of approved minor sequences.

Students cannot select a minor in Environmental Health, or Psychological Science, due to difficulties of sequencing and in maintaining curriculum logic.

Level 1 - Trimester 1

DAI001Academic Integrity Module (0 credit points)

HBS107Understanding Health

Level 1 - Trimester 2

HBS108Health Information and Data

Level 2 - Trimester 1

HSH211Australian Health Care System

Level 2 - Trimester 2

HSH219Population Health: A Research Perspective

Level 3 - Trimester 1

HSH323Program Planning, Management and Evaluation

Level 3 - Trimester 2

HSH324Integrated Learning for Practice


The sixteen credit points within the Arts and Education component of the combined course are made up of:

  • The 3 credit points in the Employability sequence OR 3 credit points in Global Challenge sequence;
  • A major sequence of 8 credit points as described under course A310 Bachelor of Arts;
  • Remaining credit point(s) may be used to undertake a Bachelor of Arts minor sequence or to take additional elective unit chosen from the Bachelor of Arts.
  • A minimum of 4 credit points at level 3 of Arts coded units.

Employability sequence

AWL100Your Future Direction

Plus 1 credit point from:

AWL200Leadership and Transformation

AWL201Communication and Persuasive Presentation

AWL202Entrepreneurial Mindset

AWL203Expand Your Experience

Plus 1 credit point from:

AWL300Internship

AWL301Enhance Your Experience

AWL302Your Professional Story

OR

Global Challenges sequence

AGC109Global Challenges and Personal Agency

AGC209Global Challenges and Innovation Strategies

AGC309Global Challenges and Collaborative Action

Work experience

Work Integrated Learning

A core unit at third-year level, based on inter-professional learning (IPL), provides students the opportunity to draw together their cross-disciplinary learning to demonstrate the knowledge and the skills they have acquired throughout the course and apply them to real-world issues. HSH324 Integrated Learning for Practice involves interdisciplinary teams working to develop responses to real-world problems for presentation to a professional audience.

Other course information

Course duration

Course duration may be affected by delays in completing course requirements, such as accessing or completing work placements.

Further information

Student Central can help you with course planning, choosing the right units and explaining course rules and requirements.

Research and research-related study

The degree includes two core units that offer research-related study, HBS108 Health Information and Data and HSH219 Population Health: A Research Perspective. HBS108 provides the basic skills necessary to be consumers and providers of health research information. The unit comprises nine topics, covering: measuring health and disease in populations, introduction to qualitative research, study design, obtaining online health information, evaluating popular health claims, introduction to quantitative research, evidence-based practice including critical appraisal. HSH219 aims to introduce students to the principles and practices of research in public health and health promotion with a focus on current population health issues using qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods approaches. The unit covers topics such as the development and expression of research aims, questions and hypotheses; the application of appropriate research methods specific to research questions; and the different ways of collecting data in various research settings. In addition, the capstone unit in the final year, HSH324 Integrated Learning for Practice may provide some students with further opportunities to conduct research activities dependent on the nature of projects offered by employers/organisations. Finally, a range of units across the majors incorporate smaller applied research tasks, such as health needs analyses of specific groups, service profiles, social issues research etc.