Bachelor of Environmental Science (Marine Biology)
2022 Deakin University Handbook
Year | 2022 course information |
---|---|
Award granted | Bachelor of Environmental Science (Marine Biology) |
Course Map | This course map is for new students commencing from Trimester 1 2022. This course map is for new students commencing from Trimester 2 2022. |
Campus | Warrnambool |
Cloud Campus | No |
Duration | 3 years full-time or part-time equivalent |
CRICOS course code | 053749E Waurn Ponds (Geelong), Warrnambool |
Deakin course code | S399 |
Approval status | This course is approved by the University under the Higher Education Standards Framework. |
Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF) recognition | The award conferred upon completion is recognised in the Australian Qualifications Framework at Level 7. |
Course sub-headings
- Course overview
- Indicative student workload
- Career opportunities
- Participation requirements
- Mandatory student checks
- Fees and charges
- Course Learning Outcomes
- Course rules
- Course structure
- Work experience
- Other learning experiences
Course overview
Study Deakin’s Bachelor of Environmental Science (Marine Biology) at our Warrnambool Campus and gain extensive hands-on experience exploring coastal ecosystems and marine environments in an area that has some of the richest biodiversity in Australia. With a biological and ecological focus, this course equips you with the skills and knowledge to sustainably manage precious marine environments in the classroom and through hands-on field trips in beautiful surrounds.
Gain practical experience with hands-on field trips in beautiful surroundings and improve your skills through placement opportunities with prominent marine and environmental organisations. Develop a deep understanding of how marine ecosystems function and skills in modern scientific research methods under the guidance of established scientists, while building professional relationships that can help you when you graduate.
Want to study marine biology in some of the best natural marine and coastal environments in Australia?
Learning through extensive fieldwork in natural marine environments and ecosystems along the Victorian coast, you will gain a distinct advantage over marine biology students studying elsewhere. You will conduct fieldwork in estuaries, intertidal rocky shores, shallow marine habitats and sandy beaches, and develop professional skills in modern scientific research methods, ecological impact assessments and marine and coastal management.
Through this exposure to real-life experiences, you will discover the great diversity that exists in coastal and oceanic ecosystems and learn how to use scientific methods and tools to sustainably manage precious marine environments and resources, relevant in Australia and overseas.
You will have the opportunity to leverage our extensive industry connections to undertake volunteer projects and placements with government and industry organisations including:
- Parks Victoria
- Catchment Management Authorities
- aquaculture industries
- environmental consultants
- aquariums
- Queenscliff Marine Discovery Centre
Placements allow you to kickstart your career by networking with potential employers. For those looking to expand their global network, there are also opportunities to gain a broader view of the world by electing to study and volunteer overseas.
This course has a strong ecological focus, linking biological and oceanographic processes in the study of marine environments. You will learn about a range of marine and coastal ecosystems from coral reefs to icebergs, estuaries to oceans, and surf zones to the deep abyss. Through fieldwork you will also directly observe, and investigate, how marine ecosystems function, how marine organisms interact with their living and non-living environments, and how we can identify and measure human impacts on these environments. This will prepare you for the challenges you will face after graduation, so you can enter the workforce with the skills needed to tackle industry problems.
Indicative student workload
Students can expect to participate in a range of teaching activities each week. This could include classes, seminars, field trips, practicals and online interaction. Individual unit details in the course structure provide specific information relating to teaching activities in each unit. Students also need to study and complete assessment tasks in their own time.
Career opportunities
As a graduate with far-reaching knowledge of marine biology and extensive fieldwork experience you’ll be sought-after in a wide range of roles including:
- marine educator (e.g. marine aquaria or ecotourism)
- park ranger
- fisheries officer
- aquaculture technician or manager
- marine biology consultant
- laboratory technician
- local government environmental officer
- sustainability project officer
- employee of local water authorities and GIS analysts.
The development of transferable soft skills, research skills and critical thinking also makes graduates more broadly employable across the environmental science and management sectors.
Once you’ve gained five years’ experience working in the environmental industry, you may be eligible to become a Certified Environmental Practitioner through the Environment Institute of Australia and New Zealand (EIANZ). For full membership details, visit https://www.eianz.org/membership-information/membership-categories.
Participation requirements
Placement can occur at any time, including during the standard holiday breaks listed here: https://www.deakin.edu.au/courses/key-dates.
Elective units may be selected that include compulsory placements, work-based training, community-based learning or collaborative research training arrangements.
Reasonable adjustments to participation and other course requirements will be made for students with a disability. Click here for more information.
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.
Course expenses
In addition to student contribution fees, students should be aware that they may be required to meet their own expenses in connection with travel, food and accommodation while on fieldwork.
Fees and charges
Fees and charges vary depending on your course, the type of fee place you hold, your commencement year, the units you choose and your study load. To find out about the fees and charges that apply to you, visit the Current students fees website or our handy Fee estimator to help estimate your tuition fees.
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 photocopying or travel.
Course Learning Outcomes
Deakin Graduate Learning Outcomes | Course Learning Outcomes |
Discipline-specific knowledge and capabilities | Appreciate the structural make up of coastal and marine environments, their physical and chemical characteristics and interaction to recognise how organisms live and exist in dynamic environments. Articulate the form and functions of organisms and how they manage environmental challenges in highly diverse and dynamic environments. Assess habitats and organisms and recognise sustainability issues and concerns to manage and conserve animals and plants within marine environments and to evaluate sustainability. |
Communication | Use appropriate scientific language and formats including written, visual, oral and graphical forms to communicate with a range of audiences, including the general public, environmental managers and scientists. Generate, analyse and present key information in a professional manner with evidence from local, national, and international contributions and contexts. |
Digital literacy | Use well developed technical skills and judgement to locate, analyse and synthesise information and responsibly disseminate information using a variety of tools and techniques. |
Critical thinking | Locate and evaluate scientific information from multiple sources and use scientific methods and frameworks to structure and plan observations, experimentation, fieldwork investigations and to undertake environmental impact and risk assessment. Use critical and analytical thinking and judgement to analyse, synthesise and generate an integrated knowledge, formulate hypotheses and test them against evidence-based scientific concepts and principles in the context of aquatic environment. |
Problem solving | Identify possible causes, effects and underlying environmental problems, brainstorm potential solutions, and develop criteria for evaluating those solutions. Provide specialist advice to solve environmental problems by designing and planning investigations and using scientific tools and techniques to apply systems and management perspectives to formulate future sustainability and conservation solutions to problems. |
Self-management | Work independently and responsibly with initiative and judgement to function safely and professionally in a manner that assimilates feedback and incorporates refection for future learning and ethical practice. |
Teamwork | Collaboratively work with others in order to critically analyse, problem solve, develop and manage plans for generating sustainable processes and solutions to manage and conserve the environment. |
Global citizenship | Adopt and value multidisciplinary knowledge and perspectives for evaluating, integrating and incorporating strategies and solutions in scoping, planning and managing alternative sustainable solutions from local to global environmental problems. Adopt, appreciate and respect scientific morals and ethics, including working with animals. |
Approved by Faculty Board 27 June 2019
Course rules
To complete the Bachelor of Environmental Science (Marine Biology), students must attain 24 credit points, which must include the following:
- Nineteen (19) core units (19 credit points);
- Five (5) credit points of elective units;
- Completion of STP050 Academic Integrity (0-credit point compulsory unit);
- Completion of SLE010 Laboratory and Fieldwork Safety Induction Program (0 credit-point compulsory unit);
- Completion of STP010 Career Tools for Employability (0 credit-point compulsory unit);
- Level 1 - up to 10 credit points;
- Level 3 - at least 6 credit points.
Students are required to meet the University's academic progress and conduct requirements. Click here for more information.
Course structure
Core
Level 1 - Trimester 1
STP050 | Academic Integrity (0 credit points) |
SLE010 | Laboratory and Fieldwork Safety Induction Program (0 credit points) |
SLE103 | Ecology and the Environment |
SLE104 | The Blue Planet: Water and Life |
SLE111 | Cells and Genes |
SLE133 | Chemistry in Our World |
Level 1 - Trimester 2
STP010 | Career Tools for Employability (0 credit points) |
SLE121 | Environmental Sustainability |
SLE105 | Marine Pollution and Water Quality |
SLE163 | Marine and Coastal Ecosystems |
Plus one elective unit (one credit point)
Level 2 - Trimester 1
SLE219 | Marine Invertebrates |
SLE265 | Marine Botany |
SLE201 | Society and Environment |
SLE251 | Research Methods and Data Analysis # |
Level 2 - Trimester 2
SLE291 | Marine Vertebrates |
SLE244 | Marine Ecology |
SLE262 | Aquaculture and the Environment |
Plus one elective unit (one credit point)
Level 3 - Trimester 1
SLE301 | Professional Practice # |
SLE304 | Geographic Information Systems for Marine Environments |
SLE305 | Integrating Marine, Coastal and Catchment Management |
Plus one elective unit (one credit point)
Level 3 - Trimester 2
SLE325 | Marine Ecotoxicology and Risk Assessment |
SLE349 | Catchments to Coasts |
Plus two elective units (two credit points)
# Must have successfully completed STP010 Career Tools for Employability (0 credit point unit)
Electives
Select from a range of elective units offered across many courses. In some cases you may even be able to choose elective units from a completely different discipline area (subject to meeting unit requirements).
It is important to note that some elective units may include compulsory placement, study tours, work-based training or collaborative research training arrangements.
Work experience
The course includes a compulsory professional practice unit that requires you to undertake at least 80 hours of work experience in a course-related host organisation. You’ll gain practical experience by completing a two week placement at a course-related host organisation to provide you with opportunities for workplace visits, field trips, industry learning and to establish valuable networks – giving you better insight into your possible career outcomes.
You’ll also have the opportunity to undertake a discipline-specific industry placement as part of your course. deakin.edu.au/sebe/wil.
Elective units may also provide additional opportunities for Work Integrated Learning experiences.
Other course information
Course duration - additional information
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.
- Contact Student Central
Other learning experiences
To broaden your experience of the world, you will have an opportunity to participate in overseas placements and study tours as an elective option in your course.