Back to Find Units Page
Unit of Study SOC20003 - Society, Health and Illness (2015)
Show me unit information for year
Unit Snapshot
-
Unit type
UG Coursework Unit
-
Credit points
12
-
AQF level
-
Level of learning
Intermediate
-
Former School/College
-
Pre-requisites
SOC00118 - Introduction to Sociology
AND 36 credit points in any SCU units
-
Enrolment information
N/A
Learning outcomes and graduate attributes
Unit Learning Outcomes express learning achievement in terms of what a student should know, understand and be able to do on completion of a unit. These outcomes are aligned with the graduate attributes. The unit learning outcomes and graduate attributes are also the basis of evaluating prior learning.
On completion of this unit, students should be able to:
Learning outcome count | Learning outcome description | GA1 | GA2 | GA3 | GA4 | GA5 | GA6 | GA7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | critically analyse sociological perspectives on health and illness | |||||||
2 | recognise how health, illness and the healthcare system are outcomes of the ways in which society is organised | |||||||
3 | identify the social, economic, political and cultural aspects involved in reproducing or changing health inequalities in Australian society | |||||||
4 | critically evaluate health status in relation to stratification concepts of class, gender, ethnicity and regionality. |
On completion of this unit, students should be able to:
-
critically analyse sociological perspectives on health and illness
- GA4:
-
recognise how health, illness and the healthcare system are outcomes of the ways in which society is organised
- GA7:
-
identify the social, economic, political and cultural aspects involved in reproducing or changing health inequalities in Australian society
- GA1:
-
critically evaluate health status in relation to stratification concepts of class, gender, ethnicity and regionality.
- GA4:
Prescribed learning resources
Prescribed Texts
- No prescribed texts.
Prescribed Learning Resources may change in future Teaching Periods.