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Postgraduate Certificate of Lifelong Learning (PGLL) - PGradCertLifelongLrng
This program is offered only to continuing students.
No new admissions will be accepted. Students who are interested in
this study area should contact us.
| | Online |
| Fees: | Student contribution amount Tuition fee International fee
|
| Standard duration: | 1 semester full-time, up to 3 years part-time |
Notes
This program does not qualify you for teacher registration with
relevant teaching authorities. If you are interested in a program
that enables you to qualify for teacher registration, please refer
to the Graduate Diploma in Learning and Teaching.

Contact us

Program focus
The program is designed to meet the professional and continuing
education needs of a wide range of lifelong learning professionals
in a variety of education-related settings and sectors. Facilitators
of lifelong learning should have a clear understanding of the characteristics
of adolescent and adult learners and the nature of learning processes
utilised by them. Such appreciation will be contextualised by global
trends (globalisation, individualisation, workforce deregulation,
knowledge society, knowledge economy, global marketplace) which emphasise
the key role of lifelong and life wide learning in contemporary societies.
Such knowledge underpins the educator’s capability to respond
positively to dynamic learning futures. The main focus of the teaching
and learning will be to develop critical thinking, intellectual engagement
and the students’ ability to design, develop, implement, manage
and evaluate programs. A key feature of the program is that it prepares
graduates who value diversity and inclusiveness, who are innovators
and navigators of sustainable change. Students are encouraged to become
engaged professionals and collaborative members of a learning community.
We are currently redeveloping our programs for 2009. This area
of study will remain available, with greater flexibility.

Program aims
The program is designed to meet the professional and continuing
education needs of a wide range of professionals in a variety of education-related
settings and sectors. Facilitators of lifelong learning should have
a clear understanding of the characteristics of adolescent and adult
learners and the nature of learning processes utilised by them. Such
appreciation will be contextualised by global trends (globalisation,
individualisation, workforce deregulation, knowledge society, knowledge
economy, global marketplace) which emphasise the key role of lifelong
and lifewide learning in contemporary societies. Such knowledge underpins
the educator's capability to respond positively to dynamic learning
futures. The main focus of the teaching and learning will be to develop
critical thinking, intellectual engagement and the students’
ability to design, develop, implement, manage and evaluate programs.
A key feature of the program is that it prepares graduates who value
diversity and inclusiveness, who are innovators and navigators of
sustainable change. Students are encouraged to become engaged professionals
and collaborative members of a learning community.

Program objectives
Graduates of the PGLL will:
-
critique the impact of social, economic and global issues influencing
the emergence of lifelong and lifewide learning in order to be an
innovative leader in lifelong learning
-
engage with and critically reflect upon theoretical frameworks
and key concepts in the area of lifelong and lifewide learning as
relevant to a variety of transnational and multi-sectoral contexts
-
develop their own capacity to be self-directed in learning exemplifying
adult and continuing education practices
-
develop capacity to assess and acknowledge the effectiveness
of student learning in a variety of lifelong learning contexts
-
extend knowledge and competencies to design, develop, implement
and evaluate lifelong learning programs in a variety of contexts.

Admission requirements
Normal Entry
To be considered eligible for admission to the Postgraduate
Certificate of Lifelong Learning, applicants must normally have:
-
completed an undergraduate degree or equivalent from a recognised
university
-
access to an educational environment, e.g. workplace training
in business and industry setting, formal educational settings, distributed
learning networks, and adult and community learning
-
appropriate resources to facilitate ready access to the Internet
-
ready access to a personal email address
-
the skills required to access and manipulate materials delivered
electronically.
International applicants must meet the University’s requirements
for English proficiency.
Special Entry
Persons who do not hold an undergraduate degree, but who can
demonstrate a significant history of work in online learning environments
would be eligible for enrolment. Requirements at dot points 2, 3,
4 and 5 above would still apply.
International applicants must have met the University's
English language requirements or have completed the University's
ELICOS/UNIPREP program.

Program fees
Student contribution amount
For domestic students who are offered Commonwealth supported
places, the Government pays some money directly to the University,
but students are also required to make a contribution. This contribution
is called the ‘student contribution’. For more information
about student contribution amounts, including the calculation of fees
for a particular program of study, refer to USQ fees.
Tuition fee
Domestic fee-paying places are funded entirely through the tuition/direct
fees paid by the student. Tuition/direct fees vary depending on the
courses that are taken. For more information about Tuition Fees, including
the calculation of fees for a particular program of study, refer to USQ Fees.
International fees
International students pay tuition fees. For details about international
student fees, refer to the International Fee Schedule provided by USQ International.

Program structure
The Postgraduate Certificate in Lifelong Learning is comprised
of four postgraduate courses drawn from a suite of courses offered
within the Master of Lifelong Learning.
To be awarded a postgraduate certificate, students must complete:
Under exceptional circumstances, at the discretion of the Program
Coordinator, one unit may be completed at level 4.

Required time limits
Students have a maximum of 3 years to complete this program.

Exemptions
Exemptions for courses in the Postgraduate Certificate program
may be granted where applicants can demonstrate that they have successfully
completed an equivalent postgraduate course or have otherwise achieved
the objectives of the relevant course. Exemptions may be granted on
the basis of professional development activities or extensive work
experience if it can be demonstrated that through those activities
the student has achieved learning outcomes equivalent to those of
a relevant postgraduate course. Where a student's program of study
includes electives, exemption may be granted for one or more electives
where students can demonstrate successful completion of work of a
type and standard equivalent to an elective study ..
Students intending to apply for exemptions should consult the University Academic Regulations. Applications for exemption
will be expected to comply with the relevant USQ and Faculty regulations
and should demonstrate that the objectives of the course for which
exemption is sought have been achieved. Within the framework of those
regulations, the following points should be given particular consideration:
-
the maximum number of units which may be exempted in the Postgraduate
Certificate is two
-
students may not claim exemption for work on which they relied
for admission to the program
-
exemptions will not normally be granted for study completed
more than five years prior to submission of the application for exemption
-
applications for exemption on the basis of study completed prior
to entering the program will NOT normally be accepted beyond the end
of the first semester of enrolment in the Postgraduate Certificate.
-
credit will not normally be granted for work undertaken concurrently
with the Postgraduate Certificate unless the application is submitted
and approved before the work is undertaken with credit subject to
satisfactory completion of the approved work.
Students should seek advice from the Program Administrator before
applying for exemptions. Detailed information about requirements for
exemptions may be available for specific courses.
Credit for courses passed in an incomplete program may be transferred
where those courses form part of the Postgraduate Certificate in Education.

Recommended enrolment pattern
To be awarded a postgraduate certificate in the Faculty of
Education, a student must have normally completed 4 units at postgraduate
level, of which no more than two can be at level 8. Under exceptional
circumstances, at the discretion of the Program Coordinator, one unit
may be completed at level 4.
The enrolment pattern should follow the Program Structure as
previously indicated
Notes:
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It is recommended that the program of study commence with one
of the courses in the Foundation Studies section of the table.
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It is recommended that courses listed as Year 1 be completed
before courses listed as Year 2 in the table below.
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It is recommended that course FET5602 Theories for Learning Futures, be studied prior to courses FET8603, FET8605 or FET8607.