Graduate Certificate of Urban Informatics
Course handbook
General Information
Overview
The Graduate Certificate of Urban Informatics focuses on designing for healthy city futures by embracing creative and speculative design thinking, cross-disciplinarity, alongside engagement with people, data and advanced technologies. Cities are growing at an unprecedented rate with over fifty percent of the world’s population now living in cities. This mass urbanisation presents urgent challenges, such as accommodating dense populations, responding to climate change, public health, housing affordability, urban mobility, and growing spatial complexity. These challenges cannot be addressed using traditional twentieth century urban planning methods – new multi-dimensional approaches are needed by professionals that embrace three dimensional space, big-data along with change over time, temperature, humidity, sun and shade, air quality, land use, safety, alongside economic, environmental, social and cultural aspects of the city.
Graduate will have skills and knowledge to respond to these critical challenges and be prepared to make meaningful contributions in careers such as specialist urban informatics consultant, or when completed in addition to a professional degree such as planning, landscape architect or architect, urban designer in private practice or local government positions in planning authorities and local city councils.
Study structure
Successful completion of the Graduate Certificate of Urban Informatics requires students to complete units of study to the value of 50 credit points. All units of study are valued at 12.5 credit points unless otherwise stated.
Full-time study: 100 credit points/eight standard units of study per year
Part-time study: 50 credit points/four standard units of study per year
One credit point is equivalent to one hour of study per week per semester (including contact hours and private study)
See the course planner for an example degree structure
Full-time study: 100 credit points/eight standard units of study per year
One credit point is equivalent to one hour of study per week per semester (including contact hours and private study)
See the course planner for an example degree structure.
Units of study | Unit code |
---|---|
Core units | |
Dynamic Modelling of Cities
Core unit, 12.5 credit points |
ARC80001 |
Theories of Buildings and Cities
Core unit, 12.5 credit points |
ARC70004 |
Urban Informatics and Modelling
Core unit, 12.5 credit points |
ARC70005 |
Urban Economics, Planning and Urban Design
Core unit, 12.5 credit points |
ARC80006 |
Aims and Objectives
Students who successfully complete the Graduate Certificate of Urban Informatics will be able to apply specialised knowledge in Urban Informatics and will be able to:
critically reflect on and apply knowledge of contemporary Urban theory demonstrating comprehension of international and local planning theory and history, urban economics, sustainability and strategic planning
apply analytical design research methods with an understanding of sourcing credible, relevant data to investigate, analyse and synthesise complex information, problems, concepts and theories and apply these to the broader social, economic and environmental urban processes
apply spatial thinking and innovation approaches in a range of settings and scales while critically presenting design research results to explain, interpret and evaluate the impact urban situation
communicate clearly and concisely using a range of media
apply technical design modelling and planning skills to research, analyse, design, and evaluate plans, policies, strategies and guidelines, land uses allocations, resources and manage implementation processes.
Career opportunities
Graduate will have skills and knowledge to respond to these critical challenges and be prepared to make meaningful contributions in careers as specialist urban informatics consultants, or when completed in addition to a professional degree such as planning, landscape architecture or architecture, as urban designers in private practices or local government positions in planning authorities and local city councils.
Graduate skills
The Swinburne graduate attributes signify that Swinburne intends that its teaching courses assist all its graduates to be:
capable in their chosen professional, vocational or study areas
entrepreneurial in contributing to innovation and development within their business, workplace or community
effective and ethical in work and community situations
adaptable and able to manage change
aware of local and international environments in which they will be contributing.
Maximum Academic Credit
The maximum level of credit that can be granted for the Graduate Certificate of Urban Informatics is 25 credit points (normally two units).
Admission criteria
Information about Swinburne's general admission criteria can be found at Admissions at Swinburne - Higher Education webpage.
Interested in the Graduate Certificate of Urban Informatics?
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