For students
The statement of graduate qualities of the University of South Australia
The following list of 7 qualities was agreed by the University of
South Australia community as appropriate to the University's distinct mission and profile.
A graduate of the University of South Australia:
- operates effectively with and upon a body of knowledge of sufficient depth to begin professional practice
- is prepared for life-long learning in pursuit of personal development and excellence in professional practice
- is an effective problem solver, capable of applying logical, critical, and creative thinking to a range of problems
- can work both autonomously and collaboratively as a professional
- is committed to ethical action and social responsibility as a professional and citizen
- communicates effectively in professional practice and as a member of the community
- demonstrates international perspectives as a professional and as a
citizen.
Each of the qualities has a set of indicators which serve as a guide to their development.
Indicators of graduate qualities |
| 1 |
A
graduate of the University of South Australia operates effectively
with and upon a body of knowledge of sufficient depth to begin
professional practice.
A graduate
will:
- demonstrate
an understanding in broad outline of a whole discipline or
professional area (concepts, theories, proponents) including a
knowledge of the boundaries
- apply
knowledge (demonstrate application of theory to practice in
real situations, appreciate limitations of theory, use
materials, devices, safety codes and practices, specific
equipment and techniques appropriately)
- identify the methodological and substantive limitations of
the field and apply the discipline or professional area's mode of
inquiry
- recognise
the social and historical context of knowledge
- demonstrate an understanding of the needs, interests,
protocols and perspectives of Indigenous groups
- demonstrate
appropriate understanding of current research areas in the
discipline or professional area.
|
| 2 |
A
graduate...is prepared for lifelong learning in pursuit of
personal development and excellence in professional practice.
A graduate
will:
- locate,
evaluate, manage and use information in a range of contexts -
i.e. be information literate
- understand
the limitations of, and have the capacity to evaluate, their
current knowledge
- understand
and accept personal weaknesses, strengths and preferred
learning styles, have knowledge of a range of learning
strategies, and take responsibility for their learning and
development
- respond
confidently to change in a flexible and adaptable manner
- maintain
a positive concept of self as capable and autonomous
- sustain
intellectual interest and critical thinking as a mature
professional.
|
| 3 |
A
graduate...is an effective problem solver, capable of applying
logical, critical and creative thinking to a range of problems.
A
graduate will:
- gather, evaluate and deploy relevant information to assist
problem solving - i.e. analysis and synthesis
- define
researchable questions in the discipline or professional area
- initiate
creative responses to problems and frame such responses as
opportunities
- apply
strategies to conceptualise problems and formulate a range of
solutions.
|
| 4 |
A
graduate...can work both autonomously and collaboratively as a
professional.
A graduate
will:
- work in a
self directed way
- use
logical and rational argument to persuade others, to negotiate
with others
- work
collaboratively with different groups, identify the needs of
others and build positive relationships
- provide
leadership within a team context by understanding
responsibilities for organisation, planning, influencing and
negotiating
- work in a
team (cooperate with all team members, share ideas, forgo
personal recognition, negotiate solutions when opinions
differ, resolve conflict, recognise strengths of other team
members, share responsibility, convey a shared vision for the
team, display a commitment to make the team function
effectively).
|
| 5 |
A
graduate...is committed to ethical action and social
responsibility as a professional and citizen.
A
graduate will:
- demonstrate
a commitment to personal ethical actions within professional
contexts
- define
social aspects of a particular technology (political,
economic, legislative, sociological, environmental etc)
- appreciate
the impact of social change, the political decision-making
process and economic imperatives of business and industry
- recognise
social justice issues relevant to the discipline and
professional area
- recognise
the potential social and economic impact of enterprise
activities upon particular social groups
- appreciate
the importance of sustainable development
- demonstrate responsibility to the community - be aware of
safety, efficiency, innovation, cost-effectiveness
- consider the relationship between the construction of power
and privilege and the ability of discipline knowledge to
perpetuate or dismantle social inequality with respect to
Indigenous groups.
|
| 6 |
A
graduate...communicates effectively in professional practice and
as a member of the community.
A graduate
will:
- demonstrate
oral, written, mathematical and visual literacies as
appropriate to the discipline or professional area
- display
sensitivity to their audience in organising and presenting
ideas
- communicate
appropriately with professional colleagues and the public.
|
| 7 |
A
graduate...demonstrates international perspectives as a
professional and as a citizen.
A graduate
will:
- display
an ability to think globally and consider issues from a
variety of perspectives
- demonstrate
an awareness of their own culture and its perspectives and
other cultures and their perspectives
- appreciate
the relation between their field of study locally and
professional traditions elsewhere
- recognise
intercultural issues relevant to their professional practice
- appreciate
the importance of multicultural diversity to professional
practice and citizenship
- appreciate
the complex and interacting factors that contribute to notions
of culture and cultural relationships
- value
diversity of language and culture
- appreciate
and demonstrate the capacity to apply international standards
and practices within the discipline or professional area
- demonstrate
awareness of the implications of local decisions and actions
for international communities and of international decisions
and actions for local communities.
|
Developments in other ATN universities
ATN project
Generic capabilities of ATN university graduates
This report is the outcome of a reflective, developmental process involving six academic development staff and thirteen course teams in the five ATN universities. The project involved the analysis of case studies from each institution, a review of the existing literature on graduate capabilities and reflection on the issues highlighted through the integration of the case studies with the literature.
ATN universities
Curtin University of Technology
Queensland University of Technology
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
Developments in other Australian universities
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