Course Title: Criminology
Part A: Course Overview
Program: C6077
Course Title: Criminology
Portfolio: DSC
Nominal Hours: 68.0
Regardless of the mode of delivery, represent a guide to the relative teaching time and student effort required to successfully achieve a particular competency/module. This may include not only scheduled classes or workplace visits but also the amount of effort required to undertake, evaluate and complete all assessment requirements, including any non-classroom activities.Course Code |
Campus |
Career |
School |
Learning Mode |
Teaching Period(s) |
JUST5150 |
City Campus |
TAFE |
365T Global Studies, Soc Sci & Plng |
Face-to-Face or Workplace |
Term1 2009,
Term1 2010, Term1 2011, Term1 2013 |
Course Contact: Michelle Noon
Course Contact Phone: 9925 4581
Course Contact Email: michelle.noon@rmit.edu.au
Course Description
The aim of this course is to introduce students to the study of crime, substantive areas of offending behaviour, and the implications of criminological knowledge for policy formulation and crime prevention strategy.
Pre-requisite Courses and Assumed Knowledge and Capabilities
VBQU369 Apply Research Techniques within a Justice Framework
National Competency Codes and Titles
National Element Code & Title: |
VBQM391 Criminology |
Learning Outcomes
This course aims to enable students to:
- Describe the broad nature of crime and criminology and demonstrate the linkages between theory and policy
- Demonstrate understanding of the historical evolution of criminology, showing ideological changes and similarities in approaches to crime, from early civilisation to contemporary times
- Analyse the nature, extent and patterns of crime, in Australia and globally
- Evaluate the validity of official crime statistics
- Demonstrate an understanding of the causes of crime
- Analyse the role of criminal profiling and its relevance to criminal investigation
- Demonstrate understanding of the major forms of criminal behaviour, their known patterns and correlates, and specify the measures designed to prevent or contain them
- Explain the rise of victimology as a major focus of study, and the importance of the victim’s role in the criminal process
Overview of Assessment
Assessment is designed to cover all Learning Outcomes and students will be expected to: participate in class and on-line discussions and debates, complete two closed book examinations, undertake a small scale research project and present their findings and write one 2000 word essay.