(1) This document sets out the Procedures governing revision and closure of courses and course components at the University of Canberra (University). (2) This Procedure applies to all award courses offered by the University and is applicable to revisions and closures of courses and course components, including majors, minors and units. (3) This Procedure complements the New Course Development Policy and New Course Development Procedure. In some circumstances revisions to an existing course may be treated as a new course proposal. (4) The approval process is facilitated by Learning and Teaching (L&T) for any approvals required above the faculty level. (5) On receipt of a revision request from a faculty, Learning and Teaching will review the submission for quality assurance and Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF) compliance. If approval is required above the faculty level, this will be arranged by Learning and Teaching. (Templates with guidelines are available from the Manager, Course Quality Assurance, Learning and Teaching.) (6) Once approval is granted, central business units will implement the revisions and communicate these changes to other relevant units. If the revisions require transitional arrangements or other communication with students, this will be managed at the Faculty level. (7) A revised course that has been formally closed, or involves a change to course name, award title, Field of Education (FoE), total number of credit points or course level must be allocated a new course code and is therefore treated as a new course. Please see New Course Development Policy and New Course Development Procedure for more information on this process. (8) A revised course component that has been closed previously or involves a change to title, Field of Education (FoE), credit point value, level, faculty or discipline must be allocated a new unit or unit set code. (9) Revisions to a course or course component other than those listed at clause 7 and clause 8 may require a new version but not a code. This will be determined by Learning and Teaching after reviewing the proposal. (10) Unless specifically approved by Academic Board, revisions to a course or course component will only apply to new students who commence from a specified teaching period. (11) Proposals to revise courses or course components which are to be applied to existing students must specify transition arrangements for enrolled students where applicable, to minimise detrimental impact on students. These arrangements must be managed at the faculty level, including communication with students and organising any necessary changes to credit or enrolment with Student Connect. (12) Information required by Learning and Teaching for revisions includes a rationale and details of the proposed revisions, year and teaching period of effect, to whom the revisions will apply (current and/or new students) and consultation processes and outcomes. (13) Additional considerations include any agreements with other institutions, articulation arrangements, and impact on expected completion dates of current international students. Associate Deans, Education (ADsE) will ensure that all relevant implications have been identified. (14) A course closure takes place in three stages: (15) Proposals to suspend a course must address transition issues for enrolled students, the needs of applicants who have been offered places and any applications in the admission process. This should be reflected in the course closure proposal. (16) The University has obligations under the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000. Faculties must seek advice from the International Compliance Office (ICO) and Admissions before initiating closure of a course. (17) Details required for course closure from faculties include the rationale for closure, consultation process, teach-out arrangements and expected duration, course components to be closed as part of the course closure and impact on other University courses, and any Memoranda of Agreement or articulation arrangement(s) for the course. (18) After approval of the Academic Program for a calendar year (see section six), proposals to suspend a course or course offering within that calendar year, must be approved by the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (DVC) prior to being submitted to Academic Board. The Faculty must provide supporting statements from Marketing and UC International. (19) Staff and committee responsibilities in relation to course closures are set out under Roles and Responsibilities (section 4). (20) For closures of units and unit sets, faculties must provide a rationale which includes: (21) When setting timelines for course development, revisions and closures, faculties should take into account: (22) It is recommended that the March Academic Board meeting is the last meeting to accredit new undergraduate courses to commence the following year. This meeting approves the next year’s Undergraduate Academic Program. (23) It is recommended that the May Academic Board meeting is the last meeting to accredit new postgraduate courses to commence the following year. This meeting approves the next year’s Postgraduate Academic Program. (24) To avoid confusion for students, revisions requiring new course codes or new course versions should be avoided wherever possible during admission periods (from May to semester 2 census date and from October to semester 1 census date). (25) For new and revised course components not associated with a new or revised course proposal, Academic Board has approved the following timelines. Timelines should be met to reduce impact on students immediately prior to the commencement of a teaching period: (26) For a summary of course-related responsibilities under University legislation and policy see the Course Policy. (27) Subject to the following requirements, faculties will determine their own processes to manage course revisions before consideration and approval by University-level committees. Course proponents should seek the Associate Dean, Education's advice on faculty consultations and procedures. (28) The below must be followed: (29) At University level, all course revisions are reviewed by Learning and Teaching and submitted to Academic Board with the DVC's endorsement[1]. (30) Developments with policy or strategic implications and new courses, are considered by the Curriculum Committee who endorse them for recommendation at Academic Board. (31) Under the University of Canberra Academic Board Rules 2011, the Board is responsible for ‘the content, structure and assessment of courses of study, approved for introduction by the Council’[2]. (32) The University of Canberra Courses and Awards (Courses of Study) Rules 2023 require Academic Board to determine the academic requirements of courses including course components and unit descriptions (Rules 6 and 7). (33) The DVC may approve streamlined procedures for particular course developments within the framework of University legislation and policy. (34) Advice on implementation of this Policy is available from the Manager, Course Quality Assurance. Supporting documentation is available from Learning and Teaching. (35) Supporting documentation for new, revised and closed courses, majors, minors and units is available from the Manager, Course Quality Assurance in Learning and Teaching. (36) Refer to the Course and Unit Revision and Closure Policy. (37) For common definitions applying to all academic policies please refer to the Academic Policy and Procedures glossary (under development). (38) The following specific definitions and abbreviations relate to these Procedures.Course and Unit Revision and Closure Procedure
Section 1 - Purpose
Section 2 - Scope
Section 3 - Procedure
Revisions to Courses and Course Components
Closure of Courses and Course Component
Timelines
Top of PageSection 4 - Roles and Responsibilities
[2] University of Canberra Academic Board Rules 2011, Rule 6.Table of Roles and Responsibilities
Who
Responsibilities
Deans
Faculty Boards
Associate Deans, Education
Faculties
(responsible committee or staff member designated by the faculty)Course and course component revisions
Course closure
Course component closure
Learning and Teaching
Council
Implementation
Section 5 - Supporting Information
Section 6 - Policies
Section 7 - Definitions
Terms
Definitions
Academic Program
The Academic Program lists all courses from the Register of Courses for the University of Canberra that are open to new admissions for the current year. The Program normally includes a provisional academic program for the following year.
Unit revisions (minor)
Small wording changes to learning outcomes or syllabus. These may be approved by the Associate Dean, Education.
Unit revisions (major)
Large changes to learning outcomes or syllabus, changes to pre/co-requisites or other major changes to unit content. These may be approved by the relevant Faculty Board, unless a new unit code is required. New units are approved at Academic Board level, with endorsement from Faculty Board.
Field of Education (FoE)
A government classification for reporting purposes. Once established for a course or course component it cannot be changed. If a change is required a new course/course component code must be established.
Course Suspension
When a course (or course offering) is closed to new admissions for a given academic year, it is considered to be suspended for that year. A suspended course can be reopened to new admissions.
After a given amount of time (two years by default), a suspended course will be forwarded to Academic Board to recommend formal closure.
Course Closure
When a course is formally closed through Academic Board and Council, subject to any teach-out required for existing students within the course. No new admissions are permitted, and the course cannot be reopened with the existing course code. A new course proposal would be required with a new course code proposed to reopen a formally closed course.
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[1] With delegated authority from UEC, as determined at UEC meeting 07/3 on 30 May 2007.