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Contribute to how humanity interprets its past and social structures. Master the techniques of gathering, preserving, and exhibiting cultural artifacts – crafting connections to pivotal eras, influential figures, and transformative concepts. Through blending theory with hands-on experience, acquire essential museum and curatorial competencies including understanding diverse societies and histories, research methodologies, evaluating significance, and crafting evidence-based narratives about communities and their surroundings. Develop expertise in examining historical items, relics, documents, and artistic works, then presenting them to tell compelling stories about human societies and traditions. Build a distinctive expertise by pairing your studies with a specialization in complementary fields like anthropology, archaeology, digital design, creative writing, or historical studies.
Pre-requisites
To study this degree we assume you have sound knowledge in:
We assume that your knowledge is equivalent to a grade C or higher in Units 3 and 4 at high school level (typically studied in Year 12).