Graduate Certificate
The Graduate Certificate in Health and Human Services equips professionals with advanced skills for leadership roles in health and community services. It offers insights into psychosocial practices and evidence-informed approaches, catering to various career stages and specializations.
The Graduate Certificate in Health and Human Services provides health and community services professionals with the higher skills needed to become leaders in their field.
As a student of this course, you will gain insight into the latest thinking, new knowledge and practices, and research related to psychosocial practice.
Who is this course for?This course has been designed for health and community service professionals at various stages of their careers, including recent graduates, established practitioners and those seeking to advance their career or move into a new field of professional practice.
It includes those who work in mental health, drug and alcohol support, welfare, and those who work with the disadvantaged or people in need.
It is particularly relevant to:
This course is designed to prepare you for leadership and specialist roles in the health, mental health and human services sectors. By undertaking this course you will understand and benefit from evidence-informed practice to effectively respond to the problems that affect individuals, families, communities and organisations. You will develop a detailed understanding of knowledge, policy and research as it relates your practice, while learning from leading academics who conduct evidence-based research in the fields of health, mental health, child and family welfare, ageing, social policy, policy evaluation and leadership.
PathwaysThe Graduate Certificate in Health and Human Services is part of a highly flexible suite of courses, designed for versatility. You can transform a Graduate Certificate into a Masters, or start with a Masters and exit early with a Graduate Certificate or Specialist Certificate.
You may also be interested in the Specialist Certificate in Implementation Science.
The Graduate Certificate in Health and Human Services provides health and community services professionals with the higher skills needed to become leaders in their field.
As a student of this course, you will gain insight into the latest thinking, new knowledge and practices, and research related to psychosocial practice.
This course has been designed for health and community service professionals at various stages of their careers, including recent graduates, established practitioners and those seeking to advance their career or move into a new field of professional practice.
It includes those who work in mental health, drug and alcohol support, welfare, and those who work with the disadvantaged or people in need.
It is particularly relevant to:
This course is designed to prepare you for leadership and specialist roles in the health, mental health and human services sectors. By undertaking this course you will understand and benefit from evidence-informed practice to effectively respond to the problems that affect individuals, families, communities and organisations. You will develop a detailed understanding of knowledge, policy and research as it relates your practice, while learning from leading academics who conduct evidence-based research in the fields of health, mental health, child and family welfare, ageing, social policy, policy evaluation and leadership.
The Graduate Certificate in Health and Human Services is part of a highly flexible suite of courses, designed for versatility. You can transform a Graduate Certificate into a Masters, or start with a Masters and exit early with a Graduate Certificate or Specialist Certificate.
You may also be interested in the Specialist Certificate in Implementation Science.
This course has been designed for health and community service professionals at various stages of their careers, including recent graduates, established practitioners and those seeking to advance their career or move into a new field of professional practice.
It includes those who work in mental health, drug and alcohol support, welfare, and those who work with the disadvantaged or people in need.
It is particularly relevant to: