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This unit will equip students with an interdisciplinary understanding of energy systems. Its focus is on how science and policy are interacting to shape Australia’s energy futures. The Australian energy sector is experiencing a period of change, prompted by the availability of new energy technologies as well as new societal expectations, desires and behaviours. Learning will focus on how these changes are being initiated and governed through a range of organisations and institutions, including the state, corporations, community groups, and individual households. The interplay between expert knowledge and decision making will be analysed, with close attention to the politics of technical decision-making processes. This unit is taught collaboratively with input from the Tasmanian energy industry and government. Science and Policy for Energy Futures will be of interest to undergraduate students from Geography, Social Sciences, Engineering and Law. In this unit there is a 2-day workshop in Week 8, to do with AT3. This takes place on the Monday and Friday of Week 8 (2 x full days), and attendance is required |
| | | | | Intended Learning Outcomes |
| | | | | As per the Assessment and Results Policy 1.3, your results will reflect your achievement against specified learning outcomes. On completion of this unit, you will be able to: |
| | | | | | | | 1 | describe the energy system in Australia in terms of its production, distribution and consumption, across both space and time. | 2 | synthesise information from a range of energy sector sources, including government, scientists, industry, and other stakeholders in order to articulate key issues at the science-policy interface. | 3 |
evaluate a range of ethical, regulatory, economic and socio-political contexts as individuals and in teams in order to make recommendations about complex energy sector problems. | 4 | explain past, present and future processes that shape the Tasmanian energy sector in order to make integrated recommendations sensitive to the Tasmanian context. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Alterations as a result of student feedback |
| | | | | This unit has been taught once before (in 2021) and student feedback was that more help and guidance could have been provided on Assessment Task 1 (AT1), to help with the preparation of Assessment Task 2. In response I have made a change so that this year I will mark all the AT1 submissions myself (rather than delegating this task) and will aim to provide more detailed, tailored feedback. Also, in response to student feedback about the length of readings for this unit and the desire to have shorter readings and more mixed media resources (e.g. podcasts, video material) I have reviewed the unit's resources and made changes in light of this. |
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