Availabilities:
2024 unit offering information will be available in November 2023
Unit description
Examines mental health and introduces students to lived experiences of mental distress and recovery. Explores mental health promotion, and strategies for effectively supporting people living with mental distress and their loved ones. Critically analyses the extent to which mental health legislation, policy and practice enables citizenship and social inclusion.
Unit content
- Lived experiences of mental distress, citizenship & social inclusion
- Discourse of mental health & explanatory frameworks for mental distress
- Mental health practice approaches I
- Mental health legislation & policy and the National Disability Insurance Scheme
- The mental health sector
- Mental health practice approaches II: promoting mental health & wellbeing across the lifespan
Learning outcomes
Unit Learning Outcomes express learning achievement in terms of what a student should know, understand and be able to do on completion of a unit. These outcomes are aligned with the graduate attributes. The unit learning outcomes and graduate attributes are also the basis of evaluating prior learning.
On completion of this unit, students should be able to: | |
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1 | investigate the diverse lived experiences of people living with mental distress and their recovery journeys |
2 | describe how the most common expressions of mental distress are diagnosed and analyse the diverse explanatory frameworks for mental distress |
3 | critically reflect on mental health practice and demonstrate an understanding of how to effectively support people with lived experience of mental distress and their loved ones |
4 | understand, navigate and critically evaluate the mental health service system and how legislation and policy influences the theoretical frameworks and practices used in mental health organisations. |
On completion of this unit, students should be able to:
- investigate the diverse lived experiences of people living with mental distress and their recovery journeys
- describe how the most common expressions of mental distress are diagnosed and analyse the diverse explanatory frameworks for mental distress
- critically reflect on mental health practice and demonstrate an understanding of how to effectively support people with lived experience of mental distress and their loved ones
- understand, navigate and critically evaluate the mental health service system and how legislation and policy influences the theoretical frameworks and practices used in mental health organisations.
Teaching and assessment
Fee information
Domestic
Commonwealth Supported courses
For information regarding Student Contribution Amounts please visit the Student Contribution Amounts.
Fee paying courses
For postgraduate or undergraduate full fee paying courses please check Domestic Postgraduate Fees OR Domestic Undergraduate Fees
International
Please check the international course and fee list to determine the relevant fees.