The national Learning and Teaching Academics Standards statement for agriculture (AgLTAS) describes the nature and extent of the discipline and threshold learning outcomes (TLOs) that define what a graduate should know and understand and what core skills they should have at graduation. The AgLTAS statement has been endorsed by the Australian Council of Deans of Agriculture and can be used to communicate to current and future students the minimum standards of their degree, as well as be used to inform curriculum design. While the AgLTAS document provides explanatory notes to assist educators to further understand the intent of the TLOs there are no exemplars on how the AgLTAS standards can be implemented. We will present two case studies o...
Agriculture, i.e. the ability to provide food reliably and efficiently for all, will remain the back...
The study was prompted by the current unemployment of agricultural diploma graduates and the negativ...
Agricultural productivity in Africa does not match that of the number of professional graduates work...
The national Learning and Teaching Academics Standards statement for agriculture (AgLTAS) defines th...
Background The Good Practice Guide: Threshold Learning Outcomes for Agriculture (the Good Practice...
A number of discipline groups have recently published Standard Statements, which contributed to the ...
We report on the perspective of academic, student and industry stakeholders in a national project th...
Learning and Teaching Academic Standard (LTAS) Statements have been published across a number of dis...
The core sciences that contribute to agriculture include biology, mathematics, chemistry and physics...
This paper reports on the perspective of industry stakeholders in a national project to develop a L...
There is increasing pressure on universities to produce employable graduates. Currently, the Univers...
Maximising student employability on graduation by ensuring they have the discipline knowledge as wel...
Academic staff are required to include graduate attributes like inquiry and problem-solving in stude...
Capstone courses are being developed in colleges of agriculture in response to demands from agribusi...
The Learning and Teaching Academic Standards Project (LTAS) has been established by the Australian L...
Agriculture, i.e. the ability to provide food reliably and efficiently for all, will remain the back...
The study was prompted by the current unemployment of agricultural diploma graduates and the negativ...
Agricultural productivity in Africa does not match that of the number of professional graduates work...
The national Learning and Teaching Academics Standards statement for agriculture (AgLTAS) defines th...
Background The Good Practice Guide: Threshold Learning Outcomes for Agriculture (the Good Practice...
A number of discipline groups have recently published Standard Statements, which contributed to the ...
We report on the perspective of academic, student and industry stakeholders in a national project th...
Learning and Teaching Academic Standard (LTAS) Statements have been published across a number of dis...
The core sciences that contribute to agriculture include biology, mathematics, chemistry and physics...
This paper reports on the perspective of industry stakeholders in a national project to develop a L...
There is increasing pressure on universities to produce employable graduates. Currently, the Univers...
Maximising student employability on graduation by ensuring they have the discipline knowledge as wel...
Academic staff are required to include graduate attributes like inquiry and problem-solving in stude...
Capstone courses are being developed in colleges of agriculture in response to demands from agribusi...
The Learning and Teaching Academic Standards Project (LTAS) has been established by the Australian L...
Agriculture, i.e. the ability to provide food reliably and efficiently for all, will remain the back...
The study was prompted by the current unemployment of agricultural diploma graduates and the negativ...
Agricultural productivity in Africa does not match that of the number of professional graduates work...