Uts Research Course Guide 2016 0
Uts Research Course Guide 2016 0
Uts Research Course Guide 2016 0
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CONTENTS
04 Research at UTS
06 Getting Started
07 Living in Sydney
08 Scholarships for Domestic Students
10 Scholarships for International Students
13 Feel at Home
14 Graduate Research School
Support Services
17 UTS Support Services
Study areas
18
20
22
24
26
28
30
32
34
Further information
RESEARCH AT UTS
At UTS, we aim to develop pioneering research solutions with real benefits for business,
government, the environment and communities at home and overseas. We call this
approach to research practical innovation.
Research at UTS is divided into six main
themes, underpinned by major research
centres we call Research Strengths*.
They are:
HEALTH FUTURES
UTS experts are providing insight into
the diagnosis, treatment and prevention
of infectious and other diseases. Were
improving the quality and safety of
health care by developing cutting-edge
biotechnology and medical devices. By
evaluating health systems and services
and conducting economic analyses, were
also improving practices to take health into
the future.
Top 400
264
21
BUSINESS INNOVATION
This theme draws together world-leading
research in fundamental discipline areas
such as finance, economics, accounting,
marketing and management with
innovative cross-disciplinary approaches
to the role of business and public policy
in addressing key economic, social and
environmental problems.
>> Centre for Corporate Governance
>> Centre for Management and
Organisation Studies
>> Quantitative Finance Research Centre
>> Centre for the Study of Choice
*current as of May 2015
HEALTH
FUTURES
SNAPSHOT OF UTS
>> 39,070 students enrolled at UTS
onshore and outside Australia
>> 10,730 international students
>> 26,595 Undergraduate students
>> 10,896 Postgraduate coursework students
>> 3,088 staff
>> 1,583 research students
FUTURE
SERVICES,
INDUSTRIES &
PRODUCTIVITY
SUSTAINABILITY
& BUILT
ENVIRONMENT
COMMUNICATION
& INTELLIGENT
SYSTEMS
CREATIVE
INDUSTRIES &
CIVIL SOCIETIES
BUSINESS
INNOVATION
GETTING STARTED
WHICH DEGREE IS RIGHT FOR YOU?
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
PROFESSIONAL DOCTORATE
Course duration: 4 years
TNSW
Lund,
milton
ph: Ha
ra
g
to
Pho
MASTERS BY RESEARCH
Course duration: 2 years
A UTS Masters by Research offers
research training for those who to
undertake research that applies advanced
knowledge in a particular context. This
degree is also a pathway for further
research study. Our online Find a
Supervisor tool can help by matching your
research interests to those of our leading
academics who are also experienced
supervisors.
Once you have chosen your degree,
you will need to find a supervisor and
developing your research proposal. For
more information please see page 40 of
this guide
LIVING IN SYDNEY
CAMPUS
INDUSTRY-CONNECTED RESEARCH
SCHOLARSHIPS FOR
DOMESTIC STUDENTS
UTS offers a variety of scholarships to support you in your research studies
CHANCELLORS RESEARCH
SCHOLARSHIPS
The Chancellors Research Scholarships
are offered every year to highly ranked,
newly-commencing doctoral students
who demonstrate outstanding academic
achievement and the potential to succeed
in a research career. These prestigious
scholarships are valued at up to A$35,000
per annum for a period of three years.
Recipients of an Australian Postgraduate
Award (detailed below) will be
considered for the Chancellors Research
Scholarships.
AUSTRALIAN POSTGRADUATE
AWARDS (APA)
Funded by the Commonwealth
Government Department of Education,
Australian Postgraduate Awards are
open to highly ranked research students
who demonstrate outstanding academic
achievement and research potential. This
scholarship is valued at approximately
A$26,000 per annum and is provided to
assist with general living costs.
JUMBUNNA POSTGRADUATE
RESEARCH SCHOLARSHIPS
RL WERNER SCHOLARSHIP
INDUSTRY SCHOLARSHIPS
Some industries, in partnership with UTS,
will provide PhD scholarships through
larger grants awarded to UTS academics,
or individually to students through
the Industry PhD program. For more
information about industry scholarships,
contact your potential supervisor directly.
FACULTY SCHOLARSHIPS
Some faculties may have specific
scholarships available for research
students. For more information, contact
your faculty directly.
www.uts.edu.au/research-and-teaching/
future-researchers/research-degreesuts/contacts/faculty-research-contacts
SCHOLARSHIPS FOR
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
UTS offers a variety of scholarships to support you in your research studies
AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT
AUSTRALIA AWARDS
Funded by the Australian Government,
the Australia Awards are available to
international students studying across all
disciplines. These scholarships provide
opportunities for students from developing
countries to study at participating
Australian universities and cover both
living allowance and tuition fees.
INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH
SCHOLARSHIPS (IRS)
International Research Scholarships are
open to highly ranked research students
10
DIKTI INDONESIA
DIKTI-UTS Scholarships are the outcome
of collaboration between Indonesias
Ministry of National Education Direktorat
Jenderal Pendidikan Tinggi (DIKTI) and
UTS. The award is open to Indonesian
citizens who satisfy the DIKTI eligibility
criteria.
VIED VIETNAM
UTS-VIED PhD Scholarships are the
result of collaboration between Vietnam
International Education Development
(VIED) under the Ministry of Education and
Training (MoET) and UTS. The award is
open to Vietnamese citizens who satisfy
the VIED eligibility criteria
11
Independent Accommodation
Weekly
Annual
UTS Accommodation
Weekly
Annual
A$200* A$330
A$10,400 A$17,160
A$100
A$5200
Internet/phone (mobile)
A$14
A$728
Gas/electricity
Books/supplies
A$20
A$16
A$1040
A$832
Transport costs
A$30
A$1560
A$10
A$520
A$380 A$510
A$19,760
A$26,520
A$336 A$498
A$17,472
A$25,896
A$220-A$372
A$11,400 A$19,344
A$100
A$5200
Free cabled internet Free cabled internet
in room and limited in room and limited
free internet access free internet access
Inclusive
Inclusive
A$16
A$832
Note: Prices vary depending on the condition of the property, the number of people you share with and the
proximity of the accommodation to the centre of Sydney and other amenities.
*Any amount less than this is likely to be twin share.
12
FEEL AT HOME
Living in Sydney
The UTS Housing Service provides support
for UTS students, including information
and assistance on UTS residences and a
range of private accommodation options.
UTS-OWNED ACCOMMODATION
UTS has five residences available to UTS
students, all close to the City campus.
>> Yura Mudang has space for 720
beds comprising studio and
shared apartments with allocated
accommodating postgraduate research
students
>> Geegal is a purpose-built group of
townhouses accommodating 57
students
>> Gumal Ngurang is a modern apartment
building accommodating 252 students
in studio, one bedroom or shared
apartments
>> Bulga Ngurra is a modern apartment
building accommodating for 111
students
>> Blackfriars offers limited self-contained
rooms exclusively for postgraduate
research students, in a small heritage
house
All UTS residences are self-catered,
secure and competitively priced. All
bedrooms are for one person (except twin
share), with shared kitchens, bathrooms
and living areas. Apartments are fullyfurnished and rent includes gas, electricity,
water bills and cabled internet in
bedrooms and living areas. You will need
to provide your own bed linen and cooking
equipment. Rent fees are different for each
residence, and there is a non-refundable
application fee of A$40 (subject to change).
13
STUDENT PROFILE:
Daniele Hromek, UTS: Design, Architecture
and Building, MA Research candidate
I am incredibly grateful to my mentors
thoughtful suggestions, recommendations
and listening ear at times I found myself
overwhelmed and my mentor redirected me
and gave me guidance on where to go next.
My mentor gave me practical ways to make
life as a new researcher easier and feel less
like an alien to the huge foreign world of
academia.
14
STUDENT PROFILE:
Angelo Garruzzo, UTS: Science MA
Research candidate
Kickstart@UTS program is very useful for
HDR students. It helps students understand
what to expect from the beginning, how to be
successful and how to feel connected with
their thesis. Personally I would have been
lost without KickStart@UTS.
Online Resources
The School offers online resources. The
e-Grad School is a joint initiative provided
by the Australian Technology Network
(ATN) of Universities. This virtual graduate
school offers a range of flexible online
courses and resources for research
students. The courses complement
the existing researcher development
activities of research students.
Lynda.com is a vast online library of
instructional videos covering the latest in
technology, creative, and business skills
taught by accomplished teachers and
recognised industry experts. Playlists of
videos and tutorials can be created and
linked in UTS Online.
15
STUDENT PROFILE:
Pauline Murray-Parahi, UTS: Health
PhD candidate
Ive attended several of the same Research
Literacies workshops organised by GRS
but each time I have learned something
new. The courses have improved my critical
reading and writing skills.
16
www.lib.uts.edu.au
www.lib.uts.edu.au/help/toursworkshops/research-skillspostgraduates-staff
UTS INTERNATIONAL
The UTS International team offers ongoing
support for international students. You
can drop in to see the international
student advisers who can help you adjust
to life in Sydney and study at UTS, assist
with visa administration queries and
answer general enquiries.
www.uts.edu.au/international
www.uts.edu.au/current-students/
support
SPECIAL NEEDS
Students with disabilities or ongoing
medical conditions which may affect their
study are supported by the UTS Special
Needs Service. You can discuss your
individual needs with the Special Needs
team upon arriving at UTS.
www.ssu.uts.edu.au/sneeds
17
www.fass.uts.edu.au/postgraduate/research
UTS:
18
RESEARCH DEGREES
Course
Course Code
CRICOS Code
C02041
015943G
C02019
014627E
C02039
043350M
C02020
014625G
Doctor of Education
C02050
066824C
C03018
014624G
C03044
066173M
C03047
040690D
C03034
043338G
STUDENT PROFILE:
Sandris Zeivots, PhD candidate, supervised
by Emeritus Professor David Boud
The experience of emotional highs is the
focus of my research, says Sandris Zeivots,
a PhD candidate in the School of Education.
I am looking at how strong and meaningful
emotional experiences assist adult learners
in their learning process.
Looking at the lived experience of 21 adult
learners who participated in one of four
experiential learning courses, Zeivots
hopes to transform the ways we think
about learning through illuminating the
lived accounts of adult learners and their
emotional high experiences. Facilitators,
educators, practitioners and scholars may
find my study particularly useful for two
main reasons. Firstly, emotional highs are
seen as significant learning experiences.
They may not work only as avenues to
engage the learner to the learning process,
but also change the scope of the learning by
making it more meaningful. Secondly, this
study highlights the lived experiences of
learners that at times are taken for granted
or become lost among the stakeholders
involved in experiential learning.
UTS FASS and my supervisor David
Boud were a perfect match to help me to
transform these learning experiences into
a more sophisticated understanding for my
research thesis.
STAFF PROFILE:
Professor Jim Macnamara BA, GradCert in Writing, MA, PhD
Jim Macnamaras 30-year career in professional communication practice
has spanned across journalism, public relations, advertising and media
research before he joined UTS as Professor of Public Communication in
2007. After starting his career as a journalist, working in leading PR firms
and running his own communication consultancy, MACRO Communication
for 13 years, he founded the Asia Pacific franchise global media analysis
firm, CARMA International, in 1995, and was CEO until he sold the company
to Media Monitors in 2006. Following this, he became Group Research
Director of Media Monitors and helped establish offices across Asia Pacific
including Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong and China.
Jim holds an MA by research in media studies and a Doctor of Philosophy
(PhD) in media research and is the author of 12 books including The 21st
Century Media (R)evolution, published by Peter Lang, New York in 2010.
19
www.uts.edu.au/current-students/business/higher-degree-research
UTS
BUSINESS SCHOOL
accounting economics finance health economics management marketing
20
RESEARCH CENTRES
MULTI-INSTITUTION RESEARCH
COLLABORATIONS
RESEARCH DEGREES
Course
Course Code
CRICOS Code
C02048
058221G
C02058
085255G
STUDENT PROFILE:
Mingming Cheng, PhD candidate and
International Postgraduate Research
Scholarship and Australian Postgraduate
Award recipient (2014) supervised by
Dr Deborah Edwards
Mingming Cheng is a PhD student in the
Management Discipline Group, and member
of the Civil Cosmopolitan Societies Research
Centre. The aim of his PhD study is to
examine the influence of cultural change on
Chinese generation Ys outbound adventure
tourism experience, undertaken through the
lens of social media.
I am investigating the outbound travel
experiences of post-80 Chinese (Generation
Y) tourists through their participation in
adventure tourism in Australia. It will build
on the existing studies and literature on
culture and cultural change, adventure
tourism, distinctive features of the Chinese
post-80s generation and social media. These
themes will be explored with a view to
developing new insights into the fast growing
Chinese post-80s tourist sector.
Choosing to study a research degree at UTS
was an easy decision, says Cheng. I had
read about the exciting research that was
being conducted in the tourism program at
UTS. I was really looking forward to joining
the tourism program at UTS and since I
arrived here, have had excellent supervision
with three supervisors, each bringing their
own expertise to assist me in my research.
STUDENT PROFILE:
Richard De Abreu Lourenco, PhD candidate and Business School stipend and
CHERE top-up recipient (2015) supervised by Professor Rosalie Viney
One of the most visible functions of government is to make decisions about health
care; particularly about whether or not to fund new and increasingly expensive
treatments and services. Those decisions are often informed by economic
evaluations using cost-utility analyses that measure value in terms of the cost per
quality adjusted life year (QALYs). However, QALYs might not capture all the benefits
that patients and society derive from health; so-called meta-health effects, such
as reassurance and convenience that arise out of the experience of health care, are
also a source of value that potentially influence decision making.
Richard De Abreu Lourenco is a PhD student in the Centre for Health Economics
Research and Evaluation (CHERE). The focus of his PhD is on how meta-health
effects influence decision making in a health care context, and how they can be
assessed for use in an economic evaluation.
De Abreu Lourenco chose UTS to undertake this research because, the research
team at CHERE is widely acknowledged for its contributions to research in the
field of health outcomes, making it the perfect Centre in which to undertake this
research.
21
www.uts.edu.au/future-students/design-architecture-and-building/research/research-degrees
UTS:
DESIGN, ARCHITECTURE
AND BUILDING
RESEARCH DEGREES
22
Course
Course Code
CRICOS Code
C02001
032316D
C03012
030867M
C03002
008674D
C03001
008672F
STUDENT PROFILE:
Ilka Staudinger, PhD candidate and
UTS Chancellors Research Scholarship
recipient (2013) supervised by Dr Susan
Stewart
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
constitutes a murky ethical terrain, says
Ilka Staudinger, a candidate in the School
of Design at UTS DAB. Her aim is to
understand the different roles played by
designed things within CSR programs.
Designed things can play a largely rhetorical
role, or can be active catalysts for change,
she says.
Using Actor-Network Theory (ANT) as a
theoretical lens, she hopes to enable better
understanding of the ways that designed
things within CSR initiatives contribute to
public perception and expectation, as well as
accomplishing social and environmental good.
CSR has sometimes been critiqued as
distracting from, rather than addressing,
the negative externalities generated by
established industrial and commercial
processes. Initiatives such as the purchase
of electric vehicles for a company fleet
may seem to deliver marginal good when
set against the carbon footprint of the
corporation as a whole. However to dismiss
CSR in this way misses the complex nature
of change, and the potential for apparently
insignificant shifts to set in train significant
reconfiguration.
I chose UTS for two reasons, she says.
First, I was looking for supervisors who
would best suit my research project. Second,
I wanted a faculty with a good and vibrant
HDR student culture.
PROJECT PROFILE:
Dr Jesse Adams Stein, DAB Faculty Postdoctoral Research Fellow,
BArtTh Hons, MA, PhD
The Government Printing Office in Ultimo may be long closed but Dr Jesse Adams
Steins PhD thesis brings it to life with the voices of former print workers, archival
images, illustrations and ephemera.
Her thesis Precarious Printers: Labour, Technology & Material Culture at the
NSW Government Printing Office 19591989 draws together labour history with
studies of material culture and design, outlining the creative, sometimes resistant
strategies used by male and female print workers to navigate technological change
and the impacts of neoliberal economic policy.
In a contemporary context that features ubiquitous technology and increasing
precarity, I was drawn to the stories of workers who faced the challenges of
technological change and employment insecurity at the beginning of the digital age:
printers in the 1970s and 1980s, Adams Stein says.
I chose UTS Faculty of Design, Architecture and Building because it encourages a
rigorous interdisciplinary approach, which meant I never had to worry about my
research not fitting any particular school or discipline.
They welcomed me into their research environment even before the PhD began,
and have continued their support into the Early Career Researcher stage
including a new position as a Postdoctoral Fellow I started in 2015.
23
www.feit.uts.edu.au/research/postgraduate
UTS:
ENGINEERING AND
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
civil and environmental engineering computing and communications electrical, mechanical
and mechatronic systems software systems, management and leadership
If you have a passion for impact-driven and
collaborative research, plus an interest in
our areas of specialisation, I encourage
you to take a look at our courses and make
an enquiry. You could be leading the next
breakthrough.
I look forward to welcoming you to UTS.
Welcome from the Associate Dean of
Research, Professor Jie Lu
Faculty of Engineering and Information
Technology at UTS is a research intensive
faculty with dynamic programs in both
disciplines. We offer six Postgraduate
research awards PhD in Engineering and
IT & Master of Science, Engineering and IT.
The Faculty is home to 11 research centres
and groups, and 5 Schools, with diverse
areas of expertise ranging from, advanced
data analytics and quantum computation to
energy policy and wastewater treatment. It
provides a collaborative and lively research
culture to develop early and mid-career
researchers. The Faculty received an
above world standard rating for its
research quality (Excellence in Research
for Australia Initiative) in the areas of
biomedical engineering, artificial intelligence
and image processing. Our researchers,
recognised as leaders in their fields, are
responsible for delivering innovative, original
and cost-effective solutions to tomorrows
complex engineering and IT challenges. HDR
Candidates can undertake graduate research
with these world-class academic supervisors
in a diverse range of study areas.
Our research students are based in the
strikingly creative Engineering and IT
Building. The building opened in mid2014 and features outstanding facilities,
including state of- the-art laboratories, the
UTS Data Arena (for 3D data visualisation)
and the Disruptive Design Lab, reflecting
the Facultys position at the cutting edge of
innovation and technology.
24
Course Code
CRICOS Code
C02047
058666A
C02029
009469A
C03051
075277F
C03025
001121E
Course
Course Code
CRICOS Code
C02018
036570B
C03017
009468B
STUDENT PROFILE:
Wei Wang, PhD candidate and IBM PhD
Fellow supervised by Professor
Mary-Anne Williams
Inspired by the way humans connect through
Twitter and Facebook, IBM PhD Fellow Wei
Wang is developing a mechanism to allow
robots to share their skills and experiences
in a similar way. Her research aims to help
robots learn from each other, adapt to new
and unseen tasks, and to sustainably develop
themselves.
Humans use social media to communicate
with friends and others. We swap news, life
events, give and receive advice, and learn
from each other. I thought, if people can
benefit from social networks in this way,
then why not robots?
They could have a social media-style profile
which identifies their capabilities, shows
what theyre working on and what new
skills theyve learnt, says Wang. Such
forward-thinking research has won Wang
a prestigious IBM PhD Fellowship an
intensely competitive worldwide program
that seeks to nurture the best in the field of
IT and to identify people and projects that are
game-changers in terms of their potential to
impact the wider world.
STAFF PROFILE:
Associate Professor Paul Kennedy, B Sc (CompSc) (Hons), PhD
Associate Professor Paul Kennedy joined UTS in 1999. His research focuses on
the data analytics of biomedical data. Primarily, he collaborates with paediatric
cancer researchers to better understand and predict treatment outcomes
for childhood cancer sufferers. However, he also explores other areas of data
analytics and bioinformatics such as developing bioinformatics pipelines to
facilitate animal vaccine discovery and mapping collaboration among researchers.
Having attracted approximately half a million dollars in grant funding to date, his
research has been the subject of various newspaper articles, as well as radio and
television features including the ABCs New Inventors program.
25
www.uts.edu.au/future-students/health/study-areas-and-strengths/research
UTS:
HEALTH
nursing midwifery health services management primary health care cardiovascular
and chronic care sport and exercise science public health sport and exercise
MULTI-INSTITUTION RESEARCH
COLLABORATIONS
>> World Health Organisation (WHO)
Collaborating Centre for Nursing,
Midwifery and Health Development
>> The Centre for Obesity Management
and Prevention Research Excellence in
Primary Health Care
RESEARCH DEGREES
26
Course
Course Code
CRICOS Code
C02024
032320G
C02057
085405J
C03048
052679M
C03049
052680G
C03050
055629G
C03055
032336M
STUDENT PROFILE:
Hiba Deek, PhD candidate and Australian
Postgraduate Award recipient (2015)
supervised by Professor Patricia Davidson
Hiba is a student at the Centre of
Cardiovascular and Chronic Care at the
Faculty of Health, currently in her third
year of her PhD in Nursing. During her
candidature, Hiba received several awards
including a $5000 grant from the Sigma
Theta Tau International Honour Society
of Nursing and the best oral presentation
award at the Joanna Briggs Institute
Australasian Cardiovascular Nursing
College Certificate for best clinical research
paper presentation.
Hibas research project focuses on involving
the family in the self-care of patients living
with heart failure. This health condition,
which some describe as malignant, sets
limits to patients lives with multiple hospital
readmission, poor health outcomes and
poor quality of life. Family involvement
in a collectivist culture, like in Lebanon,
is appropriate and assumed to improve
such outcomes. I was encouraged by my
supervisor to do this challenging move since
a well-structured and well-knit program
can be a base for future health programs
in a resource limited setting. UTS allows us
to travel and investigate almost any topic
anywhere! Considering the gaps in research,
UTS supports our moves within academic
and ethical boundaries.
STAFF PROFILE:
Professor Aaron Coutts, B Sc (HMS-ExMan), M Sc (CQU), PhD
Professor Coutts is an applied sports scientist with an academic background in
physiology. His research includes elements of exercise physiology, biochemistry,
training theory, performance analysis and even psychology. He has published
more than 100 highly cited scientific articles and is an associate editor of the
International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance.
Coutts and the team at UTS use evidence-based approaches to offer support to
some of the biggest sporting clubs in Australia and around the world.
Staff and research students from our group have worked with English Premier
League clubs such as Chelsea and Manchester United, Football Federation
Australia, Tennis Australia, Cricket Australia, the Australian Institute of Sport, as
well as premier NRL teams including the Parramatta Eels, Penrith Panthers and
Melbourne Storm, and the AFLs Carlton, Essendon and the Sydney Swans, says
Coutts.
Much of our work is focussed around the development of evidence-based athlete
management and performance analysis systems a method that quantifies
training, manages fatigue and recovery and improves our understanding of
performance both in training and competition.
27
www.uts.edu.au/about/graduate-school-health
UTS:
RESEARCH AREAS
Primary Health Care
>> Cancer
>> Asthma and other respiratory disease
RESEARCH DEGREES
28
Course
Course Code
CRICOS Code
C02056
074603E
C02059
086294C
C02060
086293D
C03053
076138J
C03054
076139G
C03056
086292E
C03057
086291F
*The physiotherapy program which may be delivered in 2017 is still subject to accreditation.
STUDENT PROFILE:
Shamsher Singh, PhD candidate and
International Research Scholarship
recipient (2013) supervised by Associate
Professor Beata Bajorek
Age is nothing but a number, says Shamsher
Singh, a PhD student researching the
definition of elderly in clinical practice.
Clinical practice guidelines in Australia dont
clearly specify what they mean by elderly,
usually relying on a chronological age of 65
years, says Singh.
Older patients are also more likely to have
a variety of age-related conditions and be
taking a number of medications concurrently
which add to the divergence in health status.
However, when comparing two patients
who are both aged 65 years, they may differ
significantly for their therapeutic needs.
The aim of Singhs research is to develop
a scale or algorithm to aid clinicians in
assessing older patients when prescribing a
treatment strategy; which takes into account
the older individuals specific needs and
profile, rather than basing the decision on
just their chronological age.
Being a student at UTS, I can expect to
get the best facilities a researcher needs.
Workshops organised by the Graduate
Research School provide thorough
knowledge required in several aspects of
my research. Access to literature is the
lifeline of any research, excellent library
services keep me updated with most recent
knowledge from across the globe.
STAFF PROFILE:
Professor Lynley Bradnam, Dip Phty, MH Sc (Hons), PhD
Professor Bradnam is a physiotherapist and neuroscientist interested in
promoting brain plasticity after injury and in neurological disorders to enhance
recovery. Her research uses Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) to
understand how brain reorganisation can drive optimal or poor physical function.
TMS is a painless, non-invasive method to stimulate the human brain and
measure brain excitability, integrity of brain pathways and connections, and the
mechanisms underlying brain reorganisation. Translation of this research to
the clinic means therapists can apply interventions that target brain plasticity, to
enhance recovery in conditions like stroke, dystonia and musculoskeletal pain.
Our research investigates how novel interventions such as non-invasive brain
stimulation can be used in conjunction with more traditional approaches such
as task-training to understand the mechanisms in the brain supporting faster
recovery or more effective function, says Bradnam.
Our work is exciting as research that aims to help people recover from
neurological or painful injuries and live well is extremely rewarding.
As a research supervisor, Bradnam enjoys supervising research students to see
their skills and understanding of the technical aspects of working in a human
neurophysiology laboratory grow and develop. I enjoy the transition as they
learn and become confident in their acquired knowledge and begin to input their
own ideas into the research.
29
www.uts.edu.au/research-and-teaching/our-research/law-research-centre
UTS:
LAW
law and culture criminal law and criminology law and history health law and policy
regulation and biotechnologies intellectual property law media and communications
international and humanitarian law environmental law China law
RESEARCH DEGREES
30
Course
Course Code
CRICOS Code
C02028
008681E
C03024
006407F
STUDENT PROFILE:
David Carter, PhD candidate supervised by
Professor Katherine Biber and Associate
Professor Penny Crofts
David Carters doctoral research focuses on
emerging legal and regulatory challenges in
health care and medicine. His research asks
questions about health care and criminal
law, with particular interest in what it means
to be responsible, the role of contemporary
quality and safety practices, and the task of
leadership and innovation in implementing
change in health care. Davids doctoral
research is an investigation into the role of
criminal law in cases of preventable deaths
in health care. At least 10 per cent of all
hospital admissions are associated with
some kind of preventable error. Through
his research, David interrogates the role
criminal law might play in the urgent task of
reducing the incidence of preventable error
and death. Criminal law engages rarely
and irregularly within health care. However,
when it does, the criminal conception
of responsibility is a difficult fit and its
imposition brings with it significant tension
and criticism. In his work, David has exposed
the unacknowledged history of engagement
between criminal law and health care in
Australia. He is also developing an account
of the doctrine of manslaughter by criminal
negligence, as a resource of significant
strength for efforts to innovate and improve
health care quality and safety.
STAFF PROFILE:
Professor Isabel Karpin BA, LLB, LLM, JSD
Professor Isabel Karpin joined the UTS Law faculty in February 2009 having
previously worked at the University of Sydney from 1994 to 2008. She has a BA
and LLB from Sydney University, a Masters of Law from Harvard University and
a Doctorate (JSD) from Columbia University. She specialises in feminist legal
theory, health law, genetics and the law, disability and the law, and culture.
She researches the bioethical implications of laws governing reproductive
technologies, genetic testing and disability. She explores the challenge posed
by new biotechnological developments on legal understandings of normality,
disability, individuality, and family.
Professor Karpin is the author and co-author of articles, book chapters and
books including recently Perfecting Pregnancy: Law Disability and the Future
of Reproduction 2012 (with K Savell) published by Cambridge University Press
and edited collections such as Nisker, Bayliss, Karpin, McLeod and Mykitiuk
The Healthy Embryo (Cambridge 2010). She is currently involved in two major
ARC projects, one exploring the regulation of behaviour as a disability and the
other examining family formation using reproductive technology both inside and
outside law and across borders.
31
www.uts.edu.au/future-students/science
UTS:
SCIENCE
chemistry and forensic science the environment mathematical sciences medical and
molecular biosciences physics and advanced materials
Many research projects are conducted
in close collaboration with industry and
government research organisations. As
a result, more than 80 per cent of our
postgraduate students find professional
employment within three months of
graduation.
32
RESEARCH DEGREES
Course
Course Code
CRICOS Code
C02031
008663G
C02030
009463G
C03029
030869J
C03026
032335A
STAFF PROFILE:
Rebecca Wood, PhD candidate supervised
by Dr Simon Mitrovic
Rebecca Wood is a PhD student from the
UTS School of Life Sciences . Her research
project, titled A novel biological method of
monitoring herbicides is focussed around
herbicides and developing an effective
monitoring and identification plan.
Herbicides for weed control in agriculture
are regularly detected in rivers draining into
the Great Barrier Reef at levels that may
pose a risk to aquatic organisms. I want to
determine whether herbicides are a threat to
photosynthetic freshwater organisms such
as benthic (bottom dwelling) algae. Algae are
important because they form the basis of
the aquatic food chain which supports many
other species.
My project aims to identify species of benthic
algae that are at risk from herbicides and
develop a new bio monitoring index to detect
herbicide toxicity in rivers that drain into the
Great Barrier Reef. The index could be used
as an early warning sign for herbicide toxicity
in rivers. This would be a valuable monitoring
tool for the improvement of water quality in
catchments of the Great Barrier Reef.
STAFF PROFILE:
Andrew Hutchinson, Chancellors Post Doctoral Research Fellow, B Sc, B Com, PhD
Dr Andrew Hutchinson from the School of Life Sciences is an immunologist, and
the latest Australian recipient of a 2014 Fulbright scholarship. One of only thirty one
recipients across Australia to receive this prestigious award, Dr Andrew Hutchinson will
spend up to a year at the esteemed Yale School of Medicine. There, he will be working
alongside Professor Philip Askenase,a world-renowned immunologist, who has
pioneered a number of animal models of inflammatory disease.
My research background and that of Professor Askenases are in molecular and
cellular aspects of immunology. Professionally, our research teams have shared
interests and a strong dedication to the development of new therapies for immune
system diseases.
One of the important properties of the immune system is to know how to distinguish
between foreign bodies (i.e. pathogens) and self, and to respond to the former without
harming the latter. In many immune system mediated diseases, this decision tree
breaks down and the immune system starts to respond to self-molecules, thereby
leading to local or systemic destruction of host tissues which ultimately causes
disease.
The focus of the UTS-Yale Fulbright project is to work on Antigen-Specific Suppressor
Exosomes (ASSEs), a newly described signalling complex that can suppress the
response of the immune system against a given molecule.
33
www.isf.uts.edu.au
UTS:
INSTITUTE FOR
SUSTAINABLE FUTURES
cities and buildings climate change adaptation corporate sustainability energy and
climate change international development local government natural resources and
ecosystems resource futures social change transport water and sanitation
34
RESEARCH AREAS
>> Cities and buildings
>> Climate change adaptation
>> Corporate sustainability
>> Energy and climate change
>> International development
>> Local government
>> Natural resources and ecosystems
>> Resource futures
>> Social change
>> Transport
>> Water and sanitation
MULTI-INSTITUTION RESEARCH
COLLABORATIONS
>> CSIRO Cluster Wealth from Waste
>> NSW Office of Environment and Heritage
-NSW Adaptation Research Hub
Adaptive Communities Node
>> Cooperative Research Centre for
Contamination Assessment and
Remediation of the Environment
(CRC CARE) Societal Perceptions
and Acceptability of Remediation
Technologies (SPART)
RESEARCH DEGREES
Course
Course Code
CRICOS Code
C02037
032334B
C03032
028886D
STUDENT PROFILE:
Stephen McGrail, PhD candidate
Stephen McGrail is undertaking his PhD
research in collaboration with CSIROs
Energy Flagship and consultancy firm Reos
Partners, examining the use of collaborative
scenario planning and related scenario
methods to foster low-carbon innovation and
climate change adaptation.
My collaboration with Reos Partners is part
of the Adaptation at Scale in Semi-Arid
Regions project which aims to improve
adaptation in Africa and Asia, engaging local
stakeholders on climate vulnerabilities that
could emerge over the next 25 years.
The research aims to assess the overall
effectiveness and impacts of scenario
interventions with a particular focus on
the context of climate change mitigation
and adaptation. As part of this, the research
also aims to improve our understanding
of how and why such interventions enable,
or perhaps, undermine the necessary
transformative responses to climate change.
One of the best things McGrail says about
doing his PhD at ISF is the encouragement
to courageously conduct interdisciplinary
and transdisciplinary forms of research that
goes beyond earlier disciplinary training.
He is a Melbourne-based PhD student
supervised by Associate Professor Chris
Riedy, a researcher, consultant and writer on
sustainability and social change.
STAFF PROFILE:
Dena Fam, Chancellors Post Doctoral Research Fellow, BA Ind Design
(Hons I), PhD
The next time you take a leak, consider the valuable resources youre flushing away.
Urine contains all the essential components for plant growth, such as phosphorus,
nitrogen and potassium, says Chancellors Postdoctoral Research Fellow Dr Dena
Fam. Yet our sewers carry these nutrients, essential for agricultural production,
away from our urban centres and discharge them into waterways where they have
the potential to negatively impact aquatic ecosystems.
Fam is a driving force in Australian and international research on urine diversion
systems. As a result of her PhD research, UTSs Engineering and IT building is
installed with urine diversion pipework and the Barangaroo development in Sydneys
CBD has incorporated it into their design plans. Completed under the supervision
of ISF Deputy Director Professor Cynthia Mitchell, Fams PhD examined the
transdisciplinary issues associated with trialling urine diverting systems in Australia
to determine how viable urine recovery and reuse is in practice.
Its a squeamish topic, acknowledges Fam, a researcher with ISF and the Centre
for Management and Organisation Studies in the UTS Business School, but with
global pressure on food production and infrastructure, due to rapidly growing urban
populations, recovering and reusing urine as a fertiliser for crop production is an
opportunity we cant afford to pass up.
35
INTERNATIONAL
COLLABORATIVE PHD DEGREES
UTS has a number of research-led
International Key Technology Partner
(KTP) universities across China, India,
Europe and Latin America. Through these
partnerships we offer joint or dual PhD
programs which provide students an
opportunity to participate in joint research
and be enrolled in a PhD across two
universities. UTS also has other research
partnerships with a number of prominent
institutions across the world that share
mutual research interests and a desire
to work closely together to strengthen
research-led partnerships. Students can
enrol in joint PhDs at these universities.
Students enrolled in PhD at a KTP
university or at other partner universities
have the opportunity to complete their
research degree collaboratively with UTS.
Students can apply for a collaborative
PhD degree by following the application
process on page 40.
36
STUDENT PROFILE:
Domenique Van Gennip, Eindhoven
University of Technology, UTS: Faculty
of Design, Architecture & Building, PhD
candidate
My joint degree candidature is part of an
inter-university research project. I regularly
discuss my progress and interesting issues
with related PhD students across the globe
and have even started on a joint exploration
that we hope to publish soon. Similarly
positive, both my supervisors from the
partner universities have complementary
expertise that really helps my learning.
VISITING RESEARCH
STUDENTS PROGRAM
The Visiting Research Students (VRS)
program is for postgraduate research
students who are interested in undertaking
supervised research studies at UTS. This
program is open to students who would
like to study part of their home research
degree (from 1 4 semesters) at UTS.
Studies completed at UTS will contribute
to the students home degree. Students
who are interested in enrolling at UTS as a
visiting research student must be currently
enrolled in a Master by Research or a PhD
in their home institution and have their
institutions approval to go abroad during
their degree.
Please refer to page 38 for the application
process.
There are many organisations external
to UTS that offer generous scholarships
to visiting research students. To find out
about the eligibility criteria, students must
refer to the external scholarship websites.
Course Code
CRICOS Code
Visiting Research
C50008
066310G
FULBRIGHT AUSTRALIAN
POSTGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIP
The Australian-American Fulbright
Commission promotes education and
cultural exchange between Australia
the United States to enhance mutual
understanding and strengthen relations
between the two countries. The Fulbright
Postgraduate Scholarship offers up
to A$40,000 to postgraduate students
undertaking their Australian PhD to
conduct a period of research and/or study
in the US.
www.fulbright.com.au/index.php/
australian-applicants
37
HOW TO APPLY
Visiting research students
STEP 1
STEP 5
STEP 7
STEP 2
CHECK YOUR ELIGIBILITY
Check that you meet the international
eligibility criteria for admission to the
research degree that interests you at UTS:
www.gsu.uts.edu.au/policies/
admissionspolicy.html and
www.handbook.uts.edu.au/
STEP 3
FIND A RESEARCH AREA
You should investigate the broad range of
research activities and projects that our
researchers are currently engaged in at UTS.
For more information about UTS Research
Strengths, visit:
www.uts.edu.au/research-and-teaching/
our-research
STEP 4
PRE-ASSESSMENT PROCESS
Some faculties have a pre-assessment
stage to the application process. If your
proposed area of research falls into one of
the following faculties, you are required to
complete the pre-assessment form. If you
are applying to any of the other faculties,
please progress to step 5.
UTS Business School: www.uts.edu.au/
future-students/business/essentialinformation/application-info-and-costs#a-name-preassessment-a-postgraduateresearch
Faculty of Law: www.uts.edu.au/futurestudents/law/essential-information/
application-information#higher-degreeresearch-students
38
Find a supervisor:
http://cfsites1.uts.edu.au/find/utsresearch/find-a-supervisor/index.cfm
Or
Contact the relevant faculty or institute:
www.uts.edu.au/research-and-teaching/
future-researchers/research-degreesuts/contacts/faculty-research-contacts
***Faculty of Health applicants MUST
submit the supplementary form to their
potential supervisor for approval:
www.uts.edu.au/sites/default/files/
health-hrd-supplementary.pdf
You need to provide the following
information when you contact the faculty
or your potential supervisor:
>> a brief research proposal which includes
your research topic and background of
the project. This must reflect your ability
to do research
>> a current CV /resume
>> academic transcripts
Some faculties require additional
documentation at this stage. It is best to
consult with your faculty directly.
STEP 6
DEVELOP YOUR RESEARCH PROPOSAL
Once you find a potential supervisor you
may need to further develop a plan for your
proposed research. For details on how to
develop your proposal:
www.uts.edu.au/research-and-teaching/
future-researchers/research-degreesuts/develop-your-research-proposal
STEP 8
WHERE TO SEND CERTIFIED
DOCUMENTATION
You must send your certified documents to
The Graduate Research School:
The Graduate Research School
University of Technology Sydney
PO BOX 123
ULTIMO NSW 2007
STEP 9
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT LETTER
You will receive an email acknowledging
receipt of your application approximately
one week after your application is received
by UTS. The Graduate Research School
will advise you the outcome of your
application in writing in approximately 46
weeks.
STEP 10
ACCEPTING AN OFFER
If you meet all the UTS requirements, you
will receive a letter of offer to study at UTS.
You will need to accept the offer:
www.uts.edu.au/research-and-teaching/
future-researchers/research-degreesuts/accepting-and-deferring-domestic-1
39
HOW TO APPLY
STEP 4
STEP 6
STEP 2
PRE-ASSESSMENT PROCESS
Some faculties have a pre-assessment
stage to the application process. If your
proposed area of research falls into one of
the following faculties, you are required to
complete the pre-assessment form. If you
are applying to any of the other faculties,
please progress to step 3.
UTS Business School:
www.uts.edu.au/future-students/
business/essential-information/
application-info-and-costs#-a-namepreassessment-a-postgraduateresearch
Faculty of Law:
www.uts.edu.au/future-students/law/
essential-information/applicationinformation#higher-degree-researchstudents
STEP 3
CHECK YOUR ELIGIBILITY
Find a supervisor:
http://cfsites1.uts.edu.au/find/utsresearch/find-a-supervisor/index.cfm
Or
Contact the relevant faculty or institute:
www.uts.edu.au/research-and-teaching/
future-researchers/research-degreesuts/contacts/faculty-research-contacts
***Faculty of Health applicants MUST
submit the supplementary form to their
potential supervisor for approval:
www.uts.edu.au/sites/default/files/
health-hrd-supplementary.pdf
You will need to provide the following
information when you contact the faculty
or your potential supervisor:
>> a brief research proposal which includes
your research topic and background of
the project. This must reflect your ability
to do research
>> a current CV/resume
>> academic transcripts
Some faculties require additional
documentation at this stage. It is best to
consult with your faculty directly.
STEP 5
DEVELOP YOUR RESEARCH PROPOSAL
www.gsu.uts.edu.au/policies/
admissionspolicy.html and
www.handbook.uts.edu.au/
www.uts.edu.au/research-and-teaching/
future-researchers/research-degreesuts/develop-your-research-proposal
40
STEP 7
SUBMIT YOUR APPLICATION
Once you have completed the application
and attached all certified supporting
documentation, submit your application
form to UTS before the closing dates.
Domestic applicants:
Closing dates:
End of October 2016 (Autumn Semester
commencement: January March
enrolment)
End of May 2016 (Spring Semester
commencement: July August enrolment)
Domestic applicants must refer to the
website for up to date application closing
dates: www.uts.edu.au/research-andteaching/future-researchers/researchdegrees-uts/applying-research-degreeand-scholarship
6. Page number/s
STEP 8
APPLICATION OUTCOME
You will receive an email
acknowledgement from the Graduate
Research School that your application has
been received approximately two weeks
after it arrives at UTS.
The application process will take 4-6
weeks. You will then receive notification
from UTS of your application outcome.
STEP 9
ENROL AT UTS
Following your acceptance of your offer
letter you will receive notification on
enrolment procedure at UTS.
41
MINIMUM ACADEMIC
REQUIREMENTS
For admission to most higher degree by
research programs you are required to
submit a research proposal and hold a
relevant Australian equivalent masters or
bachelors degree (first or second class
honours with division 1).
Current academic requirements for HDR
students
www.gsu.uts.edu.au/policies/
admissionspolicy.html and
www.handbook.uts.edu.au
HEALTH COVER
www.uts.edu.au/future-students/
international/essential-information/
being-international-student-australia/
overseas
IELTS
(Academic Strand)
TOEFL
(internet-based)
PTE
(Academic)
CAE
Insearch
65-72
67-73
AE6
58-64
58-66
AE5
50-57
52-57
AE5
42
TUITION FEES
Domestic (Australian and New Zealand
citizens and Australian permanent
residents) students are eligible for the
Research Training Scheme (RTS). RTS will
pay your tuition fees for the duration of the
research degree (PhD 4 years and Master
by Research 2 years). More information
about the Research Training Scheme is
available from the Department of Industry
website:
http://education.gov.au/researchtraining-scheme
International students must pay tuition
fees prior to the commencement of each
semester. The fees may vary between
courses. For detailed information about
tuition fees for UTS courses and the
UTS Protocol on Fees and Refunds
for International Students studying in
Australia go to:
www.uts.edu.au/future-students/
international/essential-information/feesinformation/postgraduate-research-fees
43
CONTACT UTS
DOMESTIC APPLICATION ENQUIRIES
[email protected]
Tel: (02) 9514 1336
Fax: (02) 9514 1588
The Graduate Research School
Level 7, Building 1
15 Broadway, Ultimo NSW 2007
INTERNATIONAL APPLICATION
ENQUIRIES
[email protected]
Tel: +61 2 9514 1336
Fax: +61 2 9514 1588
The Graduate Research School
Level 7, Building 1
15 Broadway, Ultimo NSW 2007
ALL SCHOLARSHIP ENQUIRIES
[email protected]
Tel: +61 2 9514 1336
Fax: +61 2 9514 1588
The Graduate Research School
Level 7, Building 1
15 Broadway, Ultimo NSW 2007
POSTAL ADDRESS
The Graduate Research School
University of Technology Sydney (UTS)
PO Box 123
Broadway NSW 2007
The University of Technology Sydney (UTS ) has used its
best efforts to ensure that the information contained
in this guide was correct and current at the time of
publication (September 2015). The information is provided
in good faith as a guide and resource for new students.
UTS accepts no responsibility for any error or omission.
Information contained in this guide is subject to change
from time to time. You are advised to check the accuracy
and currency of the information with the relevant faculty or
unit within UTS, or with the relevant external organisation,
before acting upon the information.