Course Title: Youth Justice Systems

Part A: Course Overview

Course Title: Youth Justice Systems

Credit Points: 12.00

Terms

Course Code

Campus

Career

School

Learning Mode

Teaching Period(s)

HWSS2116

City Campus

Postgraduate

365H Global, Urban and Social Studies

Face-to-Face

Sem 2 2008,
Sem 2 2009,
Sem 2 2010,
Sem 2 2011,
Sem 2 2019

HWSS2116

City Campus

Postgraduate

365H Global, Urban and Social Studies

Internet

Sem 2 2023

HWSS2117

City Campus

Undergraduate

365H Global, Urban and Social Studies

Face-to-Face

Sem 2 2006,
Sem 2 2007,
Sem 2 2008,
Sem 2 2009,
Sem 2 2010,
Sem 2 2011,
Sem 2 2019

HWSS2117

City Campus

Undergraduate

365H Global, Urban and Social Studies

Internet

Sem 2 2023

Course Coordinator: Robin Cameron

Course Coordinator Phone: +(61 3) 9925 2721

Course Coordinator Email: robin.cameron@rmit.edu.au

Course Coordinator Location: Building 37. Floor 04. Room 9

Course Coordinator Availability: By appointment


Pre-requisite Courses and Assumed Knowledge and Capabilities

None


Course Description

 

This course is designed to provide you with an introduction to youth justice issues from a national and international perspective, and to highlight issues that specifically relate to youth justice in Victoria. It is also designed to assist you to be both a thoughtful and practical professional working with young people and the youth justice system. The course will introduce the historical, ethical and theoretical underpinnings of the current system. You will consider explanations of delinquency and offending behaviour, as well as the key legal principles at work in the youth justice system, including the link between child protection, youth justice, and the adult criminal justice system. You will also learn about adopting a holistic approach to working with young people, including developing effective interventions


Objectives/Learning Outcomes/Capability Development

In this course you will develop the following graduate capabilities:

  • Informed professional practice
  • Ethical practice
  • Reflective practice


On successful completion of the course, you will be able to:

  1. Distinguish between various ideas about justice in the contemporary youth justice system;
  2. Critically appraise various explanations of young people’s delinquent and offending behaviour and the notion of children and young people being categorised as victims or threats;
  3. Describe the key historical factors that have shaped the current youth justice system;
  4. Explain the ’philosophical underpinnings’ of the Children, Youth & Families Act 2005, especially minimising intervention into the lives of young offenders; the hierarchy of sentencing; and the separation of ‘needs and deeds’;
  5. Apply the features of effective assessment and interventions for working with young people in preparing relevant written documentation;
  6. Evaluate strategies to assist young people to develop pathways out of the youth justice system.


Overview of Learning Activities

This course may be delivered in face-to-face or online modes. Face-to-face modes will include a blend of learning activities, which include lectures, seminars, tutorials, panel discussions, debates, role plays, guest speakers, presentations, case studies/scenarios, videos, and student lead discussions. Online modes will involve self-paced lectures, reading materials and online discussions to enable a flexible learning experience.


Overview of Learning Resources

There is generally a prescribed text for this course as well as selected readings. RMIT will provide you with resources and tools for learning in this course through our online systems.


Overview of Assessment

You will be assessed on how well you meet the course’s learning outcomes and on your development against the program learning outcomes. 

Assessment Tasks
Task 1: Critical Reflections piece, 30% (CLO 1,2,3,4)
Task 2: Pre-Sentence Report, 30% (CLO 4, 5, 6)
Task 3: Client Risk Assessment, 40% (CLO 4, 5, 6)

Feedback will be given on all assessment tasks. 

If you have a long term medical condition and/or disability it may be possible to negotiate to vary aspects of the learning or assessment methods. You can contact the program coordinator or Equitable Learning Services if you would like to find out more. 

A student charter http://www.rmit.edu.au/about/studentcharter summarises your responsibilities as an RMIT student as well as those of your teachers.

Your course assessment conforms to RMIT assessment principles, regulations, policies, procedures and instructions which are available for review online: http://www.rmit.edu.au/policies/academic#assessment