This subject contains a 15 days Compulsory Workplace Learning component.
Student must attend a Mixed Practice for this clinical rotation.
This rotation exposes students to mixed rural veterinary practice. Mixed veterinary practices are common throughout rural Australia and perform an important role in their communities by ensuring access of the public to veterinary services, advice on zoonoses, public health and animal welfare and performing other community services, while also acting as sentinels for new or exotic diseases of animals and as a reserve for outbreaks of introduced disease in animals. This composite role is unique to mixed rural practice and CSU veterinary graduates require an understanding and familiarity with this complex community responsibility.
HD/FL
One session
School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences
Bachelor of Veterinary Science
Bachelor of Veterinary Biology/Bachelor of Veterinary Science
Bachelor of Veterinary Biology/Bachelor of Veterinary Science (Honours)
VSC415 and VSC426 and VSC427 and VSC450 and VSC451 and VSC453
Veterinary reproduction
Veterinary surgery
Veterinary medicine
Veterinary emergency medicine
Veterinary anaesthesia
Diagnostic imaging
Epidemiology
Public Health
Communication skills
The following table summarises the assessment tasks for the online offering of VSC466 in Session 2 2019. Please note this is a guide only. Assessment tasks are regularly updated and can also differ to suit the mode of study (online or on campus).
This subject contains a 15 days Compulsory Workplace Learning component.
Student must attend a Mixed Practice for this clinical rotation.
Students have to supply their own travel and accommodation for the Mixed Practice Rotation.
The information contained in the CSU Handbook was accurate at the date of publication: October 2020. The University reserves the right to vary the information at any time without notice.