CERTIFICATE IN FOUNDATION STUDIES, LEVEL 3: WHITINGA

COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

Semester One 2016

ThisNZQA-approved 60-credit certificate programme comprises four courses, each worth 15 credits. Depending on their study/career pathway (and, for new students, the results of the Skills Review), students will be offered four courses from the list below, which must be completed successfully in order to be eligible to graduate.

Literacy and Numeracy

As literacy is embedded throughout all our courses, at Level 2 Bridgepoint does not offer specific literacy courses. Numeracy includes the basic maths skills needed in everyday life. Basic numeracy is embedded throughout all our courses.

ALAF3070 – Internal Business Environment

Topics covered:Entrepreneurship, product design and promotion, management, competitor analysis, marketing, operations, distribution, accounting, human resource management and experience of running a business as a project.

COMM3080 - Business Communications and Personal Effectiveness:

Topics covered: Teamwork, communication process and barriers, SWOT analysis, conducting questionnaires, oral presentations, sustainability and ethics, health and safety, customer service, business writing, writing a report.

FSTU2101 - Understanding Maths A

Course Aim: To develop students’ confidence in their own ability to think mathematically and to use and communicate mathematics in the solving of problems in a variety of contexts, including those of everyday life and the workplace.

Content Outline:

  • Calculate using integers, fractions, decimal fractions, percentages, ratios, and powers
  • Develop and use proportional reasoning skills, including ratios, rates, fractions and percentages
  • Solve numerical problems in context (e.g. nursing and financial contexts), using calculators where appropriate
  • Solve measurement problems in context
  • Interpret data and reason statistically

FSTU2103 - Understanding Maths B

Course Aim: To develop students’ understanding of algebra and algebraic thinking in a variety of representations, and for them become confident in applying algebraic skills in a variety of contexts.

Content Outline:

  • Make sense of and generalise number operations to develop algebraic concepts and notations
  • Investigate patterns and use algebraic notation
  • Substitute into and manipulate algebraic formulae including expansion of two brackets
  • Use graphs to represent relations and link multiple representations
  • Form and solve linear equations
  • Investigate situations involving chance and uncertainty
  • Investigate collected data and use it to reason statistically

FSTU3101 - Maths Algebra

Course Aim: To extend students’ confidence and understanding of algebra and trigonometry and to use mathematical skills in the solving of problems in a variety of contexts.

Content Outline:

•Investigate non-linear patterns and use graphs to represent relations and link multiple representations

•Develop further algebraic concepts and skills, including substitution and manipulation of expressions with indices, and transposing formulae

•Understand linear and quadratic patterns, cubic and hyperbolic functions and link with their graphs

•Form and solve linear equations and inequations, simultaneous linear equations and simple quadratic equations

•Solve contextual problems involving linear and quadratic functions

•Trigonometry – apply trigonometric relationships in 2 and 3 dimensions, linking simple trigonometric functions with their graphs. Find areas of triangles, apply sine and cosine rules

FSTU3103 - Construction Maths

Course Aim: To extend students’ confidence and understanding of mathematics used in construction and to use mathematical skills in the solving of problems.

Content Outline:

•Develop further number concepts and skills and use them to solve problems including complex percentage calculations

•Use measurement applications including 3D contexts, right angled triangles (Pythagoras) and bearings

•Use formulae and calculators in solving complex measurement problems

•Reason proportionally including use of rates, scale factors and other ratios

•Trigonometry applying trigonometric relationships in 2 and 3 dimensions, linking simple trigonometric functions with their graphs, finding areas of triangles, applying sine and cosine rules

FSTU3105 - Science Maths

Course Aim: To extend students’ confidence and understanding of mathematics and calculus and to use mathematical skills in the solving of problems.

Content Outline:

•Algebra – manipulative skills including use of indices and logarithms and applying these to solving equations and contextual problems

•Trigonometry – understanding of trig ratios and their graphs, applying these in solving trigonometric equations; exploring angle measures including radians and use to solve contextual problems; manipulation of simple trigonometric identities

•Graphical representations of a variety of functions connecting the graphs and the structure of the function

•Calculus – developing concepts of limits, derivatives, anti-derivatives and applying calculus techniques to practical situations which could include rates of change, graphical features, areas under a curve and kinematics

FSTU3107 - Nursing Maths

Course Aim: To extend students’ confidence and understanding of the mathematics used in nursing and to use mathematical thinking in the solving of contextual problems.

Content Outline:

•Carry out measurement tasks related to nursing

•Interpret data in tables and graphs – develop statistical concepts and skills needed for nursing

•Interpret and apply probabilities to make decisions involving risk and uncertainty

•Use mathematical methods to solve nursing related calculations including drug calculations, infusion rates and solution strengths

FSTU3201 - Biology

Course Aim: To develop students’ knowledge of biological processes and concepts, and their interaction with each other and the environment.

Content Outline:

•Cell biology

•Human and animal life processes

•Diversity and genetics

FSTU3403 - Physics – Mechanics

Course Aim: To develop students’ knowledge of basic physics processes and concepts and their interactions and applications.

Content Outline:

•Physical phenomena: kinematics and motion, forces and density, energy and momentum

•Applications and scientific investigation

FSTU3404 - Academic and Career Development – Science

Course Aim: To relate physics to students’ personal and professional development and facilitate progress to the next level of study in physical phenomena.

Content Outline:

•Features of scientific method and best practice in scientific investigations

•Interaction of physics and society

•Career pathways

FSTU3501 - Creative Arts 3

Course Aim: To enable students’ to confidently express themselves through chosen art forms.

Content Outline:

•Students’ explore the tensions and or contrasts of what it means to be human

•Dramatic and/or literary and/or visual techniques are explored and illustrated

•Students’ explore and illustrate key concepts from one or more of the disciplines

FSTU3502 - Creative Arts Additional 3

Course Aim: To relate creative arts to personal and professional development and to prepare them for further study within a creative pathway.

Content Outline:

•Dramatic and/or literary and/or visual techniques are explored and illustrated

•Real world practitioners and their stories

•Opportunities available for further studies in creative arts pathways

FSTU3601 - Introduction to Social Sciences 3

Course Aim: To develop an introductory understanding of social sciences for future learning.

Content Outline:

•Understanding behaviour: nature versus nurture; determinism and free will

•Getting in and out of trouble: bio-psycho-social model; strengths-based approach; labelling

•Community programmes: social responsibilities and social policy

•Research

FSTU3602 - Academic and Career Development, Social Science 3

Course Aim: To discover and develop competencies to self-manage their life, work and learning.

Topics covered:

•Range of literacies necessary to communicate with their peers and with the wider world, including

•prospective employers, further study, broader networks and in online spaces

•Opportunities to integrate life, learning and work

•Self-reflection

•Strategies to make well-informed decisions and find alternatives when faced with obstacles

FSTU3701 - Humanities 3

Course Aim: To develop an introductory understanding of humanities for future learning.

Topics covered:

•Social inequalities and environmental protection

•United Nations conventions, the Treaty of Waitangi and New Zealand laws and commissioners: examples such as United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child; Human Rights Act; Privacy Act; Health and Disability Commissioner

•Advocacy: logical and persuasive argument on behalf of another person or community

FSTU3801 - Cultures in Aotearoa New Zealand 3

Course Aim: To enable students’ to further develop an intermediate knowledge of Matauranga Māori.

Content Outline:

•Intermediate Te Reo Māori

•Māori waiata

•Māori tikanga and values

•Marae protocol

•Te Tiriti o Waitangi and Waitangi Tribunal

FSTU3901 - Negotiated Pathway Project 3

Course Aim: To enable students to undertake a developmental and holistic activity as an alternative way of achieving the graduate profile.

Content Outline:

  • To be negotiated and developed with the Pathway Leader, lecturer and student before the commencement of the project.

FSTU4000 - Sport Leadership

Course Aim: To provide students with the skills and strategies to contextualise, manage information and communicate effectively in relation to leadership in a sport and physical activity context.

Topics covered:

  • Definitions of leadership

•Leadership concepts

•Leadership styles and values

•Leader philosophies

•Self-leadership

•Exploring, discovering, navigating and empowering leadership relating to the SPARC Growing Leaders Programme

•You – the Leader: Contributing and influencing through leadership in sport

•Leadership inventory

•The leader in the team

•The Coach Leader

•Practical activities suitable for leadership in sport or physical activity

•Leadership plan for leading of others

FSTU4001 - Sport Performance

Course Aim: To provide students with basic skills and strategies to contextualise, manage information and communicate effectively in areas specific to sport performance.

Topics covered:

•Definitions for sport, fitness and athletic performance

•Basic components of health relating to athletes social, physical and psychological characteristics

•Issues for athletes relating to: athletic profiles, public image, sport and the media

•Components of fitness relating to athletic performance in a sporting environment

  • understand goal setting and undertake a goal setting analysis
  • understand and apply the principles of training
  • fitness testing in endurance, speed, power and flexibility

•Nutrition components relating to health and wellness

  • understand nutritional recommendations for health and performance
  • knowledge of common food sources
  • knowledge of and the ability to explain the cause and effect of nutrition imbalance in relation to athletic performance

•Psychological factors relating to sport

  • Identify personal goals and goal setting strategies
  • Examine the concept of athletic motivation on athletic performance
  • Understand the affect of anxiety and stress on athletic performance

MAOR3999 – Toi Maori

To enable students to broaden their knowledge of Toi Maori (Maori Art), through the mediums of Whakairo (Carving), Raranga (Weaving), Ta Moko (Tattooing) and Kowhaiwhai

Topics may include:

  • Mythology
  • tikanga
  • customs
  • traditional practices related to each discipline
  • natural resources
  • colonisation
  • urbanisation
  • cultural & intellectual property rights
  • traditional & contemporary design, concepts and contexts
  • workshop protocols & procedures

Materials Required:

Necessary

  • A4 sketch pad for visual diary/diaries
  • Pencils/pens for drawing and note taking
  • Camera or something that is able to take images to support visual diaries.

Optional

Any paints, pastels, markers, paper you are interested in experimenting with, and any extra materials required for your final presentation (ie. black material, paper, pins, colour printing, etc)