Updating Results

University of Adelaide

  • 28% international / 72% domestic

Bachelor of Computer Science (Honours)

  • Bachelor (Honours)

An honours degree is a one-year program that builds upon undergraduate study by introducing the challenge of an extended research project.There are many reasons we encourage graduates to apply for an honours year. You might want to build a necessary foundation for postgraduate research.

Key details

Degree Type
Bachelor (Honours)
Duration
1 year full-time
Course Code
3BH004, 3BH069, 015094K
Intake Months
Jul, Feb
International Fees
$49,500 per year / $49,500 total

About this course

Turn high-achieving into a higher degree

An honours degree is a one-year program that builds upon undergraduate study by introducing the challenge of an extended research project.

There are many reasons we encourage graduates to apply for an honours year. You might want to build a necessary foundation for postgraduate research. You could be seeking computer-based solutions to problems in industry, commerce, science, entertainment, or the public sector. Perhaps you're pursuing advanced communication skills and subject knowledge to gain a competitive edge in the job market.

Our researchers work at the cutting edge of science and technology within a faculty ranked 43 in the world for computer science and engineering*. Our prerequisite for honours study is at least a credit standard GPA.

Study locations

North Terrace

North Terrace Campus

Course structure

Honours Degree of Bachelor of Computer Science is normally made up of six honours courses and an individually supervised project. The supervised project lasts the whole year and counts for 40% of the assessment. In special cases, the honours degree may be spread over two years.

The courses offered in the honours degree vary from year to year, depending on the research interests of the academic staff presenting them. Examples include:

Computer Vision
Distributed Databases and Data Mining
Language Translators
Evolutionary Computation
Mobile and Wireless Networks
Honours courses typically have smaller classes and are less formal than undergraduate courses. Assessment varies and may include writing reports, assignments, and/or exams.

Honours projects are conducted under the supervision of a member of the academic staff, sometimes in association with one of the School of Computer Science's research groups. Project topics are selected by discussion with a supervisor during the first week of the degree.

Graduate outcomes

Graduate satisfaction and employment outcomes for Computing & Information Systems courses at University of Adelaide.
62.8%
Overall satisfaction
76.5%
Skill scale
66.7%
Teaching scale