| 1 | <p>Describe and explain key developments and movements in architecture from the late 19th century to the post-World War II period.</p> | <p>BAS - Bachelor of Architectural Studies - Programme Capabilities <p>Evidence an appreciation of the inter-relationship between societies and the built environment and the ability to foster sustainable cultural practices in the context of the Te Moana-nui-a-Kiwa - as the great connector of all Polynesia and the world.</p><p>Evidence knowledge and understanding of the importance of creativity and innovation in the history, theory and critical practice of architecture, and the ability to apply them in practice or to progress to a professional postgraduate architecture qualification.</p><p>Show an understanding of key issues and multiple viewpoints around the built environment disciplines in all their contexts: human, environmental, social, cultural, historical, contemporary, future, local, regional, and global.</p> </p> |
| 2 | <p>Understand and explain how architecture is influenced by cultural, social and physical contexts.</p> | <p>BAS - Bachelor of Architectural Studies - Programme Capabilities <p>Evidence an appreciation of the inter-relationship between societies and the built environment and the ability to foster sustainable cultural practices in the context of the Te Moana-nui-a-Kiwa - as the great connector of all Polynesia and the world.</p><p>Evidence knowledge and understanding of the importance of creativity and innovation in the history, theory and critical practice of architecture, and the ability to apply them in practice or to progress to a professional postgraduate architecture qualification.</p><p>Show an understanding of key issues and multiple viewpoints around the built environment disciplines in all their contexts: human, environmental, social, cultural, historical, contemporary, future, local, regional, and global.</p> </p> |
| 3 | <p>Identify, research, contextualise and analyse significant late 19th and 20th century buildings and/or architecture projects, with reference to such things as siting, exterior form, planning, spatial qualities, structure and materials.</p> | <p>BAS - Bachelor of Architectural Studies - Programme Capabilities <p>Evidence an appreciation of the inter-relationship between societies and the built environment and the ability to foster sustainable cultural practices in the context of the Te Moana-nui-a-Kiwa - as the great connector of all Polynesia and the world.</p><p>Evidence knowledge and understanding of the importance of creativity and innovation in the history, theory and critical practice of architecture, and the ability to apply them in practice or to progress to a professional postgraduate architecture qualification.</p><p>Show an understanding of key issues and multiple viewpoints around the built environment disciplines in all their contexts: human, environmental, social, cultural, historical, contemporary, future, local, regional, and global.</p><p>Evidence the ability to identify and globally frame context-specific conditions and needs, establish premises, gather information, analyse issues, appraise possibilities and produce rational architectural assessments, proposals and reflections that incorporate Māori epistemologies and the perspectives of other disciplines.</p> </p> |
| 4 | <p>Use a range of sources, particularly books, and demonstrate awareness of academic writing conventions.</p> | <p>BAS - Bachelor of Architectural Studies - Programme Capabilities <p>Evidence the ability to identify and globally frame context-specific conditions and needs, establish premises, gather information, analyse issues, appraise possibilities and produce rational architectural assessments, proposals and reflections that incorporate Māori epistemologies and the perspectives of other disciplines.</p><p>Demonstrate a variety of skills in, and abilities to (both individually and collaboratively) responsibly and respectfully gather, interpret, elaborate and share knowledge using an appropriate range of visual and written techniques, technologies and formats.</p><p>Demonstrate capacity to deploy manaakitanga and high ethical standards in any phase of architectural research to develop positive relationships with all relevant stakeholders, colleagues, and the wider publics.</p><p>Display the ability to operate professionally and with confidence both locally and globally through principled actions that leverage the Māori place-based approach and acknowledge the uniqueness, wealth, and vulnerability of each specific social, cultural, and environmental context.</p><p>Demonstrate personal integrity, good judgement, responsibility, independent thought, and lifelong learning/professional development propensity through all professional paths and actions pertaining to architectural research and practice.</p> </p> |