Complementary medicine/CMT101/About

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About Complementary medicine

Course Name: Complementary medicine (CMT101)

Complementary medicine is one micro-course (short course) from a suite of Micro Courses developed by the University of Tasmania. This micro course, in particular, is part of the The Diploma of Sustainable Living. Which is a complete degree you could enrol in if you find yourself wanting to learn more about Food Security, Sustainability or the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals?

These micro-courses are 1/3 of an award course (full course) that a traditional student would enrol in at the University of Tasmania. These courses have been designed to allow learners to engage and sample learning from a higher education institution before deciding on their next step. Remembering all learning on OERu is free and assessments are always optional.

The unit helps you develop critical thinking and an appreciation of diverse approaches as CMT contains many confounding issues and perspectives.


What is the course about

At the core of this unit is the question: How can we achieve Complementary medicine in the 21st century and what role might you play in this?

We hope that you can keep this question in mind throughout the unit as achieving Complementary medicine will require participation across all of society.



What is involved

There are 4 learning pathways each containing numerous resources and learning challenges designed to help you develop your thinking in relation to Complementary medicine. The Four learning pathways are:

  1. Products and its Practitioners
  2. utilization of Complementary Medicine
  3. Growth, Commodification and Big Business
  4. Environmental Issues of Complementary Medicine

Learning can expect to complete this Micro Course within 40 hours. Learners that participate in the assessment component of this course, can also expect to complete the course within 40 hours.

Prerequisites: Do I need them?

Anyone is free to participate in this course. An internet connection and basic web browsing skills are required.

Learners aiming to submit assessments for formal credit towards an academic qualification will need to meet the normal university admission requirements of the conferring institution (e.g. language proficiency and school leaving certificates etc.). Please see the assessment details tab.

Each micro-course can be studied independently.