Monash Law Honours

The award of an Honours degree in Law is currently based on the weighted average of marks obtained in Monash Law units.

If you are working towards an Honours degree, you should consider enrolling in the Honours Research Unit in which you complete an honours thesis. Students who undertake the unit receive a 20% bonus added to the grade achieved in that unit for the purposes of the weighted average calculation.

See Honours Research Unit.

Calculation of Honours

The award of an Honours degree in Law is currently based on the weighted average of marks obtained in Monash Law units.

Depending on your Honours Weighted Average (HWA) you may be awarded may be awarded an Honours classification of HI, HIIA, HIIB or HIII. For further information, see Honour Classification and Order of Merit.

Honours Weighted Average (HWA)

The Honours Weighted Average is the weighted average of all of a student's Monash law units in the degree.
Each law unit is weighted according to its value in the Bachelor of Laws:

  • 12 credit point units and compulsory full year units carry a weighting of 1.0
  • 6 credit point units and compulsory semester units carry a weighting of 0.5
  • 3 credit point units carry a weighting of 0.25

20% bonus for LAW5207 Research Unit 512

It is possible to qualify for the degree with honours without undertaking LAW5207 Research Unit 512, in which students complete an honours thesis. However students who undertake the unit receive a 20% bonus added to the grade achieved in that unit for the purposes of the HWA calculation. See Honours Research Unit below for more information.

Honours classifications and order of merit

The Faculty of Law calculates the order of merit in February of each year, based on the HWA of every completing student.

Honours cut-offs were determined and endorsed by Faculty Board Meeting 1/08. The following cut-offs were applied when determining the Honours grade in 2008:

Honours grade Weighted average
HI 73
HIIA 71
HIIB 69
HIII 67

Applying for an Honours Degree

Honours are awarded by the Faculty of Law based on the Order of Merit. You do not apply for the award of Honours.

The Order of Merit list ranks each student in the graduating cohort by their HWA. Students are identified by ID number only.

If you do not wish your ID number to be included in the Order of Merit, you can request that the number be withheld in the published list.

Honours Research Unit

For their final full year of law, many of the Faculty's top students elect to enrol in the Honours Research Unit (LAW5207 Research Unit 512).

In the Honours Research Unit, you write an 8,000 - 10,000 word thesis under the supervision of an academic member of staff, on a topic you've chosen. You must have your topic approved by a staff member.

Undertaking an Honours thesis gives you the opportunity to choose an area of the law that fascinates you and, under expert guidance from a member of staff, to:

  • rigorously analyse this area, and research it in great detail
  • write a learned piece about that area of the law.

You will further develop high level research and writing skills, and gain a deeper understanding of the discipline. You're also more likely to be considered for some highly sought-after jobs, such as a judge's associate, if you've included a major research project in your degree.

Are you eligible?

To be eligible for the Honours Research Unit, you must have both:

  • an average of 68% or better across your law subjects, when you submit your application form (see below)
  • no more than 54 credit points remaining to complete the law requirements of your degree when you commence the Honours Research Unit.

Scheduling the thesis into your course

The Honours Research Unit is a 12 credit point subject.

If you undertake the Honours Research Unit, you may schedule the Honours Research Unit either to:

  • commence in semester 1, with the thesis being due towards the end of semester 2
  • commence in semester 2, with the thesis being due a short while after the beginning of semester 1, the following year 

If you will finish your degree at the end of first semester in a particular year, you will find it convenient to commence the Honours Research Unit at the beginning of second semester in the preceding year.

Bonus points in the Honours Weighted Average (HWA)

In recognition of the high level achievement in researching and writing a thesis, a bonus 20% is added to the grade obtained in that unit when calculating the student's overall Honours Weighted Average.

That 20% bonus may have a significant impact upon a student's Honours Weighted Average, and could easily affect the class of honours awarded, as well as the student's ranking in the order of merit in the graduating class. See Honours classifications and order of merit above.

The bonus in action

Assume a student obtains a mark of 80% for her Honours Thesis (the median result for Honours theses in 2007 was in fact 82%!). For the purposes of ascertaining the student's Honours Weighted Average (HWA), the thesis mark of 80% will count as a mark of 96% (80% + (20% * 80%)). More accurately, since the Honours Research Unit is a 12 point subject, it will count as the equivalent of marks of 96% in two (6 point) units.

Because of that weighting, a student who is doing a 156 credit point LLB as part of a combined degree, and who receives 80% for the Honours thesis, will receive a bonus of 1.23 marks in calculating the HWA.

That bonus of 1.23 marks could be crucial to the class of honours a student obtains, since only two marks separate each class of honours award. (see table of numerical values of HWAs for each class of honours, See Honours classifications and order of merit above.

Further examples:

Honours thesis mark Bonus marks in HWA
75% 1.15
85% 1.38

In each case, the bonus will not necessarily, but might well, catapult the student into the award of a higher class of honours.

Listen to an explanation of this bonus, as well as other matters relevant to the Honours Research Unit, by the 2009 semester 2 Honours Convenor, Normann Witzleb.

Applying for the Honours Research Unit

If you would like to commence the Honours Research Unit in 2012 (whether in semester 1 or semester 2 of that year) you must lodge your application by 28th November 2011. Download the Honours program application form here or obtain a copy from the Student Services counter.

Successful applicants will be notified in December.

The only students who will be permitted to apply for entry in the 2012 semester 2 intake after their semester 1 2012 results for that year have been published, will be those students who have already applied in November 2011, but who did not meet the requisite average. Accordingly, even if you are not confident of achieving the requisite average (68%) in November 2011, but you think that you may achieve the average as a result of your first semester 2012 being taken into account, you must apply for entry into the unit in November 2011, so that you have the right to reapply after semester 1 2012.

You will then, in consultation with a member of staff, be required to develop a research proposal, which will be submitted for approval by the Director of the Honours Program.

Further information

For further information about the Honours program, please contact:

Pauline Smith
Student Services

First floor, Faculty of Law
Phone: + 61 3 9905 3300
Email: Pauline.Smith@monash.edu

Dr Colin Campbell

Convenor, Honours Program