Bachelor of Health and Biomedical Sciences (Honours)

1 Years On Campus Bachelors Program

RMIT University

Program Overview

The Bachelor of Health and Biomedical Sciences (Honours) at RMIT University is a one-year research-focused program that gives you hands-on experience in cutting-edge health and biomedical research. It’s perfect for graduates who want to build advanced research skills, deepen their scientific knowledge, and prepare for careers in research, diagnostics, scientific communication, or further postgraduate study.

Curriculum Structure

In your honours year, you’ll take your existing undergraduate knowledge and apply it directly to a substantial research project under the guidance of a dedicated supervisor. The program includes subjects like Research Methods and Scientific Communication, which teach you how to analyse data, plan experiments, and present complex scientific ideas clearly. The series of Research Project units guides you through designing, conducting, and reporting an original research project, giving you practical experience in planning experiments, solving problems, and interpreting results. By the end of the year, you’ll have developed the skills to conduct independent research and communicate your findings like a professional scientist.

Focus Areas

Advanced research skills, scientific communication, health sciences investigation, independent research design

Learning Outcomes

Graduates will have strong problem-solving and research skills, the ability to carry out independent studies, and the confidence to contribute new knowledge in health and biomedical science. They’ll also be able to communicate complex scientific ideas effectively to both expert and non-expert audiences.

Professional Alignment (Accreditation)

The honours degree equips graduates to join professional scientific and biomedical societies in Australia, and the skills gained are highly valued by employers in research, diagnostics, health, and STEM-related industries.

Reputation (Employability & Rankings)

RMIT University is known for its research-intensive programs and strong connections with the scientific community, ensuring graduates are well-prepared for both professional careers and further postgraduate study.

Experiential Learning (Research, Projects, Internships etc.)

That sounds like a really promising pathway — the Honours year of RMIT University’s Bachelor of Health and Biomedical Sciences (Honours) is designed not just to add a credential to your degree, but to get you working like a real biomedical scientist — asking real questions, doing real experiments, and building skills that employers (or postgraduate supervisors) actually want. In that year, you take on a supervised independent research project, while also sharpening your methods, communication and critical-thinking skills through structured coursework. In short: you don’t just learn — you do, under expert guidance, and emerge ready to contribute to real health or biomedical science.

Here are the concrete experiential learning opportunities you’d get in this programme:

  • Undertake an independent, supervisor-guided research project tailored to your interests — working on topics across biomedical sciences, applied health, or allied health depending on your background.

  • Join and collaborate with established multidisciplinary research groups at RMIT, giving you the chance to work alongside experienced researchers in real labs or research settings.

  • Use RMIT’s extensive biomedical and biotechnical equipment and facilities, gaining hands-on experience with advanced tools and methods that mirror real-world research environments.

  • Develop and refine core professional skills through dedicated coursework in research methods, research practice and scientific communication, ensuring you can plan, execute, analyse and present scientific work effectively.

  • Engage in projects that may tie into external research partnerships or industry collaborations, which can offer insight into how biomedical research interfaces with industry, diagnostics, public health or allied-health sectors.

  • Build transferable skills — analysis, independent thinking, collaboration, scientific writing and communication — that are highly valued both in academic pathways (Masters/PhD) and in non-academic careers such as diagnostics, health industry, scientific communication or applied health sectors.

Progression & Future Opportunities

That’s a great choice — the Bachelor of Health and Biomedical Sciences (Honours) at RMIT University gives you a really strong springboard into both meaningful careers and further academic growth. Graduates leave well prepared for real-world health and science roles — as well as graduate-level study. Typical roles include working as a research scientist, in diagnostics or laboratory services, in biomedical industry or biotechnology, or even in health-policy and government health sectors.

Here’s what this means for you:

  • You’ll do a supervisor-guided research project as the core of the honours year, giving you hands-on experience in modern biomedical research and helping build a strong profile if you want to work in labs or industry research.

  • The training you get — in research methods, scientific communication, critical thinking and independent problem-solving — is highly respected by both academic institutions and non-academic employers.

  • Because RMIT partners with external research groups and industry collaborators, there are real opportunities to contribute to impactful projects (in applied health, diagnostics, biotech and allied health) even while you’re a student.

  • Graduates are often eligible to join Australian scientific and biomedical professional societies — which can help when you’re looking for jobs or research collaborations.

  • After completing honours, many go on to postgraduate or research-degree paths; but even if you enter the workforce, the qualification signals you have robust research and applied-science training — a plus in labs, diagnostics centres, biotech firms, government health agencies, or regulatory bodies.

Further Academic Progression:
Once you finish this honours degree, you’ve got options. You could apply for postgraduate courses at RMIT in related health, biomedical or applied-health areas. There are also pathways to specialised diplomas (for example in occupational health and safety) or degrees in community health, mental-health nursing or other allied/clinical fields (depending on your interests). And if you enjoy research, you could go on to a Master’s or PhD — building on the research skills and thesis experience you gain during honours.

Program Key Stats

$46,080
$13,558
Febr Intake : 30th Nov


No
Yes

Eligibility Criteria

2.5
-
-

-
N/A
6.5
79
-

Additional Information & Requirements

Career Options

  • Biomedical Engineer
  • Clinical Engineer
  • Rehabilitation Engineer
  • Medical Device Designer
  • Biomedical Research Scientist
  • Biomechanics Engineer
  • Regulatory Affairs Specialist
  • Quality Assurance Engineer (Medical Devices)
  • Tissue Engineering Specialist
  • Healthcare Technology Consultant

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