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Friday, September 12, 2008

Pursuing a Bachelors Degree in Design

By Scott Salter

Anyone looking to pursue a career in design will almost certainly need to get a bachelor's degree in design before applying for prospective employment at any given firm. Design bachelor's degrees are undergraduate academic degrees generally lasting three or four years and are aimed at giving you the core skills and knowledge that you'll need to pursue a career in your chosen field. This article will look at the various sub-fields of design in which you can pursue a design bachelor degree.

If you're looking to pursue a career in design it will usually be because you have a certain amount of visual flair and an interest in combining the aesthetic with the functional. We live in a society that is in a constant state of flux and therefore always subject to new influences. This in turn creates a need for designers to create new designs (regardless of the field) which are reflective of the environment and the times in which we live, whilst at the same time delivering functionality that hopefully makes our lives a little easier.

There are various sub-sets of design in which you can specialize. The field of graphic design is aimed at providing visual impact to corporate communications; web design is about constructing appealing and useful websites; industrial design is concerned with producing new products that have both functional and aesthetic appeal; fashion design is an applied art relating to clothing and accessories; interior design about designing pleasing spaces in which people can live and work; and games design about designing entertaining electronic games for people to play.

All of these fields will have an associated bachelor's or associate degree attached to them. Bachelors in design degrees are obtained from a college, University or other accredited school program and will take four to five years to complete depending on how fast you wish to graduate and on how many concentrations, majors or minors you wish to attain. A bachelor's degree will have a direct effect on your earning potential: a 2002 report by the American Council on Education showed that a an average individual with a bachelors degree earned $22,000 per annum more than a high school graduate and $14,000 more than an Associate's degree recipient.

There are an increasing number of schools that are now offering online design degrees via the Distance Education Network. The curricula on offer via online undergraduate programs are not substantially different than those on offer to those whom are required to physically attend a campus. An online degree obviously gives you greater flexibility in how they go about pursuing your studies as well as a greater choice of schools.


For more information on the different types of design bachelor degrees go to http://www.bachelorsindesign.com

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