NOTE: THIS PROGRAM IS NO LONGER ACCEPTING NEW STUDENTS OR INTERNAL TRANSFERS
Arnold Bernhard Center
Telephone: (203) 576-4316
Curriculum and Program Requirements
The SASD Graphic Design Program offers two four-year B.F.A. programs: Graphic Design, and Graphic Design New Media. Each curriculum is a B.F.A. (Bachelor of Fine Arts) of 125 credits minimum.
Graphic Design students are versatile visual communicators, designing for a wide range of print and digital media, including identity systems, websites, posters, typefaces, motion graphics, and books.
Graphic Design New Media students specialize in digital design, focusing on video, animation, sound, electronic publishing, interactive processes, user interfaces, augmented and virtual reality, and web-based design and development.
Both curricula consist of integrated, inter-disciplinary sequences which strengthen concept development, communication skills, critical thinking, problem solving abilities, creativity, research methods, and professional practice.
Graphic Design and Graphic Design New Media majors share the same foundation in the fundamentals of design. Beginning the second year, students choose electives in accordance with their major and their interests, and proceed together through the Graphic Design Studio sequence.
Both programs offer opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration, internships, real-world client projects, social impact design, entrepreneurship, and a self-directed thesis project in the senior year.
Learning Outcomes
- Demonstrate ability to identify, analyze, and solve design problems. Assessment: Portfolio projects and project research.
- Demonstrate mastery of design tools, techniques, and concepts in design. Assessment: Projects and portfolios that evidence craftsmanship and adherence to project parameters.
- Demonstrate an understanding of the aesthetics of form development, and of the history and current state of design. Assessment: Projects, papers, and presentations for art and design history courses; in studio courses, projects that appropriately reference historical precedents.
- Demonstrate proficiency in selection and use of relevant technologies in design. Abilities to use available technical and industrial processes to produce a design product, and to design and implement such a process. Assessment: Project and portfolio materials planned to be feasibly reproducible by industrial means rather than by one-off or by hand.
- Demonstrate an understanding of the cultural and societal connections linking design trends and processes as well as a knowledge of business practices and of the market place. Assessment: Projects and portfolio solutions that are culturally- and audience-appropriate for the problem as posed by the business and market briefs for the project.