

BA Graphic Design
About this course
Graphic design is concerned with the visual communication of ideas, information, and identity. At its core it asks how images, type, colour, space, and medium can be combined to communicate something effectively to a specific audience. It is a discipline that spans print, digital, environmental, and motion contexts, and the designer's role has expanded considerably with the growth of digital media, user experience design, and the demand for coherent visual identities across multiple platforms. Design is also increasingly collaborative, requiring designers to work within teams, manage projects, and negotiate briefs with clients and stakeholders. At Teesside University, this part-time Graphic Design programme develops your creative skills alongside the professional capabilities that working in the field requires. You will develop your abilities in typography, image-making, layout, and digital tools, alongside an understanding of design history and theory that gives your practice a critical context. A distinctive element of the programme involves collaborative work with your peers, producing small-scale creative projects in response to specific briefs, which builds the skills in team-working, communication, project management, and negotiation that the current course description highlights. These are genuinely the skills that design studios, agencies, and in-house teams look for, and the ability to work collaboratively on a creative brief under real constraints is one of the most valuable things a design education can provide. The part-time structure makes this degree accessible to students who are working alongside their studies or who have other responsibilities, while still providing a thorough and practically oriented design education. Teesside's creative arts provision has a strong regional reputation, and the North East's creative economy includes agencies, digital businesses, and public sector design teams that provide a relevant professional context for your studies. Graduates work in graphic design studios, advertising, publishing, branding, digital product design, and as freelance practitioners. The range of career paths reflects the breadth of contexts in which visual communication skills are needed.
Syllabus & Modules
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