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Creative Design Industries

Foundation Degree in Digital Design and Media (Digital Media)

Start Date: September 2024
Site: College Main Site

Course Overview

On this exciting future focussed programme you will explore and develop the creative, critical, professional and personal skills needed in the competitive and rapidly changing digital media landscape. The course and methods of study allow you to engage with the contemporary issues and practices which are transforming media production and consumption. You will explore audio-visual production across a range of platforms and outcomes (Digital Content Production, Short Film and Music Video Production, Factual and Corporate Production, and Presentation / Interview Techniques) and have the opportunity to work in a variety of media. This includes video, audio, radio, animation, motion-graphics and interactive media. Emphasis can be placed on a medium of your choice and you will be encouraged to work outside of conventional forms, where appropriate, so that you are able to investigate and continually respond to the changing conventions of the sector. You will develop strong digital media skills which will make you highly employable. This programme is also ideal for employees who want to develop digital skills for career progression or to change careers. You can study 2 years full-time or 4 years part-time. As well as the Digital Media pathway, we also offer pathways in Digital Graphics, Digital Photography, 3D Design Visualisation, Surface Pattern and Textiles, Concept Art for Games and Film, and Visual Effects for Film and Games. Some of the modules on this course will be studied collaboratively by students on all pathways, whilst other modules will be specific to the specialist pathway you are studying. In the first Semester of Year 1 (September-February of the first year of the course) students will have exposure to all of the pathways available. If, at the end of this, you wish to switch your specialist pathway then you will have the one-off opportunity to do this in the February of Year 1 of your course. After this point, you will remain fixed on your chosen specialist pathway for the remaining duration of the programme. Full-time typically equates to two days per week in taught sessions, and part-time to one day per week in taught sessions. On top of this, students are expected to work independently on research, assignments, and practical projects.

Work Experience & Industry Placements

You will study Creative Industry Employability Skills and Professional Practice and take part in work experience or work related activity (e.g. live briefs) within the Creative Industries during this programme.

Qualification Gained

Level 5 Foundation Degree Arts in Digital Design and Media [Digital Media]. The awarding body is the University of Gloucestershire.



After The Course

You can apply and progress onto a Level 6 Top-Up Degree at another University. Or you could find employment in the Creative Industry or start your own Creative Business.

What Will I Learn

You will study a range of modules that will develop your specialist knowledge, skills and professional behaviours. Level 4 (Year 1 Full Time, and Years 1 & 2 for Part Time students) undertake Communication and Visual Culture, Creative Visual Research, Experimental Project 1, Creative Project 1: Digital Media, Creative Thinking, and Creative Industry Employability Skills. Level 5 (Year 2 Full Time and Years 3 & 4 for Part Time students) undertake Creative Professional Practice, Creative Enterprise, Experimental Project 2: Digital Media, Creative Project 2: Digital Media, Creative Major Project Research, and Creative Curation. Please be aware that modules studied may change periodically to reflect developments in the discipline or in response to student and stakeholder feedback. Students can always find the most up-to-date information about their modules and who is teaching them in the course handbook.

English And Maths

English and maths is embedded into the programme

Our Lecturers

Your lecturers are specialists in developing your skills to progress to your next level - most continue to work in the Creative Industries themselves! You will be taught by academics, practicing professionals and technical demonstrators. Staff are currently working on a range of live briefs within the creative sector and some of whom are educated to Masters level.

Teaching Learning and Assessment

Through structured, practical activities and demonstrations in our Creative Media Broadcast Studio and Digital Media and Visual Effects Lab, using a variety of resources provided including our industry standard Macs, PC’s, cameras, edit labs, sound labs, TV and Film Studio equipment and Adobe Creative Cloud Software, Final Cut Pro, and Logic Pro. Teaching is delivered in a variety of methods (e.g. tutor-led, student-led). Students are encouraged to manage their own learning, apply their learning in real-world context, develop adaptability and skills for research. Critical thinking, creativity and employability are key drivers of the Media curriculum. You will develop your skills whilst working on real exciting Media briefs. Each semester there will be 2 days of college led learning a week for the range of modules studied. You will be expected to complete independent study each week outside of these timetabled sessions on a range of tasks. This will vary depending on the requirements of the modules. You will study modules totalling 120 credits at Level 4, and a further 120 credits at Level 5. Each Level will be made up of a mixture of 15 credit and 30 credit modules. For a 15 credit module, on average, students will receive 30 hours of College-led teaching, learning and assessment. On top of this, students should expect to put in around 30 hours of independent study – researching, building technical skills, and working on assignments. For a 30 credit unit, there will be around 60 hours of College-led teaching, learning and assessment, and students should expect to put in around 60 hours of independent work on top of this.

Tutorials

The Programme Leader is your Tutor. You will have regular one to one meetings with your Tutor to support you with your personal development planning.

Course Expenses

For full information about tuition fees please see the 'YCUC Fees' and 'YCUC HE Fees Policy', both available in the 'Policies and Reports' area of our website. There are no required additional costs for the programme. Whilst some students may choose to buy their own device with Adobe software this isn't essential. Our technical demonstrator team can provide guidance if you require support with purchasing equipment / materials / resources for the course. Throughout the course there are opportunities to undertake trips and visits to industry exposition events and trade shows. Whilst these are not mandatory, they will enrich the learning experience. Students would be expected to fund their own travel to and from such events.

How Will I Be Assessed

You will be assessed for each module of study through a variety of assessment methods including practical projects, written essays and presentations. The course provides you with opportunities to test your understanding of the subject informally before you complete the formal assessments that count towards your final mark. For each module you will receive ‘formative’ assessment and feedback from your tutor on the assignment work you are working on. There is a formal or ‘summative’ assessment at the end of each module. The grades from formal assessments count towards your module mark. Most modules count for 15 academic credits although some, such as Experimental Project 1 in the first year, are double weighted and count for 30 credits. Each credit equates to the total of 2 teaching, learning and assessment hours. Total study time includes scheduled teaching, independent study, and assessment activity. Full-time students take modules worth 60 credits per semester, with part-time students taking proportionately fewer credits per semester. All students take a total of 120 credits per level and 240 credits for the foundation degree as a whole. Your overall grade for the course is based on the marks obtained for modules taken at level 5.

Entry Requirements

Typical entry requirements are 48 UCAS tariff points from two A levels or equivalent, BTEC Level 3 Diplomas, Access to HE Diploma, International Baccalaureate (with at least 24 points achieved), UCAS tariff points from Scottish Highers or Advanced Highers, UCAS tariff points from the Irish Leaving Certificate and Welsh Baccalaureate are generally accepted. GCSE Maths and GCSE English at grade 4 or above (or equivalent) are highly desirable. In some circumstances, applicants may be considered on the basis of a creative portfolio where they do not meet these entry criteria in full. Applicants will be invited to attend an admission interview and will be advised of the criteria in advance. We welcome applications from mature students (aged 21 and over as of 1st September in the academic year of admission) and do not necessarily require the same academic qualifications as school leaving applicants. Please email university.centre@yeovil.ac.uk to find out more. International applicants will be required to evidence English language skills - this could be an IELTS score of 6.0, with a minimum score of 5.5 in each component, a grade 4 in GCSE English (or equivalent), or having recently completed a Level 3 qualification taught and assessed in the English language. For more information, please email university.centre@yeovil.ac.uk.

Required Experience

An understanding of the creative industries and a desire to produce original and innovative outcomes using traditional and digital methods.

How To Apply

Full-time: please apply through UCAS (Campus name: Yeovil College University Centre; Institution code: Y25; Course code: DMDM Part-time: please apply direct to the Yeovil College University Centre by calling 01935 845454 or emailing university.centre@yeovil.ac.uk