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MA Model Design and Model Effects MA

About the course

On the MA Model Design and Model Effects degree we relate the activity of physical (non-digital) modelling to the design process and the communication of ideas and information through the languages and forms of models. Applications include uses in film and media through to museum displays and architectural applications. Underlying the uses of models is a set of common issues relating to representation, communication and their inter-relation with processes. Particular emphasis is given to providing you with the skills necessary to further your career as a practitioner.

Through your study on this postgraduate degree you will develop a range of project management skills, and an ability to identify and manage your own learning. You will consider the role of enterprise opportunities in commercial, professional and social environments. Enquiry, research and clear communication underpin work throughout the programme. As well as specialist modules in your chosen discipline area the programme includes modules that are shared with other postgraduate awards in the School of Creative Arts. This structure promotes cross-discipline discussion and maintains the enthusiasm and focus of discipline specialists. It enables you to develop the key transferable skills of postgraduate study grounded in activities that have currency, relevance and application for your future career and for further academic study. This award is concerned with the communication of ideas, information and feelings through materials and form in both physical and media contexts. 

The postgraduate Media programme offers you a coherent learning in one of several awards. It enables you to develop creative practical skills in a discipline of your choosing. That work may extend your existing skills, knowledge and understanding, or it may mean a change of direction, new learning, and new experiences. Induction, seminars and social events for students and staff mean that you will be part of a friendly and supportive postgraduate community, which includes film makers, musicians and professionals working in new media.

Senior research staff and internationally renowned professionals work with postgraduate students, helping you to develop original and challenging work. Your study will include ways of thinking about the cultural resonance of your work and about the audiences it is made for, about the nature of creativity, and the role of the Cultural Industries in a modern knowledge economy.

Why choose this course?

  • On the MA Model Design and Model Effects you will develop your physical Model Design skills and knowledge to a more advanced level.
  • You will develop a personal portfolio which in approach, style and vision looks to the forefront of current practices.
  • This postgraduate degree will extend your theoretical and contextual understanding of Model Design and Model Effects, its audiences and culture.
  • You will develop professional-level enquiry, research, creative invention, project planning and management practices.
  • You will experience a multi-disciplinary environment of discussion and exploration of ideas.

Entry requirements...

An honours degree (2:2 or above) in a field relevant to the award you want to study. If you do not have a degree, you will need to show you have appropriate professional experience and skills to benefit from the course. We may also be able to take into account accredited prior learning (APL) or accredited prior experiential learning (APEL). If your degree is in a different field, you will need appropriate knowledge, skills or experience in the field you wish to study, or be able to show that you are prepared for intensive new learning.

In all cases you will need to demonstrate through a portfolio and/or interview your preparedness for study at postgraduate level.

Study routes

  • Part Time, 2 Years
  • Full Time, 1 Years

Locations

  • University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield

Careers

Particular emphasis is given to providing you with the skills necessary to further your career as a Model Design practitioner. The course is designed to help you understand and work within the contemporary media environment. Particular attention is given to helping you acquire enquiry and information handling skills, enterprise skills in the development and presentation of ideas, in communicating in the spoken and written word, and addressing particular audiences.

Teaching methods

On this programme teaching and learning emphasises enquiry led project work, developing the kind of independence and autonomy that is appropriate for postgraduate education. Lectures, seminars and other discussions bring students together in multi-disciplinary groups where ideas are shared, challenged, developed. Workshops and other activities develop specific discipline centered skills and understandings while tutorials develop individual study trajectories and responses to assignment tasks and briefs.

Much of the time students are engaged in self-managed independent study, undertaking enquiries and research, developing skills, inventing and developing ideas, realizing project outcomes, exploring the cultural resonance of their work.

All students on the PG Media programme engage in an interdisciplinary project as a part of their MA study, giving them an opportunity to work with students from other disciplines in an experimental and creative way.

Work Placement

There are work related learning opportunities on this course.

Structure

Year 1

Core Modules

  • Creative Enterprise and Context

    This module emphasises the professional contexts of the student's work both in terms of its content and in terms of the kind of outcomes used for assessment. A series of lectures present ideas about key issues in the Creative Industries and Health and Social sectors. The lectures provide a broad context for ideas about the emergence and future of the Creative Industries and Health and Social sectors about Intellectual Property Rights, about the social conditions of the workplace and about the planning and management of projects. 'Break out' seminars lead to the student producing a piece of work that explores topics relevant to their award of study. Alongside these is the development of professional 'presentation of self' skills appropriate for the student's aspirations. This includes the development of portfolios, showreels and other material and skills in preparing and delivering a pitch or bid for funding as if for a Creative Industries or in the Health and Social sectors.

  • Discourse / Reflection: Media Discourses

    The learning activities fall into two phases. The first reviews and introduces a range of critical and theoretical methodologies through which the experience of media artefacts may be examined and discussed; this phase coincides with the second half of Semester A. During the second phase which takes place during Semester B, the student follows a line of personal enquiry in which they deploy and apply a chosen approach to examine artefacts, techniques and processes in their own discipline area to discuss the ways in which meaning is made. The outcome of this enquiry includes a text equivalent to around 4,000 words which may take the form of an academic journal paper, a web site, a spoken word or video recording of a scripted or extemporised talk or a live performance, or a similarly demanding production of the student's devising. Along with this there are two other staged submissions which structure the beginning stages of the enquiry and a requirement that students use an open blog or wiki type environment to log and record their enquiry.

  • Major Study: Model Design and Model Effects

    Students undertake a significant project within the field of Model Design and Model Effects, the form, nature and topic of which is defined by the student. As part of the project they document the process of ideas development and design decision making, discussing the languages of shape, form, colour and materials that they have deployed. There is a strong emphasis on design for communication in a given context and for a given audience and on the critical understanding of modeling as part of design thinking.

  • Practice 1: Media

    The student develops their knowledge and understanding of current processes, techniques and the scope of their chosen award field in this module. They become aware of contemporary activities and of the forefront in terms of artefacts, figures, debates, technologies and ideas. The student develops the kind of self-managed autonomy that characterises post-graduate work in their field through a series of projects which develop their own voice or style, exploring the particular issues, processes and ideas that interest them.

  • Practice 2: Media

    In this module students are required to relate their own practice and learning to developments and emergent activities in their chosen field. In particular, students are asked to challenge their preconceptions of what the field is about and to work innovatively in the field. The portfolio of projects used for assessment includes a 1000 word evaluative commentary which discusses how the student's work relates to the forefront of their field in terms of subject knowledge, the application of technology, or in terms of current enterprise activities and opportunities. This is likely to include such things as new artistic practices, emergent genre forms, alternative culture formations, the appropriation of technologies for unexpected ends, the furthering of existing knowledge structures, the reapplication of established processes to novel and inventive ends, the subversion of norms, expectations and conventions, popular culture trends in the consumption of media artefacts and funding council and other government initiatives.

  • Research and Enquiry

    This module aims to provide students with a range of research skills suitable for postgraduate level study in art, art therapy, design, film, media and music. The module helps students locate their work within contemporary advance-level practice in their disciplines and to make a critical evaluation of the bodies of ideas that sustain them. Key skills addressed include those of data management, critical evaluation, communication skills, notions of creativity and a range of modes of contextual analysis. The skills gleaned on this module will provide students with a platform for research for the remainder of the programme and in their future careers.

Optional

Fees & funding

Fees 2013

UK/EU Students

Full time: £6,700 for the 2013 academic year

International Students

Full time: £11,000 for the 2013 academic year

Discounts are available for International students if payment is made in full at registration

View detailed information about tuition fees

Other financial support

Find out more about other financial support available to UK and EU students

Living costs / accommodation

The University of Hertfordshire offers a great choice of student accommodation, on campus or nearby in the local area, to suit every student budget.

View detailed information about our accommodation

How to apply

2013

Start DateEnd DateLink
24/09/201330/09/2014Apply online (Part Time)
24/09/201330/09/2014Apply online (Full Time)

2014

Start DateEnd DateLink
24/09/201430/09/2015Apply online (Full Time)
24/09/201430/09/2015Apply online (Part Time)
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Key course information

  • Course code: CCPGFMMD
  • Course length:
    • Part Time, 2 Years
    • Full Time, 1 Years
School of study: School of Creative Arts
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