Product Design

BA (Hons)

2023/24 Full-time Undergraduate course

Award:

Bachelor of Arts with Honours

Faculty:

Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences

School:

Belfast School of Art

Campus:

Belfast campus

UCAS code:

W260
The UCAS code for Ulster University is U20

Start date:

September 2023

This course is now closed for International applications for September 2023

With this degree you could become:

  • Product Designer
  • Furniture Designer
  • Industrial Designer
  • Ceramicist
  • Jewellery Designer
  • Self-employed business owner

Graduates from this course are now working for:

  • Big Small Design
  • Leckey
  • IRG Composites
  • Sliderobes
  • Marks
  • Consider It Design

Overview

Product Design is a studio-based, hands-on course. Its focus on design, materials, processes and technology produces highly employable graduates.

The University regularly ‘refreshes’ courses to make sure they are as up-to-date as possible.

In addition it undertakes formal periodic review of courses in a process called 'revalidation’ to ensure that they continue to meet standards and are current and relevant.

This course will be revalidated in the near future and it is possible that there will be some changes to the course as described in this prospectus.

Summary

This adaptable course is designed primarily for students from either an Art and Design or Technology with Design background who wish to follow careers within the design (product, industrial) and design-making industries (to encompass ceramics, metal and jewellery) or who wish to teach in either Art and Design or Technology with Design, or want to undertake further design-related studies at Masters or Doctoral level.

The course provides stimulating and challenging practice-based education for the designer and designer-maker within a multidisciplinary studio environment with fabricating and prototyping at the core of the curriculum. There is access to metal, jewellery, ceramics and wood workshops, and 3D printing facilities.

The emphasis is on design (wood/ plastic) and design as making (clay/ ceramics and metal/ fine metal), so manufacture and material manipulation are very important with maquettes, concepts and testing as key parts of design creation and product development. State-of-the-art metal, jewellery, wood and ceramics workshops with full technical support offer facilities for fabrication and manipulation of soft and hard materials, as well as applied skills for metal and plastics.

Practice is informed by a strong culture of contextual understanding and critical writing and reflection. Students will engage in multidisciplinary work-based learning through collaborative projects and industrial placements underpinned by teaching in professional practice, strategic business thinking and entrepreneurship. Product, ceramics, jewellery and metalsmithing are the course pathways comprising designer and designer-maker strands.

The goal is therefore to produce design and making graduates who are critical thinkers, fluent communicators and informed and highly-skilled makers who have the requisite technical, intellectual, creative and entrepreneurial skillsets to contribute in a valuable and meaningful way to the creative industries offering social solutions to real world issues which include being a furniture or spatial designer, lighting and homewares designer, a designer for education, or ceramicist, metalsmith or jeweller.

The ceramics pathway, for instance, equips the student with all the skills necessary for a career as an independent maker or as part of a team. The ceramics workshop allows students to develop their practice with teaching and technical support from experienced staff in a technically high-end environment. As with all workshops, the focus is on new and evolving technologies and traditional 2D and 3D processes that are appropriate for industrial manufacture.The workshop is fully equipped to support traditional and digital processes with materials and equipment perfectly suited to the individual maker and designer in contemporary ceramic practice. The studio features all elements necessary for ceramic design for industrial batch or multiple manufacture and individual production. There is a dedicated throwing area for wheel-based ware with full mouldmaking facilities.

There are also wood and metal workshops with technical and academic staff supporting the product design, and metal and jewellery strands. There is access to 2D and 3D printers and the course itself is across two floors of the Belfast campus, in close proxinity to the above workshops, allowing for interaction and cross-overs of ideas, materials and expertise.

We’d love to hear from you!

We know that choosing to study at university is a big decision, and you may not always be able to find the information you need online.

Please contact Ulster University with any queries or questions you might have about:

  • Course specific information
  • Fees and Finance
  • Admissions

For any queries regarding getting help with your application, please select Admissions in the drop down below.

For queries related to course content, including modules and placements, please select Course specific information.

We look forward to hearing from you.

About this course

About

The course has a modular structure with four modules of study in each year of the first two years with the final year at the moment containing three modules, one of which comprises two semesters. Students in first year (level 4) are introduced to key skill sets and methodologies common to all areas of study. They are given the opportunity to sample short projects from a number of pathways before going on to select specialist areas in years two and three. At the end of final year, students will have gained a comprehensive range of design and making skills and developed a personal, innovative approach to the practice of making and design, and will exhibit their work at the Belfast School of Art end-of-year student shows.

Students are encouraged to undertake group study trips in years one and two to London and a European destination, respectively. The aim is to broaden their contextual knowledge of the process and professionalism in design and making, and to undertake a series of industrial study visits to gain insight into professional practice and entrepreneurship in their chosen discipline.

Student choice is a strong feature of the course, especially at year two (level 5) where students can choose between an optional industrial placement (DPP) or take advantage of the opportunity for international academic study at a number of European or US institutions (DPPi) through the Erasmus/ Turing and BEI initiatives respectively. Students have the choice to explore a diverse range of specialist subjects in their final year through self-generated project briefs, learning contracts, choice of dissertation topic and alignment with specialist teaching staff and tutorial/ seminar groups.

Students are encouraged to join the 'Chartered Society of Designers' or 'The Institute of Designers in Ireland' as student members. Full professional membership is gained after required application and folio interviews, post final year of the course.

Associate awards

Diploma in Professional Practice DPP

Diploma in International Academic Studies DIAS

Diploma in Professional Practice International DPPI

Attendance

Attendance is largely studio based, four days per week with 15 hours staff contact time and 35 hours self directed study per week.

Start dates

  • September 2023

Teaching, Learning and Assessment

The course is very applied in its nature. All of the outcomes will mean the production of physical models and prototypes to justify a solution. The course’s main focus is to enable students to understand and learn the processes, make models, test their ideas, develop core design skills and learn about the theory and culture of making and design. The most beneficial way to enable the pedagogy of design education is to deliver it in a studio environment. Every student will have their own space to conceptualise, make and deliver their projects under the tutelage of experienced, passionate staff. Formal assessment is at the end of each module, with interim reviews within the teaching period. Teaching, Learning and Assessment are fully -supported by the University VLE (Blackboard Learn).

Academic profile

The University employs over 1,000 suitably qualified and experienced academic staff - 59% have PhDs in their subject field and many have professional body recognition.

Courses are taught by staff who are Professors (25%), Readers, Senior Lecturers (20%) or Lecturers (55%).

We require most academic staff to be qualified to teach in higher education: 82% hold either Postgraduate Certificates in Higher Education Practice or higher. Most academic staff (81%) are accredited fellows of the Higher Education Academy (HEA) by Advanced HE - the university sector professional body for teaching and learning. Many academic and technical staff hold other professional body designations related to their subject or scholarly practice.

The profiles of many academic staff can be found on the University’s departmental websites and give a detailed insight into the range of staffing and expertise.  The precise staffing for a course will depend on the department(s) involved and the availability and management of staff.  This is subject to change annually and is confirmed in the timetable issued at the start of the course.

Occasionally, teaching may be supplemented by suitably qualified part-time staff (usually qualified researchers) and specialist guest lecturers. In these cases, all staff are inducted, mostly through our staff development programme ‘First Steps to Teaching’. In some cases, usually for provision in one of our out-centres, Recognised University Teachers are involved, supported by the University in suitable professional development for teaching.

Figures correct for academic year 2021-2022.

Belfast campus

Accommodation

High quality apartment living in Belfast city centre adjacent to the university campus.

Find out more - information about accommodation  


Student Wellbeing

At Student Wellbeing we provide many services to help students through their time at Ulster University.

Find out more - information about student wellbeing  


Belfast Campus Location

The Belfast campus is situated in the artistic and cultural centre of the city, the Cathedral Quarter.

Find out more about our Belfast Campus.

Campus Address

Ulster University,
2-24 York Street,
Belfast
BT15 1AP

T: 02870 123 456

Modules

Here is a guide to the subjects studied on this course.

Courses are continually reviewed to take advantage of new teaching approaches and developments in research, industry and the professions. Please be aware that modules may change for your year of entry. The exact modules available and their order may vary depending on course updates, staff availability, timetabling and student demand. Please contact the course team for the most up to date module list.

Year one

Design Practice

Year: 1

Design Practice introduces students to the importance of visual and physical representation and how they are applied in Product Design professional practice. From the iterative development process through to communication of finished Designs. Students will explore systems of drawing including freehand and measured perspective, orthographic projection and physical soft modelling in a range of media. Iterative Sketching alternating between 2D and 3D, drawing and modelling, is explored as a key part of the creative process and students are introduced to a range of techniques with the aim of demonstrating creative and appropriate ways of generating and communicating ideas within a creative design environment.

Design Fundamentals

Year: 1

Design Fundamentals provides an introduction to the methods of exploring and conceptualising user-centered Product Design and Development. Students will develop and demonstrate creative thinking demanded by a variety of design projects. Within the design process students will explore a wide range of ideas towards a final solution across multiple projects, with emphasis on process as well as outcome. Students will have the experience of working in different scales using different thinking processes and a variety of materials and studio based techniques.

Design Culture

Year: 1

This module introduces major issues and concerns within design research to broaden the student's understanding, knowledge and critical observation of design design and material culture. Students are encouraged to think about design within a wider theoretical, historical and social context to enable them to evaluate and respond to discourses, past, present and future. There is a strong emphasis in establishing the rigors of reading, writing and research required at this level to develop the student's ability to support, defend and express their ideas.

Design Process

Year: 1

Design Processes introduces students to the concept of a formalised design and making processes. It explores the tools, techniques and methodologies employed within those processes introducing creative strategies for idea generation and problem solving against a contextual background of key issues and drivers that inform contemporary design practice within the fields of Product Design, Industrial Design, and the Designer Maker, through the context of User Empathy and End-User Innovations.

Year two

Professional Practice

Year: 2

Design Communication provides an introduction to the concepts and methodologies of visual communication, graphic design, 3D CAD, CAM, information design and presentation techniques. Through studio-based practice students are taught effective communication of ideas using appropriate presentation techniques and output media.

Design Entrepreneurship

Year: 2

This module enables students to test commercial/social viability of their design ideas. Students will be guided to develop professional skills associated with creative design practice to integrate and manage the complexities of the design process, reconciling user needs with commercial requirements. The module provides a unique learning experience in the development of professional level skills required for visual, written and oral presentation.

This module is worth 40 credit points and requires a comprehensive range of course work from concepts through to final designs. Presentation is expected in a range of formats, simulated concepts and prototypes, and a supporting business viability report.

Design Realisation

Year: 2

In Design Realisation, students will undertake a series of design projects designed to demonstrate the intrinsic relationship between design intent, scale of manufacture, choice of material and choice of making and manufacturing process. They are given the opportunity to develop an in depth applied understanding of a number of materials and manufacturing processes through live briefs where they have to balance design intent, client brief, commercial and industrial considerations, methods of production through to a successful outcome. The projects are informed by a series of lectures and Industrial study visits.

Design Debates

Year: 2

This module engages students in discussions of the issues that underpin contemporary, creative design practice. Students are encouraged to contribute actively their own ideas, theories, opinions on key design issues and to develop intellectual and conceptual tools to challenge and inform their own developing practice. It provides students with the necessary frameworks, methodologies and core skills of writing and presentation in a variety of media formats (video-documentary, journal editing) to undertake the major writing project in their final year. The module builds on and broadens the skills learnt in Level 4 module and introduces new skills to be consolidated in Level 6 module.

Year three

International Academic Studies

Year: 3

This module is optional

This module provides an opportunity to undertake an extended period of study outside the UK and Republic of Ireland. Students will develop an enhanced understanding of the academic discipline whilst generating educational and cultural networks.

Industrial Placement

Year: 3

This module is optional

This is an optional placement year for students who have completed Level 5 prior to the final year of study. The placement must be a minimum of 25 weeks duration and can be in a broad range of design based practices within the creative, commercial and industrial sectors. A programme of work is agreed by the student, the Placement Tutor and the Placement Partner and usually takes place in Europe with respect to the relevant health and safety and disability regulations (SENDO). The placement is designed to increase experience of workshop/studio/communal and technical practice, while broadening and enhancing the student's social, personal and professional development.
Upon successful completion of the placement year the student is awarded a Diploma in Professional Studies (DPP) or a Diploma in Professional Practice (DPP) International upon graduation from the course.

Year four

Design Transitions

Year: 4

This Design Transitions; Product Design module focuses on the key strategies that will prepare and guide level six students towards planning for graduation, career development and employment. The module will provide the student with a professional e-portfolio, a 5- year strategic career plan and an opportunity to showcase their skillsets in the end of year show. Student Learning is supported with valuable resources, tools, case studies and signposts to allow them to tailor the resource material to their specific career ambitions. It will adopt a professional and entrepreneurial approach to planning a career within the broader spectrum of the creative industries.

Design Perspectives

Year: 4

This module engages students in developing their skills as individual researchers, reflective practitioners and as dynamic participants in a community of learners. Design history, theory, and practice spans diverse but interrelated disciplines and students will be engaged in critically reflecting and underpinning the interdisciplinary nature of its discourses, thus building an intellectual framework to support their studio practice. Students are supported in the generation and development of a self-directed research project on a topic related to the field of design studies, following historical and theoretical frameworks of enquiry. The module promotes the rigour of reflective and analytical writing at an academic level.

Design Consolidation

Year: 4

The module provides students with the opportunity to develop a real product for commercialisation. This module will be the accumulation of learning throughout a three / four-year degree process and provides the opportunity to evidence this education.
The outcome of this module will be a product that meets industry standards for potential commercial launch, while equipping the student with the skills and knowledge to be an independent or employable product designer/maker, within contemporary industry and creative sector practices.
This module will educate the student to become an industrial and/or sector practitioner of their own discipline, while attaining the academic critical attitude towards making choices under evidence and rationale. Prototyping and experimentation will be key and the processes involved in doing so, to assist the student in making validated decisions within a managed product development process against set criteria within a stage and gate methodology.

Standard entry conditions

We recognise a range of qualifications for admission to our courses. In addition to the specific entry conditions for this course you must also meet the University’s General Entrance Requirements.

A level

Grades CCC

Applied General Qualifications

QCF Pearson BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma / OCR Cambridge Technical Level 3 Extended Diploma (2012 Suite)

Award profile of DMM

RQF Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma/ OCR Cambridge Technical Level 3 Extended Diploma (2016 Suite)

Award profile of MMM

QCF Pearson BTEC Level 3 Diploma/ OCR Cambridge Technical Level 3 Diploma (2012 Suite)

Award profile of DM plus A Level Grade C

RQF Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Diploma/ OCR Cambridge Technical Level 3 Diploma (2016 Suite)

Award profile of MM plus A Level Grade C

QCF Pearson BTEC Level 3 Subsidiary Diploma/ OCR Cambridge Technical Level 3 Introductory Diploma (2012 Suite)

Award profile of M plus A Level Grades CC

RQF Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Extended Certificate/ OCR Cambridge Technical Level 3 Extended Certificate (2016 Suite)

Award profile of M plus A Level Grades CC

Irish Leaving Certificate

96 UCAS tariff points to include a minimum of five subjects (four of which must be at higher level) to include English at H6 if studied at Higher level or O4 if studied at Ordinary Level.

Irish Leaving Certificate UCAS Equivalency

Scottish Highers

Grades CCCCC

Scottish Advanced Highers

Grades DDD

International Baccalaureate

Overall profile is minimum 24 points (including 12 at higher level)

Access to Higher Education (HE)

Overall profile of 55% (120 credit Access Course) (NI Access Course)

Overall profile of 45 credits at Merit (60 credit Access Course) (GB Access Course)

GCSE

For full-time study, you must satisfy the General Entrance Requirements for admission to a first degree course and hold a GCSE pass at Grade C/4 or above in English Language.

Level 2 Certificate in Essential Skills - Communication will be accepted as equivalent to GCSE English.

English Language Requirements

English language requirements for international applicants

The minimum requirement for this course is Academic IELTS 6.0 with no band score less than 5.5. Trinity ISE: Pass at level III also meets this requirement for Tier 4 visa purposes.

Ulster recognises a number of other English language tests and comparable IELTS equivalent scores.

Additional Entry Requirements

Applicants to this course are NOTrequired to submit a portfolio.

Acceptable alternative qualifications include:

Pass HND with overall Merit to include distinctions in 15 Level 5 credits/units may be specified.

Pass HNC with overall Merit to include distinctions in 45 Level 4 credits/units may be specified.

You may also meet the course entry requirements with combinations of different qualifications to the same standard as recognised by the University (provided subject requirements as noted above are met).

Careers & opportunities

Graduate employers

Graduates from this course are now working for:

  • Big Small Design
  • Leckey
  • IRG Composites
  • Sliderobes
  • Marks
  • Consider It Design

Job roles

With this degree you could become:

  • Product Designer
  • Furniture Designer
  • Industrial Designer
  • Ceramicist
  • Jewellery Designer
  • Self-employed business owner

Career options

Graduates from the course find employment in areas as diverse as Product Design both consultancy-based and corporate, Industrial Design, Vehicle or Transport Design, Furniture and Lighting, and design both as a studio maker and in volume batch production. Students with an additional PGCE go on to teach both Art and Design and Technology with Design at secondary and tertiary level.

Students who achieve a 2:1 can go on to develop their studies further on taught Masters programmes or research degrees to Phd level offered by the University as well as throughout the UK and further afield.

Work placement / study abroad

BA Hons Product Design offers a suite of opportunities to enhance students design and making skills, build transferrable skills, broaden their life experience to prepare them for employability, and equip them to be globally mobile. Collectively these add value to their degree and make them an attractive prospect to employers. The experiences are offered at the end of second year.

Erasmus/ Turing: one or two semesters at a partner European University

International Student Exchange Programme (ISEP) One year at an US University (in any subject). Upon successful completion, students will be awarded a Diploma in International Studies in addition to their degree at graduation.

Students may seek placement within a design-related company for one year. Staff support students in identifying appropriate opportunities and interview/ portfolio preparation. Careers Fairs across the University help students to link with potential employers. The course has a dedicated Employer Liaison Event which networks prospective students with placement providers, industry professionals and current placement students. The Year Out is assessed, and successful students are awarded a Diploma in Professional Practice/ International (Dpp/ Dppi) alongside their degree at graduation.

The University also funds a number of short programmes to encourage global mobility.

https://www.ulster.ac.uk/goglobal/study

Apply

Start dates

  • September 2023

Fees and funding

Fees (per year)

Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland and EU Settlement Status Fees

£4,710.00

England, Scotland, Wales and the Islands Fees

£9,250.00

International Fees

£15,840.00

Scholarships, awards and prizes

International Undergraduate Scholarship

https://www.ulster.ac.uk/international/apply/scholarships/international-undergraduate-scholarship

  • Open to all new international (non-EU) entrants on the first year of a full-time undergraduate course delivered on one of our Northern Ireland campuses, commencing September 2018.

Value

£2,000 scholarship applied as discount to your annual tuition fee.

  • Information on other scholarships available to international students

https://www.ulster.ac.uk/international/apply/scholarships

Other awards and prizes:

https://www.ulster.ac.uk/apply/fees-and-finance/scholarships

Information provided is for guidance only as scholarship details are subject to change - please refer to the source website for up-to-date and accurate information.

Additional mandatory costs

Students purchase materials for their own coursework.

Consumable workshop contribution of up to £100 is optional and contributes to materials used by students.

Field trips may incur additional costs.

Student Trips: Approx £250 Year 1 & 2 (Elective)

It is important to remember that costs associated with accommodation, travel (including car parking charges) and normal living will need to be covered in addition to tuition fees.

Where a course has additional mandatory expenses (in addition to tuition fees) we make every effort to highlight them above. We aim to provide students with the learning materials needed to support their studies. Our libraries are a valuable resource with an extensive collection of books and journals, as well as first-class facilities and IT equipment. Computer suites and free Wi-Fi are also available on each of the campuses.

There are additional fees for graduation ceremonies, examination resits and library fines.

Students choosing a period of paid work placement or study abroad as a part of their course should be aware that there may be additional travel and living costs, as well as tuition fees.

See the tuition fees on our student guide for most up to date costs.

Contact

We’d love to hear from you!

We know that choosing to study at university is a big decision, and you may not always be able to find the information you need online.

Please contact Ulster University with any queries or questions you might have about:

  • Course specific information
  • Fees and Finance
  • Admissions

For any queries regarding getting help with your application, please select Admissions in the drop down below.

For queries related to course content, including modules and placements, please select Course specific information.

We look forward to hearing from you.


For more information visit

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