Industrial Design M.I.D.
Program Mission Statement
There are millions of people all over the world waiting for the enlightened and entrepreneurial participation of designers, waiting to hear the insights that come from our years of work and study – real interventions that can touch the lives of all citizens of the world via the language of design, showing what's possible in life. The Industrial Design Department at Pratt is united in a common rigorous pursuit of creativity, explored through projects large and small, and translating ideas into a wide variety of forms, systems and structures. At grad level, our mission extends to bringing conceptual and design skills to a higher level than undergrad, through significant research activity and personal engagement (character), while allowing the individual sensibility of the designer to flourish through individual thesis projects and contact with the New York design scene. Ours is a generalist, humanist design program that pays particular attention to students without prior design degrees, helping them to incorporate their previous backgrounds and interests in their work, and to enter the professional sphere with conviction, intelligence and skill.
Student Learning Outcomes
•Students will develop an independent masters-level thesis project that reflects the design process according to current professional practice. Above all, emphasis will be placed on addressing human needs from the point of view of interface, ergonomic, social, global, historical, ethical and commercial issues.
•Students will acquire professional-level competence in two- and three-dimensional design, using aesthetic sensibility, digital/analog tools and critical thinking, combined with a working knowledge of materials and methods in an environmentally responsible context.
•Students will hone their writing to complement other presentation skills related to research, design concepts, theory and development of a persuasive personal viewpoint verbally and in written documentation.
•Graduates from the MID program will have working knowledge of the business aspects of design, with emphasis on entrepreneurship, protection of intellectual property, teamwork and marketing.
Curriculum
G2120-Requirements for MID, 2011
Semester 0
TAKE THESE QUALIFYING COURSES UNLESS EXEMPT.IND-612B Industrial Design Technology II
IND-694 Drawing I
IND-695 Drawing II
IND-585 Production Methods I
IND-586 Production Methods II
Semester 1
Complete these courses.IND-660A Directed Research I
IND-690 Industrial Design Workshop I
IND-612A Industrial Design Technology I
IND-614A Graduate Color Workshop I (2-D)
IND-672 Graduate 3-D I
Semester 2
Complete these courses plus 3 elective credits.Take 3 credits from the industrial design core courses
INDC-620 Process/Product Studio OR
INDC-622 Interdepartmental Studio OR
INDC-624 Design Methodology OR
INDC-626 Design Strategies OR
INDC-628 Furniture Design OR
INDC-630 Exhibit Design OR
INDC-632 Tabletop Design
IND-660B Directed Research II
IND-539 CAID I: Alias OR
IND-541 CAID: Solid Works/Pro E.
IND-614B Graduate Color Workshop II (3-D)
IND-673 Graduate 3-D II
Semester 3
Complete these courses plus 2 elective credits.Take 3 credits from the industrial design core courses
INDC-620 Process/Product Studio OR
INDC-622 Interdepartmental Studio OR
INDC-624 Design Methodology OR
INDC-626 Design Strategies OR
INDC-628 Furniture Design OR
INDC-630 Exhibit Design OR
INDC-632 Tabletop Design
IND-699A Thesis I
IND-509 Space Analysis I OR
IND-510 Space Analysis II
HD-506 Concepts Of Design
IND-540 CAID II: Alias OR
IND-542 CAID II: Solid Works/Pro E.
Semester 4
Complete these courses plus 2 elective credits.IND-699B Thesis II
IND-515 Prototypes I OR
IND-516 Prototypes II
HD-608 History of Industrial Design
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