| Course Name |
3D Design Modelmaking & Digital Art |
| Course Provider |
Dun Laoghaire Inst of Art Design & Technology |
| Course Code |
DL828 |
| Course Type |
Higher Education CAO |
| Qualifications |
| Award Name | NFQ Classification | Awarding Body | NFQ Level |
| Degree - Honours Bachelor (Level 8 NFQ)
More info...
|
Major |
Institute of Art Design and Technology |
Level 8 NFQ |
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| Apply To |
CAO |
| Attendance Options |
Full time, Daytime |
| Location (Districts) |
Dun Laoghaire |
| Qualification Letters |
BA (Hons) |
| Duration |
4 years |
| Leaving Certificate Entry Requirements |
Expand+Min Entry Requirements
2 H5 + 4 O6/H7
English – O6/H7
Portfolio: Yes
Portfolio assessments will take place from the 14th to the 16th of March 2017. Interviews, if required will be held from the 4th to the 6th April, 2017.
All courses that ...
Hide-Min Entry Requirements
2 H5 + 4 O6/H7
English – O6/H7
Portfolio: Yes
Portfolio assessments will take place from the 14th to the 16th of March 2017. Interviews, if required will be held from the 4th to the 6th April, 2017.
All courses that require portfolio assessment are restricted application (apply before 1st Feb).
For standard applicants, selection is based on points. These are calculated by adding together the points scored in the best six subjects in a single sitting of the Leaving Certificate Examination (or equivalent).
In the courses for which a portfolio is required, additional points, to a maximum of 600, are added based on the outcome of the portfolio assessment.
Maths requirements
Some courses will accept Foundation Level Mathematics while others require Ordinary Leaving Certificate Mathematics. Please read the entry requirements for each individual course.
Foundation Level Mathematics
For courses that do not specifically require Mathematics as an entry qualification, Foundation Level Mathematics will be accepted. Foundation Level Maths at grade F1 and F2 will count as a passing subject. Points will be awarded for these grades as follows: F1 = 20, F2 = 12.
Implementation of Bonus Points for Higher Level Maths
A bonus of 25 points will be allocated to students who achieve a grade H6 or above in Higher Level (HL) mathematics. This means that the maximum cumulative LC points total will increase from 600 to 625 (existing maximum points plus bonus points).
Time Scale
Bonus points will be awarded during the four year pilot period irrespective of the year in which the examinations were taken.
Formula
–– All students presenting H6 or above in mathematics will have 25 points added to their score for mathematics.
–– The six highest subject points scores will then be counted to achieve a cumulative points score, as is normal practice.
The bonus points will only be relevant in cases where the subject HL mathematics (including bonus points) is scored as one of the candidate’s six best subjects for points purposes. Consequently, if HL mathematics (cumulative points score) is not among these six subjects, the bonus points will not be included in the total points score.
Irish Language requirements
Foundation Level Irish, at F2 or better, will meet the minimum language requirement for entry to all courses, but currently no points are added.
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| QQI FET Applicants General Information |
Expand+Fetac Links Scheme
IADT is committed to encouraging FETAC / QQI award holders to progress onto our courses. For details of FETAC courses and the FETAC Higher Education Links, please refer to FETAC / QQI on 01 9058100 or www.qqi.ie.
Applications ...
Hide-Fetac Links Scheme
IADT is committed to encouraging FETAC / QQI award holders to progress onto our courses. For details of FETAC courses and the FETAC Higher Education Links, please refer to FETAC / QQI on 01 9058100 or www.qqi.ie.
Applications from FETAC award holders are made through the CAO, and all relevant closing dates and conditions apply. If you have any full FETAC Level 5 or FETAC Level 6 award, you are eligible to apply for a place on any of our Ordinary Degree (Level 7 award) courses or on any of our Honours Degree (Level 8 award) courses.
Fetac Links Scheme
IADT is committed to encouraging FETAC / QQI award holders to progress onto our courses. For details of FETAC courses and the FETAC Higher Education Links, please refer to FETAC / QQI on 01 9058100 or www.qqi.ie.
Applications from FETAC award holders are made through the CAO, and all relevant closing dates and conditions apply. If you have any full FETAC Level 5 or FETAC Level 6 award, you are eligible to apply for a place on any of our Ordinary Degree (Level 7 award) courses or on any of our Honours Degree (Level 8 award) courses.
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| QQI FET Entry Requirements |
Web Page - Click Here |
| Alternative Entry |
Expand+Advanced Entry at IADT
In certain circumstances application may be made for admission to undergraduate courses at post year one level. Availability of places differs from year to year. Sometimes, in certain courses, no places become available.
A...
Hide-Advanced Entry at IADT
In certain circumstances application may be made for admission to undergraduate courses at post year one level. Availability of places differs from year to year. Sometimes, in certain courses, no places become available.
Application for advanced entry (to year 2, 3 or 4) of our undergraduate courses must be made via www.cao.ie. There is no direct application to IADT for advanced entry places. There is no direct application to IADT for advanced entry places.
Closing Date Friday, 31st March 2017, 4pm
Admissions Officer Eoin Kelly
Phone 01 239 4621
Email eoin.kelly@iadt.ie
EU other international examinations
All EU students presenting for admission to IADT with a clear equivalent to HL Mathematics as one of their EU school leaving subjects will be awarded bonus points. A scoring system for some examinations such as: GCE, International Baccalauréat and European Baccalauréat is being developed, please see the CAO website www.cao.ie.
GCSE / GCE requirements
Applicants are scored on the basis of a maximum of 4 different subject results at A and/or AS level.
For scoring purposes, a combination of a smaller number of “A Levels” and “AS Levels” will be permitted as follows:
1. The best 4 A level results in a single sitting.
2. The best 3 A level results in a single sitting, plus the best AS level result from the previous or the same sitting.
3. The best 2 A level subject results in a single sitting, plus the best 2 results at AS level from the previous or the same sitting.
4. The best 1 A level subject result in a single sitting, plus the best 3 results at AS level from the previous or the same sitting.
5. The best 4 AS level subject results in a single sitting.
GCSE / GCE Scoring System
Grade A-Level All AS Levels (+ 4th A-level where presented )
A* 180 60†
A 150 60
B 130 55
C 100 40
D 65 25
E 45 20
† Applies to A-level only
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| Recognition of Prior Learning RPL |
Web Page - Click Here |
| Number of Places |
30 |
| Course Fee |
Expand+Student Contribution
An annual Student Contribution (€3,000 in the academic year 2016/17) is payable by all full-time students. This fee, subject to change from year to year, includes an Examination Fee and is payable for each year of study. All stu...
Hide-Student Contribution
An annual Student Contribution (€3,000 in the academic year 2016/17) is payable by all full-time students. This fee, subject to change from year to year, includes an Examination Fee and is payable for each year of study. All students are required to pay the Student Contribution on Registration. Students who receive a grant will have this charge refunded. Those in receipt of Back to Education Allowances may qualify for an exemption from the student contribution. An application under the Higher Education Grant Scheme to cover the cost of the Student Contribution must be submitted to Student Universal Support Ireland (SUSI) through www.susi.ie or www.studentfinance.ie . For families with more than one student attending Higher Education, please note that you will be required to pay each Student Contribution in full, and then claim the reduction on the second and subsequent contributions through tax reliefs. Further information on Student Contribution is available from the Citizens Information website: www.citizensinformation.ie/categories/education/ third-level-education/.
Tuition Fees
Currently, EU nationals (subject to residency requirements) attending full-time Ordinary Degree and Honours Degree courses are not normally required to pay tuition fees. However, non-EU nationals must do so. Details are available from our Office of Academic and Student Affairs. If you are an EU national and have already attended a third level institution, you should be aware that this may affect your entitlement to free tuition fees and maintenance grants. The general principle, with some exceptions, is that you will only receive financial support once for a given stage/year of study. Further information on Tuition fees is available from the Citizens Information website: www.citizensinformation.ie/categories/education/third-level-education/.
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| Link to Course Fee |
Web Page - Click Here |
| Financial Support |
Expand+You can obtain details of maintenance grant schemes and other supports at www.susi.ie; www.studentfinance.ie; www.hea.ie/en/students or the Citizens Information website www.citizensinformation.ie. All applications will be made online to a single awar...
Hide-You can obtain details of maintenance grant schemes and other supports at www.susi.ie; www.studentfinance.ie; www.hea.ie/en/students or the Citizens Information website www.citizensinformation.ie. All applications will be made online to a single awarding authority, Student Universal Support Ireland (SUSI) through www.susi.ie; or www.studentfinance.ie . Decisions regarding eligibility are made by your grant authority and not by IADT.
Tax Relief
Tax relief, at the standard rate of tax, may be available for tuition fees and student contributions paid in respect of approved third level courses. It is intended that families who pay student contributions for more than one student in a year will be able to claim tax relief on the second and subsequent contributions. Further information on tax relief is available from the Citizens Information website: www.citizensinformation.ie/categories/education/third-level-education/ .
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| Portfolio |
Expand+Do I have to submit a portfolio?
Yes, if you are applying for any course in the Department of Design & Visual Arts. We review portfolios in March. You may be called to an interview; these are held in April. Points allocated for the portfolio/intervi...
Hide-Do I have to submit a portfolio?
Yes, if you are applying for any course in the Department of Design & Visual Arts. We review portfolios in March. You may be called to an interview; these are held in April. Points allocated for the portfolio/interview are combined with the points from your Leaving Certificate (or equivalent). The CAO calls these courses Restricted Application, as they have special requirements (portfolio assessment). The CAO Late Application deadline is not available for these courses.
Please read the relevant guidelines carefully and adhere to them. If you apply for more than one course, your portfolio will be separately assessed for each course. Bear this in mind when preparing your portfolio: it is not unusual for an applicant to receive a favourable response in one course and not in another.
What should my portfolio contain?
A portfolio is a collection of your work – both finished and in progress – that showcases your interests and enthusiasms. It should demonstrate curiosity, inventiveness and ideas through a wide range of media, as well as your ability to develop your projects around selected themes. You can include course and schoolwork as well as any independent work. We like to see a portfolio that demonstrates a high level of visual skill, creativity, self-motivation, inventiveness, experimentation, flexibility and stylistic variation. We like to see large or three-dimensional work, but this can be presented as photographs or other documentation.
Be organised
Decide how best to arrange your portfolio. For example, it may be chronological or in thematic sections where initial work is placed next to final pieces.
Be sure to include
Notebooks, sketchbooks, journals or visual diaries. We want to see how you document your working process.
Include a CV
One CV for each course for which you are applying. Note details of hobbies, technical skills and involvement in activities relevant to that course. Information on age or educational background is not used for assessment purposes, so there’s no need to include it.
Be clear
If you are including team work, identify your role.
Be selective
Include and highlight your best work. We appreciate quality not quantity, so no more than 30 pieces, please. Show work relevant to the course for which you are applying.
Department of Design + Visual Arts portfolio checklist
Have you included
Project work (set projects and self-initiated work) – including sketchbooks, development work and finished pieces – showing visual exploration, experimentation and creativity around a theme/object(s)/place/idea, etc.
Observational drawing from life/still life (not from photographs)
Drawings/Visual studies using a range of different media and demonstrating colour exploration including painting, collage, etc.
Any photographic work (optional) or support work of personal
interest
Photographs of 3D work
Digital work: either printed or as files on a USB stick
Digital portfolio delivery for DL704
Portfolio submission for DL704 for 2017 is via email. Full instructions will be emailed in January 2017, once you have applied for the course through www.cao.ie
You have two options on what to submit for this portfolio:
A. 2 audio works plus a statement.
B. A written submission, please see portfolio guidelines below.
Portfolio guidelines
Applicants must submit either A or B
(A) Audio Submission
•Applicants to this course must submit two examples of their audio/music compositions, or audio/music work they have produced, assisted or contributed to.
•In addition, you must provide a written statement which explains the work presented, to a maximum of 300 words. You need to tell us what your role was in relation to the material presented – is it original work, did you perform it, record it, produce it?
Professional quality tracks are not expected, although applicants are recommended to take the opportunity to present their best work.
The written report is a very important aspect of the submission. It offers an opportunity to not only clearly outline your role in the submission, but also to discuss aspirations and passion for the area.
When deciding what tracks to include, reviewers would welcome two contrasting pieces (this is a suggestion, not a requirement).
Reviewers are looking for work that shows an enthusiasm for the area.
The work must be in mp3 format and submitted to the email address as advised in the January prior to admission. Audio files must be MP3s, 256kps, or preferably 320kps.
The total size of BOTH audio works must not exceed 24mb in TOTAL.
We cannot accept data files, i.e. project files such as Pro Tools or Logic.
OR
(B) Written Work Submission
A piece of written work on one of the following;
•A music genre
•Review of a concert
•Study of a composer or performer
The written work must give detail of an understanding of a musical field or artist, demonstrating your passion and interest for the subject. Written work must be submitted as an attachment to the email or in the body of the email itself.
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| CAO Application Dates and Fees |
Expand+Early online application (discounted): Fee €25 Closing Date: 20th January 2017 at 5:15pm
Normal online application: Fee €40 Closing Date: 1st February 2017 at 5:15pm
You should avoid submitting an application close to a closing date. No extens...
Hide-Early online application (discounted): Fee €25 Closing Date: 20th January 2017 at 5:15pm
Normal online application: Fee €40 Closing Date: 1st February 2017 at 5:15pm
You should avoid submitting an application close to a closing date. No extensions to closing dates will be allowed and all fees are non-refundable.
Restricted Courses
Applying for a restricted course – you must have applied to CAO by 5:15pm on 1st February 2017 if you wish to apply for a restricted course. The restricted course must be included on your course choices list by that date, or added to your application using the Change of Course Choices facility before 1st March at 5:15pm.
Restricted courses normally require additional assessment procedures, e.g. the submission of a portfolio, an oral assessment or interview, or a written assessment – restricted courses are identified in the handbook by the words “(Restricted - see page 3 of the 2017 CAO Hanbook)” on the same line as the restricted course’s title. Please make sure to acquaint yourself with the additional requirements, if any, of the restricted course(s) that you have applied for and go to page 11 of the 2017 CAO Hanbook for more information about interviews and assessments.
Exception: If a restricted course shares the exact same assessment procedures with a course you had applied for by 1st February 2017, you may be permitted to introduce it on a ‘Change of Mind’. You should consult with the relevant HEI before introducing such a course.
Restricted-category Applicants
Mature applicants – most HEIs will require mature applicants, who wish to be assessed on mature grounds, to have applied to CAO by 1st February 2017 at 5:15pm. (This restriction does not apply if the applicant wishes to be considered on the basis of school leaving qualifications only.) For more information about applying to CAO on the basis of mature years go to www.cao.ie/mature.
Applying for the HEAR and/or DARE schemes – to be considered for the HEAR and/or DARE schemes applicants must have registered on the CAO system by 1st February 2017 at 5:15pm and must have completed the HEAR/DARE application form by 1st March 2017 at 5:15pm – supporting documents must be sent to CAO offices before 1st April 2017 at 5:15pm.
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| Restricted Entry |
Yes |
| Course Content |
Expand+Learn how to design and create 3D and digital representations of ideas and concepts in a variety of contexts such as film, gaming, architecture, exhibitions and theatre. With three equally valuable areas of study, on this course you will gain the ski...
Hide-Learn how to design and create 3D and digital representations of ideas and concepts in a variety of contexts such as film, gaming, architecture, exhibitions and theatre. With three equally valuable areas of study, on this course you will gain the skillsets and techniques to thrive in both the modelmaking industry and a variety of creative practices.
What will I do?
–– Get the professional competence to master specific skills and techniques such as: sculpting/modelling, casting, CNC cutting, laser cutting, 3D printing, technical fabrication and digital modelling/animation, design and presentation.
–– Benefit from a practical, hands-on approach to every module.
–– Get the opportunity to work within different aspects of real modelmaking practice.
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| Subjects Taught |
Expand+What modules will I study?
Year 1
2D/3D Studies
Technical Modelling
Architectural Modelling
Prototype Modelling
Digital Studies 2D (Photoshop, AutoCAD)
Critical + Cultural Studies
Common Faculty Module.
Year 2
Model Animation
Modelmak...
Hide-What modules will I study?
Year 1
2D/3D Studies
Technical Modelling
Architectural Modelling
Prototype Modelling
Digital Studies 2D (Photoshop, AutoCAD)
Critical + Cultural Studies
Common Faculty Module.
Year 2
Model Animation
Modelmaking for Film
Spectacle Arts
Advanced Sculpting
3D Digital Studies
Critical + Cultural Studies
Faculty Elective.
Year 3
Advanced Digital Modelling
Spatial Design
Character Design
4D Digital Studies
Industry Project
Research Seminar
Business Studies
Thesis Proposal.
Year 4
Initial project and the production of final project for the Graduate Exhibition, as well modules in Professional Practice, Presentation Skills and completing your dissertation.
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| Comment |
Expand+Unite advanced skills and techniques of manufacture with strong creative and design knowledge.
Cost for materials and/or field trips
Approximately €1000 per year (years 1, 2 and 3) for materials and tools. You will have an opportunity to take pa...
Hide-Unite advanced skills and techniques of manufacture with strong creative and design knowledge.
Cost for materials and/or field trips
Approximately €1000 per year (years 1, 2 and 3) for materials and tools. You will have an opportunity to take part in extended field trips or international visits (not compulsory). Your final year exhibition is your professional showcase. We advise you to budget for not less than €1000. It is extremely useful to have a good quality digital camera, portable hard drive and laptop. We recommend you don’t purchase these in advance, but seek advice from your tutors.
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| Careers or Further Progression |
Future careers
Graduates work as model makers on feature films or commercials, display/model makers for interactive exhibits such as museums, event designers/fabricators for entertainment events, and in a variety of other roles, including art director, architectural modeller, art teacher, creature developer/character animator for games and/or animation, digital matte artist, digital FX supervisor. |
| Further Enquiries |
Julian King, Course Co-ordinator
T – 01 239 4709
E – julian.king@iadt.ie |
| International Students |
Web Page - Click Here |
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| Points History |
| Year |
Points |
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| 2017 |
699 |
# (Test / Interview / Portfolio / Audition) |
| 2016 |
555 |
# (Test / Interview / Portfolio / Audition) |
| 2015 |
699 |
# (Test / Interview / Portfolio / Audition) |
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