Media & Journalism 2019 Subject Brochure

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Media & Journalism


Right: Gulem Ezer & Stela Jonikaite, UCA Farnham

Cover: Kemi Lawrence, UCA Epsom


Media & Journalism

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Introduction

At UCA, we deliver cutting-edge courses that will give you the skills and expertise you need to start your creative career. Our Media and Journalism courses are often taught in small groups and with a more creative angle than traditional degree courses. You’ll be taught by our knowledgeable lecturers who’ll get to know you and your interests quickly, many of whom have worked for the likes of BBC Radio, LBC, The Guardian and some of Britain’s largest magazine publishers. You can draw on expertise from specialists in areas such as photography and film to enhance your projects, as well as fellow UCA students on other courses, who provide a rich source of collaborative opportunity. You’ll learn skills in a very hands-on environment, working on live briefs and newsroom simulations that give you industry experience before you graduate. There are many opportunities to undertake internships and placements at big names in the industry – connections include Private Eye, BBC Watchdog, Kerrang! Magazine, Athletics Weekly, Sky News and NME, to name just a few.

We’ll encourage you to aim high – our students have secured interviews with household names such as Jessica Ennis-Hill, Mo Farah and Jonny Wilkinson. We believe that your drive will help you achieve great things – many of our graduates now work in newspaper, television, online, music, PR and media industries all over the world. We have a great range of programmes in the field – you’ll learn how to develop strategies to engage audiences through different media platforms, as well as strengthening your skills as a creative thinker, effective writer and confident producer. All of these techniques will be taught in a fast-paced environment that simulates the excitement of the media industry.

We run a wide range of trips – recently our students visited BBC Radio Surrey, ITN, BT Sport and the Houses of Parliament – and invite regular guest speakers on specific courses to keep tuition varied. We also provide many chances to network and get your foot in the door of a very competitive industry. 3


TV Production, Maidstone Studios

Find the right course for you

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BA (Hons) Advertising

BA (Hons) Fashion Journalism

UCA Epsom

UCA Epsom

Neve Marinou, UCA Farnham

Kemi Lawrence, UCA Epsom

Taught by highly experienced practitioners with connections to the biggest names in the industry, our Advertising degree offers you a unique opportunity to blend academic excellence with professional experience.

This course’s unique philosophy revolves around the idea of the voice – training and finding your voice in Year 1 through the Fashion Vocabulary and Fashion Media & Industry units.

Supported by some of the world’s best-known creative directors, our course continues to develop a mentoring scheme. Visiting professors include Rory Sutherland, Vice Chairman of Ogilvy UK, and Mark Waites, founding partner of Mother Advertising in London, New York, Los Angeles and Argentina. Through a carefully curated collection of units such as Art Direction, which introduces you to the process involved in creating a successful advertising campaign; Copywriting, which will encourage you to develop your ‘voice’ and understand how to talk to your audience; Advertising Strategy, which will give you the opportunity to explore some of the world’s leading advertising agencies; and Personal Practice, which gives you the platform to create and experiment with your own ideas, you will graduate with a strong knowledge of industry and your role within it.

Duration: 3 years full-time UCAS code: C93/W218/E UCAS tariff points: 112

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You’ll continue developing and widening that voice in Year 2 through investigative journalism techniques to working collaboratively on the Fashion Publishing unit and the opportunity to develop and demonstrate your skills in the real world through industry placement. In Year 3, you’ll be able to express and promote your voice’s unique attributes through the Innovation unit and your final major project, demonstrating an understanding of Fashion Journalism, a use of firsthand sources and design elements, alongside your dissertation. Instagram: @ucafashionjournalism

Duration: 3 years full-time UCAS code: C93/WP25/E UCAS tariff points: 112

Find out more 5


BA (Hons) Journalism & Media Production

BA (Hons) Marketing

UCA Farnham

UCA Epsom

Shanae Brooks, UCA Farnham

Miruna Manole, UCA Epsom

This course will allow you to develop visual stories for websites and social media, with opportunities for cross-course collaboration throughout your studies.

Our BA Marketing course will harness your creative talent and allow you to develop an enquiring, critical and reflective approach that you’ll need to become a marketing professional in an exciting and everchanging industry.

In the first year, you’ll be introduced to research techniques and how to create a factual story using sound and moving image. You’ll learn to develop your own online presence, the home of your content that you produce and the blogs that you write. In your second year, you’ll learn about content production, producing packages across multiple platforms, planning and producing news bulletins in a realistic newsroom environment. You’ll understand the importance of media law and how this knowledge will help you secure employment. The year includes a five-day work placement to begin putting what you’ve learned into practice. In your third year, using the theoretical work you’ve completed so far, you’ll undertake a major piece of research with your dissertation. You’ll continue to develop and hone your live broadcasting skills within the newsroom environment and undertake your final major project. You’ll also complete ten days’ work experience in the industry.

Duration: 3 years full-time UCAS code: C93/W902/F UCAS tariff points: 112

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In the first year, you’ll be introduced to the fundamentals of marketing, learning about the industry as a whole, alongside units such as Introduction to Finance and Accounting, which will lay the foundations for a practical understanding of business. The Project & Operations unit will introduce you to broader project management. In the second year, you’ll build on the fundamental skills you have learned in the first year and begin to apply them to real-world situations through the Professional Practice and Marketing Placement unit. Alongside this, you’ll continue to explore the theory of marketing both nationally and globally, and understand more about e-business. In the final year, you’ll produce a final Integrated Marketing project which will demonstrate your deep understanding of marketing and business, presenting your ideas creatively and demonstrating your ability to critically think about marketing as a whole.

Duration: 3 years full-time UCAS code: C93/N500/E UCAS tariff points: 112

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BA (Hons) Television & Media Production

UCA Epsom

UCA Farnham

With the world’s most recognisable music brands on your doorstep, this course will give you the chance to build a professional network in one of the most competitive and rewarding media professions.

This course will enable you to create engaging stories for radio, television and online studio production.

In the first year, you’ll look at how the principles of marketing and promotion have been developed to take advantage of new media and technology in an ever-changing and challenging industry. You’ll also examine the visual and cultural history of music – how it fits into the wider social history, and how critical thought can help us deconstruct its deeper meaning and context. In year 2, you’ll gain deeper understanding through professional practice or work placement of the current working structures and operations of global music industries. Working alongside other marketing and business professionals you will explore how music producers and businesses interact. You’ll also explore the concepts of brand development and gain a broad understanding of the power of music and brands. In your final year, you’ll combine these skills, understandings and experience into your final major project, where you’ll demonstrate your understanding of the music marketing industry, of the importance of brand, and how your ideas can be successful.

Find the right course for you

BA (Hons) Music Marketing & Communication*

The first year of the course will introduce you to research techniques and creating engaging factual stories. You’ll learn how to record and edit audio suitable for broadcast, create a moving image project and develop your own online presence. The second year will see you work in the multicamera television studio to remake a scene from TV, and within a group make a fiction or drama documentary production on location. You’ll choose to either develop your writing skills, or specialise in an area of production as director, producer, camera operator or editor. Your practical work will be underpinned by your theoretical knowledge and a look at the cultural and social theories that inform debates around the media today. In your final year, you’ll combine the skills you have developed throughout the course into a substantial body of work, including the proposal and creation of your final major project, alongside a professional portfolio for industry and your dissertation.

Twitter: @TheWaveUCA *Course subject to validation. Duration: 3 years full-time UCAS code: C93/WN36/E UCAS tariff points: 112

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Duration: 3 years full-time UCAS code: C93/P321/F UCAS tariff points: 112

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BA (Hons) Television Production Maidstone Television Studios

Andrei Allen, Maidstone TV Studios

Taught at Maidstone Television Studios and UCA Rochester, this practical course offers you the unique opportunity to study television and film production in one of the UK’s leading TV studios. In the first year, you’ll dive straight into production with the Script to Screen unit, where you’ll write an original short screenplay and produce a short film from it. You’ll be introduced to the television centre, learn how to use our filmmaking equipment and familiarise yourself with the environment. In the second year, you’ll begin to explore other aspects of television production, such as TV news, and live programming. You’ll have the option of researching, planning and producing a short film adaptation or undertaking an industrial placement, gaining professional and valuable experience from a live environment. In your final year, you’ll produce a dissertation, a self-directed research piece demonstrating your understanding of the theoretical context of television production. Alongside this, you’ll focus your individual practice through the Pre-Production and Production units, culminating in a final major project. Members of CILECT – The International Association of Film and Television Schools. Twitter: @ucatvproduction Instagram: @ucatvproduction

Duration: 3 years full-time UCAS code: C93/P311/R UCAS tariff points: 112

Find out more 8


Luke Smith, UCA Epsom

Find the right course for you

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Your career

The UK’s creative industries are growing year-on-year, employing three million people in a range of sectors¹ from broadcast and media through to publishing and film, contributing £92 billion to the economy².

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Whether you want to write breaking news, interview celebrities or produce TV programmes, our Journalism and Media courses will enable you to develop specialist skills that prepare you for working in industry. Our extensive production facilities ensure that you’ll have the advance technical skills to carve your way into the industry, as well as an impressive body of work that you will have created as a student.

UCA has a proud tradition of supporting students and equipping them with everything they need to thrive in the workplace. 96.9% of our students find employment or go on to further study within the first six months after graduating. Recent graduates have gone on to become presenters, communication professionals, publicists, feature writers, screenwriters and content creators for companies such as Vice and Absolute Radio.

You’ll have many opportunities to undertake specialist work placements that will give you valuable experience and help you make media contacts. Our students have worked on live programmes such as Later… With Jools Holland, with broadcasters and publishers such as Channel 4, Heat, NME, BBC Radio 1, W Magazine, Reuters and ITV Sport, and organisations including UEFA and top PR agencies.

¹ Source: thecreativeindustries.co.uk/uk-creative-overview/ facts-and-figures/employment-figures ² Source: gov.uk/government/news/creative-industries-recordcontribution-to-uk-economy


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Portfolio advice

What is a portfolio? A portfolio is a collection of your work that demonstrates your range of skills and creative talent. It’s your opportunity to showcase your individuality, creativity, inspirations and artistic abilities, and a useful way for us to evaluate your suitability for the course you’ve applied to. It might contain design work, drawings, art projects, photographs, films, sound work, music composition, or examples of creative writing or essays. Think of your portfolio as a statement about your work – it should exhibit your creative journey, thought processes and influences. Don’t be afraid to be bold and appeal to a viewer, keeping their attention and leaving them feeling excited about your creative potential.

What should my portfolio include? Your portfolio should feature examples of your research and show the development of your ideas and projects – this should be highly presentable and well organised. It may be useful to arrange your work into themes, styles or chronological order, demonstrating good organisational skills and your own artistic awareness. Make sure you show your passion for the subject – look into your favourite writers, editors and magazines and explore the industry. Show us some ideas you’ve had for stories, people you’d like to interview or brands you love. Your portfolio should exhibit your creative journey, thinking processes and individual personality, so we can assess your potential. It’s important to show both your inspirations and aspirations, as your portfolio says a lot about you and your creative identity. Documenting the development of your ideas in a sketchbook is a great way to show us how you approached the task of creating your work, giving us insight into your creative thinking and how you approach your subject. Make sure your portfolio is well presented. Our tutors only have a short amount of time to look through each portfolio, so you need to organise your work intelligently. We recommend that you include between 10 and 25 pieces of work, neatly mounted on white or off-white paper in either landscape or portrait format (not a mixture of both).

Find out more The course pages at uca.ac.uk provide clear guidance on what we’d like to see in your portfolio for each of our courses. We’ve also put together a set of videos talking you through the process: uca.ac.uk/study/portfolio-advice 12

Put some of your most attention-grabbing and interesting work at the front and lead us through your journey, showcasing a variety of skills, materials, techniques and influences – it could include paintings, drawings, photography, digital pieces, storyboards, animation images or written work. If you include moving image work, we recommend a maximum of two minutes’ running time. Highlight your favourite pieces too, and indicate what or who inspires you.


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Rebecca Felton, UCA Epsom


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Lydia Smedley, UCA Epsom


“ I was anxious about starting university and doing the course for a number of reasons, but I’ve really surprised myself by actually loving it! I was concerned that because I’m disabled and quite a bit older than the rest of my class that I wouldn’t fit in, but as the course has progressed I’ve gained more confidence, which has allowed me to bond with the other students. “ The staff are all incredibly helpful and have so much background experience in the subject. We were able to do a whole range of things, from making a newspaper to filming a television news programme. It is an incredibly varied and interesting course, and there’s a great atmosphere among the students. “ I gained more confidence in a range of areas, such as approaching members of the public for interviews, making phone calls and presenting television programmes. I’ve been able to learn new skills like film editing, being in the gallery during broadcasting and developing my writing skills for different audiences.”

Jenny Cole BA (Hons) Journalism & Media Production (previously Journalism), UCA Farnham Graduated 2018

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Natalie Blain, UCA Epsom


“ A thing I really appreciate is how I’ve been given the basic blocks within journalism, media and styling and have been able to develop those skills. I’m happy to know that I will leave university with a number of different skills which will really help me get a job within the industry. “ In my second year, I was able to try so many different types of writing and I could really see how much my writing had improved since starting the course. It was really interesting to learn about the history of fashion and how it is still referenced today – it opened my eyes and taught me that a simple photo or phrase can hold a hundred messages. “ I had always considered myself to be a visual person and was really interested in styling, however throughout the course I found myself really enjoying doing the graphics and layout; I never really considered myself to be a photographer but the more shoots I did, I seemed to develop skills I didn’t know I had. I discovered that I’m an ideas person too – I throw out hundreds of ideas until I reach one I’m happy with. I’m pleased to have discovered this about myself as I think it will really help me in the future.”

Naeemah Miah BA (Hons) Fashion Journalism, UCA Epsom Graduated 2017

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Course leaders

David Anderson Course Leader for BA (Hons) Advertising — UCA Epsom David Anderson leads our Advertising degree, and is a successful creative and strategic thinker combining a highly renowned academic reputation with extensive industry experience. A graduate of Glasgow School of Art and the University of Huddersfield, he’s been awarded an MA in Writing for Performance and Publication from the University of Leeds and is the External Examiner for MA, MDes and BA courses and is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. David’s impressive CV includes a number of years as Creative Director and Art Director, following on from his success as a Graphic Designer. During his career in the advertising industry, David was mentored by Ogilvy & Mather and worked for several influential agencies. Before joining UCA, David spent 19 years at Leeds College of Art developing and leading a portfolio of courses in both graphic design and advertising. Alongside his role at UCA, David is also a short story writer and a published playwright.

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Katherine Boxall

Mark O’Connor

Deputy Director of the Business School

Acting Course Leader for BA (Hons) Fashion Journalism

— UCA Epsom Katherine graduated from De Montfort University in Design Management, majoring in Fashion. After graduating, she went on to work in the advertising industry, account managing for Harvey Nichols, Oxo Tower, Schuh, BMW, Mercedes, Audi, and many other major blue chip and fast-moving consumer goods brands. She then progressed to global marketing communications with IBM, before moving into the higher education sector. Katherine began her career at UCA on the Fashion Promotion & Imaging course, and after seven years, was asked to co-write the award-winning Fashion Management & Marketing programme. In 2018 she became UCA Business School’s Deputy Director. Katherine is the Academic Lead for UCA, working alongside TALENT developing new Global Online Marketing and Design courses. Not only does Katherine lead the BA course, she also leads several Masters programmes including two at our Business School – MA Fashion Business & Management and MA Fashion Marketing & Communication. She has been a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy since 2012.

— UCA Epsom Mark leads our BA (Hons) Fashion Journalism course. A graduate of the University of Northumbria, Mark started his career styling innovative window campaigns for Selfridges before embarking on a profession in menswear fashion journalism as Deputy Fashion Editor for FHM Magazine. Following this Mark moved to be Fashion Director at The Daily Express and Sunday Express magazine, where he built up a newspaper fashion team of writers and stylists. Mark has contributed to titles such as Sleaze Nation, The Guardian, Health and Fitness magazine and has styled fashion advertising campaigns for M&S, River Island, Orange, Topman, Nike and Pretty Green. Mark runs his own online men’s interest magazine, marksmanstyle.com

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Chris Parles

Adrienne Rosen

Acting Course Leader for BA (Hons) Music Marketing & Communication

Course Leader for BA (Hons) Journalism & Media Production, BA (Hons) Television & Media Production

UCA Epsom

UCA Farnham

As the Acting Course Leader for our Music Marketing and Music Journalism courses, Chris brings with him extensive experience in the music industry. As a senior A&R executive at Virgin EMI, Sony and Universal Music Group, he delivered number one selling albums and singles, working with artists, songwriters and producers such as Blue, Atomic Kitten, Robert Plant, Natalie Imbruglia, Lemar, Diane Warren, Gary Barlow, Rob Davis and Cathy Dennis.

Adrienne Rosen leads our Journalism & Media Production and Television & Media Production courses in Farnham. She has worked as a journalist for most of her career, beginning in newspapers and moving on to broadcast.

During his time at Universal he was head of A&R for the BBC/Endemol reality series, Fame Academy. He went on to work for Universal Music Group in Shanghai, China, consulting on A&R and Marketing for China’s most popular television show, Wor Xing Wor Show. Chris also delivers courses and workshops for clients including Universal Music Group, The British Phonographic Industry (BPI), Sony Electronics, EA games (LA), eBay and Pernod Ricard, ranging from music industry specialisms to executive and business creativity and innovation. He is a Senior Fellow of Higher Education, a Consultant at Music Tank and a board member of UK Music Skills Academy, helping to further integrate music education and industry. Chris’ key research interests include corporate creativity and innovation, music marketing practice, and the history of music business. 20

Adrienne spent twelve years with the BBC, starting as reporter and news editor in radio, moving into television as a Correspondent. She also produced and presented a number of half-hour documentaries for the BBC. Her teaching career began at Bournemouth University before leading the Postgraduate Broadcast course at Highbury College. She ran a degree course in Journalism at Northbrook College before moving to the University of Brighton as Course Leader of the Multimedia Broadcast Journalism course. Her research interests span the bridge between factual news and fictional stories, the main inquiry focusing on whether one writing skill inflates or deflates the other. Adrienne has a Masters degree in Creative Writing and has recently completed her first novel.


Course leaders

Charlotte Rutter

Simon Welsford

Course Leader (interim) for BA (Hons) Fashion Management & Marketing

Course Leader for BA (Hons) Television Production

Maidstone TV Studios

UCA Epsom With over a decade lecturing in BA (Hons) Fashion Management & Marketing (FMM) and as a cofounder of a successful fashion company, Charlotte has a wealth of experience to share through both an academic and professional lens. As Senior Lecturer at UCA, she has developed innovative and industryrelevant course content, making UCA’s FMM course one of the best in the country. Charlotte is passionate about developing research in the areas of FMM, business management, sustainability, ethics and consumer psychology – she has authored papers for publication and is a regular speaker at academic conferences. She has collaborated with fellow academics and colleagues to design, write and deliver short courses and chapter content on specialised topic areas and is Deputy Chair on the Fashion Marketing & Consumption SIG. Charlotte also works with companies in a consulting capacity to provide advisory and sounding board services through to full branding, marketing and business strategies.

Simon Welsford leads our Television Production degree. He specialises in writing and directing for drama, but he lectures across the whole course programme in both theory and practical units. Simon gained a degree in Fine Art from Sheffield Hallam University in 1993, specialising in filmmaking, and he completed a postgraduate certificate in Learning and Teaching in the Creative Arts in 2013. He joined UCA in 2010 as Senior Lecturer on the newly formed Television Production course based at Maidstone Studios. Prior to this Simon spent over 15 years in the film and television industry, mainly as a writer/director. He has worked on a wide range of productions; his work has been screened around the world and has won a number of international awards. Simon continues to write scripts, with a particular interest in genre cinema, and is currently developing a new feature film project.

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Antonia Dittrich, UCA Epsom


“ I started university with little, if any knowledge of how to use Adobe programmes. I hadn’t done a media course at school or college unlike some of the other students, so it was a completely new software to me. Although we did have a few lessons in how to use Photoshop and Premiere Pro, it was really about finding the confidence and having the patience to continue practicing at home. Having free use of programmes such as Lynda and workshops at the library really helped me to find my way. I also realised that I have a good eye for visual aesthetics and have great leadership/people skills to help steer a group towards the end goal and common vision. “ The course was a great experience for me to expand on my creative skills, some that I’ve built on and others that I’ve developed purely whilst I was there! The course certainly pushes you to try new ideas and experiment, something that I used to be quite hesitant to do. You should be as creative as possible in the first two years, that is the time to push boundaries and see what works and what doesn’t. “ As a person, I think I developed massively while I was on the course. I realised that I’m actually a great leader, and I should be more confident in myself!”

Heather Ibberson BA (Hons) Fashion Journalism, UCA Epsom Graduated 2017 Freelance writer for Geist, FAULT, and Elite magazine

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Our facilities

Epsom

Farnham

UCA Epsom is renowned as a major centre for fashion, fashion journalism and graphic design. Our resources provide students with the right ingredients for successful study including modern IT facilities, an Equipment Hire Department, inspiring teaching areas, gallery space, a library, supportive teaching staff and a programme of guest speakers.

UCA Farnham has extensive purpose-built facilities for over 2,000 students studying a wide range of creative arts subject areas including film, animation, graphics, illustration, fine art, photography, textiles, journalism and advertising.

Music and fashion journalism facilities include: –– Access to video cameras, stills cameras and digital recorders from the Equipment Hire Department –– D igital print studio with large and small format printing, bookbinding, guillotine, perfect binding –– F ive fully-equipped photographic studios with digital processing and finishing facilities and full industry-standard lighting rigs –– Sound studio with equipped sound booth –– T wo dedicated large teaching rooms/studios furnished with computers and printers.

Journalism and media resources include: –– Dedicated Mac and PC suites for design, for both web and print, editing and copywriting –– Access to fully-equipped radio and sound studios –– A fully-digital, tapeless three-camera television studio, networked to our broadcast newsroom using industry-leading Autocue production software –– A ccess to industry-standard audio and video equipment which can be hired from the media store. Film and animation resources include: –– Animation studio with Mac workstations, light boxes, line testers and high-speed batch scanners –– D edicated studios for set building, lighting, costume and prop making –– I ndustry-standard video production equipment, editing software, sound editing software, digital media software and CGI software.

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UCA at Maidstone TV Studios Maidstone Studios have a comprehensive range of post-production and scenery services onsite. You’ll receive exclusive 24/7 access to an expansive, dedicated learning and teaching space within the studios (depending on your course). This includes Apple edit suites, screening rooms, an audition room, sound booth, kitchen, kit room and library. We also have a dedicated technical tutor onsite who can assist with projects, and a dedicated work placement coordinator who can help in establishing opportunities for you. Dedicated production facilities include: –– Fostex field sound recorders

Rochester As well as specialist studios, lecture theatres, equipment and software, our campus at UCA Rochester boasts a wide range of industry-standard facilities. Computer generated animation resources include: –– Industry-standard software such as Autodesk Maya, Mudbox, After Effects, Unity and Adobe Photoshop, Audition, Premiere and Animate Unity –– Specialist computers supplied by Dell –– S tudios and access to other campus computer facilities –– Sound booths –– 3D printing.

–– 2 Panasonic 4k cameras –– GoPro Hero –– Green screen –– iMacs equipped with Adobe Studio and FCPX –– Professional studio and live gallery –– Pro-tools sound booth –– Manfrotto tripods –– Manfrotto Fig Rig –– Manfrotto tracking kit –– Mini Crane –– Sennheiser sound kits –– Sony HD cameras –– Steadicam … and much more.

Please note, access to each campus and its resources can sometimes depend on the campus you choose to study at. For example, you may be using the facilities at the campus where your course is based but not always at others – this depends on your course. 25


Next steps

How to apply The course you choose determines how you apply – this could be through UCAS (the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service) or directly to UCA. Find out more uca.ac.uk/study/how-to-apply ucas.com/apply Contact us If you’ve got any queries regarding the admissions process or your application, please contact the relevant admissions team: UK/EU admissions T: +44 (0)1252 892 960 E: admissions@uca.ac.uk International admissions T: +44 (0)1252 892 785 E: internationaladmissions@uca.ac.uk Connect with us @UniCreativeArts facebook.com/ucreativearts @unicreativearts @unicreativearts youtube.com/unicreativearts #WeCreate blog.uca.ac.uk social.uca.ac.uk Join us at #UCAlive We run live Q&A sessions where you can ask us anything you like about what it’s like to live and study here at UCA. Visit uca.ac.uk/live to find out about our next #UCAlive session.

Disclaimer The information in this brochure is believed to be correct at the time of publication. The University reserves the right to introduce changes to the information given including the addition, withdrawal, relocation or restructuring of any programmes. The information in this brochure is subject to change and does not form part of any contract between UCA and the student and his/her sponsor. For up-to-date and more detailed information on any of our courses and studying at UCA, please visit uca.ac.uk 1035-0318


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