This exciting A-level course offers students the opportunity to explore Product Design in a hands-on way, working with a wide variety of materials, manufacturing techniques and media. Students will develop their own creative ideas, responding to areas of their own personal interest. The students will develop their skills in sketching and rendering, modelling and Computer Aided Design and Manufacture (CAD/CAM). Through a series of projects, students will be researching and analysing examples of good design and other focused research activities. They will also be guided through a broad range of manufacturing techniques, which they will be experiencing for the first time in order to utilise these as part of their own new ideas for products. Students are expected to be highly motivated, creative and have the ability to work both collaboratively and independently towards unique and imaginative outcomes for their own three-dimensional products. You'll have lots of time to experiment with traditional and new media, using a range of materials to develop your knowledge of art and design processes and techniques. You'll choose a theme within which you'll create personal and imaginative work, using the study of other artists, craftspeople and designers to inform your own creative ideas. You'll keep a sketchbook to record and document your move on to through media exploration, idea development, annotation and analysis, building a portfolio of your own work as you go along. You'll complete a written personal study of a minimum 1000 words demonstrating your critical understanding. You'll learn through practical hands on practice and classroom-based exercises. You will be expected to complete independent study.
GCSE in any D&T course grade 5 or higher is desirable but not essential.
Coursework contributes 60% of the overall A-Level. Students will produce a body of work that often takes the form of design sheets, supported by rendered drawings, leading to modelling in different media and a final piece of three-dimensional practical work. Externally set task contributes 40% of the overall A-Level. A range of themes will be issued by the exam board on 1st February in Year 13.
About Education Provider
| Region | West Midlands |
| Local Authority | Staffordshire |
| Ofsted Rating | Requires improvement |
| Gender Type | Co-Educational |
| Address | Bridge Cross Road, Chase Terrace, Burntwood, WS7 2DB |
This exciting A-level course offers students the opportunity to explore Product Design in a hands-on way, working with a wide variety of materials, manufacturing techniques and media. Students will develop their own creative ideas, responding to areas of their own personal interest. The students will develop their skills in sketching and rendering, modelling and Computer Aided Design and Manufacture (CAD/CAM). Through a series of projects, students will be researching and analysing examples of good design and other focused research activities. They will also be guided through a broad range of manufacturing techniques, which they will be experiencing for the first time in order to utilise these as part of their own new ideas for products. Students are expected to be highly motivated, creative and have the ability to work both collaboratively and independently towards unique and imaginative outcomes for their own three-dimensional products. You'll have lots of time to experiment with traditional and new media, using a range of materials to develop your knowledge of art and design processes and techniques. You'll choose a theme within which you'll create personal and imaginative work, using the study of other artists, craftspeople and designers to inform your own creative ideas. You'll keep a sketchbook to record and document your move on to through media exploration, idea development, annotation and analysis, building a portfolio of your own work as you go along. You'll complete a written personal study of a minimum 1000 words demonstrating your critical understanding. You'll learn through practical hands on practice and classroom-based exercises. You will be expected to complete independent study.
GCSE in any D&T course grade 5 or higher is desirable but not essential.
Coursework contributes 60% of the overall A-Level. Students will produce a body of work that often takes the form of design sheets, supported by rendered drawings, leading to modelling in different media and a final piece of three-dimensional practical work. Externally set task contributes 40% of the overall A-Level. A range of themes will be issued by the exam board on 1st February in Year 13.