STUDY
Course options: | Professional Placement |
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Institution code: | S82 |
UCAS code: | W212 |
Start date: | September 2025 |
Duration: | Three years full-time, four and a half to nine years part-time. |
Location: | Ipswich |
Typical Offer: | 112 UCAS tariff points (or above), BBC (A-Level), DMM (BTEC), Merit (T Level) |
Course options: | Professional Placement |
---|---|
Institution code: | S82 |
UCAS code: | W212 |
Start date: | September 2025 |
Duration: | Three years full-time, four and a half to nine years part-time. |
---|---|
Location: | Ipswich |
Typical Offer: | 112 UCAS tariff points (or above), BBC (A-Level), DMM (BTEC), Merit (T Level) |
Overview
Our Graphic Design and Graphic Illustration courses offer you control over your creative direction and career ambitions. Because we teach both degrees together, you are not tied to one study route; for instance, if you develop a passion for illustration you can transfer to Graphic Illustration to study that pathway in much more depth.
Within both courses, projects help you develop the creative and technical skills you need for industry, while also being open enough to allow you the freedom to steer your work to suit your interests. This way, you get the most out of your time with us—tailoring your degree, exploring your career options and developing a personal approach to your creative process.
With our small class sizes, throughout your degree you will benefit from generous contact time with our tutors and technicians and easy access to all facilities, supporting you to advance your learning and hone your design skills.
Employability is at the heart of our Graphic Design course. Alongside developing a broad range of practical skills, you learn how to be a creative and critical thinker, developing transferable skills along the way.
Our links to professional bodies, experts and design practitioners makes for an industry-focused programme, providing you with fantastic networking and placement opportunities. For example, students have recently received industry-set briefs from BBC Studios, Jacob Bailey and Itineris, and worked on client-facing live projects for Suffolk Archives, 4YP, Saxon Packaging, MT Productions and Ipswich Vision. Tutors will also advise and support you in approaching design studios to arrange practical work experience.
To give you and your work maximum exposure, we support rolling out competitions from partner organisations as extracurricular projects, as well as embed national competitions within the course curriculum. Read more in Career Opportunities below.
Applicant Portfolio Advice
Below we provide some useful tips on what to include in your application portfolio. Since there is no set ‘checklist’, if you do not have all of the suggested elements, we still encourage you to apply.
- Include a range of work demonstrating creativity in its broadest sense. If you can, provide examples of applied design, typography and digital skills.
- Show work that represents graphic design with ideas at its centre and that aims to communicate a message.
- Provide examples of drawing skills in a range of different mediums.
- Demonstrate your ability to analyse your own work and the work of others.
- Show a project from start to finish, so we can gauge your creative journey and understand your design process.
Contact us with your questions: graphics@uos.ac.uk
Student Projects
Course Modules
Our undergraduate programmes are delivered as 'block and blend', more information can be found on Why Suffolk? You can also watch our Block and Blend video.
Downloadable information regarding all University of Suffolk courses, including Key Facts, Course Aims, Course Structure and Assessment, is available in the Definitive Course Record.
This module introduces key digital software and contexts, familiarising students with industry standard requirements and encouraging them to explore the creative potential of digital processes.
This module introduces students to approaches and methods for the generation of ideas in order to solve visual communication problems.
This module engages students with the activity of image making as a multi-faceted language, reinforcing the idea of drawing, mark-making and image construction as core skills to both the graphic designer and illustrator.
This module introduces the basic principles of formal typography and how type can be used creatively.
This module explores a range of print processes and media for creating graphic design outcomes.
This module introduces the historical and contemporary contexts of Graphic Design and Illustration and explores their relationship to professional practice.
This module develops a student’s understanding of contemporary visual branding and how a designer communicates their clients’ identity.
This module allows students to explore how sequential narratives in applied contexts influence and affect an audience's interaction with graphic design outcomes.
This module allows students to develop their knowledge and digital skills in UX and UI design for screen-based communications.
This module builds on Contextual Studies at Level 4 and introduces the underpinning research and writing skills needed to be able to approach a Dissertation at Level 6. It seeks to extend students’ critical questioning of their discipline and introduces design writing and publishing as a potential career option.
This module extends student’s knowledge of contemporary design contexts through projects focusing on employability and professional practice, where-possible, through client-facing briefs.
This module allows students to use experience of a work placement towards their degree. (Replaces Professional Design Practices.)
This year-long module focuses on the development of a Graphic Design Portfolio. Through reflective analysis and the completion of set and negotiated projects, it provides the student with the opportunity to produce work that represents their personal career ambitions. The module allows the student to bring together all that they have learnt on the course to date, and to develop a self-awareness of their personal creative process and how to produce highly effective and professionally realised visual communication outcomes.
This module allows students to explore the personal and professional career or postgraduate education options open to them. Through reflective creative projects, engagement with industry partners, discussions surrounding contemporary practice, and exercises that explore employability skills, the module seeks to position the student more confidently in their progression from higher education.
The Dissertation provides an opportunity to conduct a significant piece of research that engages critically with a student’s own interests. It allows them to articulate their findings through a piece of academic writing and to position themselves as an emerging expert in their field of study.
WHY SUFFOLK
2nd in the UK for Career Prospects
WUSCA 20243rd in the UK for spend on academic services
Complete University Guide 20254th in the UK for Teaching Satisfaction
Guardian University Guide 2024Entry Requirements
Career Opportunities
We are proud that many of our graduates find jobs with respected graphic design studios in the region such as Firebrand Creative, Jacob Bailey, Linassi + Co, StrategiQ and This is Fever ; while others have gone on to work at national organisations including FutureGov, Government Digital Services, M-is and Saatchi & Saatchi.
If you want to run your own business, the degree also equips you with the crucial skills to be a successful freelance designer or to set up your own design practice. Alternatively, you can progress to a design-related Masters degree or initial teacher training.
Our graphic design graduates go on to follow careers in a broad range of areas including:
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Graphic design
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Illustration
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Art direction
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Publishing
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Web design
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App design
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Exhibition design
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Branding
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Advertising
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Marketing
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Content creation
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Film and television
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Teaching
Facilities and Resources
In your time at University of Suffolk you will be based in our dedicated Arts Building, which is home to all Art and Design courses. Our two Graphic Design studios on the first floor have generous open access for you to work in outside of taught sessions, with use of audio/visual equipment, iMacs, lightboxes, bench work space, and a pack-shot photography area. The studios also house a graphics library to compliment the main University library, as well as storage planchests. Sited across the corridor on the first floor is the Apple Mac digital suite with scanning and printing facilites. In addition to these Graphic Design spaces, the top floor of the Arts Building contains a Drawing Studio, while on the ground floor you will have access to our Printmaking Studio and 3D workshops, with facilities for screen-printing, linocutting, etching, laser-cutting, plastics vacuum forming and woodworking. The Printmaking Studio also houses a Riso printer, vinyl cutting and mounting equipment, as well as a large-format digital printing service run by our arts technicians.
Unibuddy: Chat to our Students and Staff
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