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    1. Studying at ZHdK
    2. Art Education
    3. BA Art Education
    More: BA Art Education

    Programme structure

    • Course content
    • Structure of the degree programme
    • Skills
    • Admissions requirements
    • Benefits of studying at ZHdK

    Course content

    The Bachelor's programme in Art Education prepares students for teaching positions in schools as well as for creative and educational roles in extracurricular or non-formal education. Students can choose their own areas of focus: those who wish to pursue a career in teaching can prepare specifically for the requirements of teaching visual arts at secondary level I or II. The subsequent Master's programme in Teaching Art or continued study at a teacher training college qualifies students to teach with a teaching diploma. 
    At the same time, the broad creative, artistic, theoretical and pedagogical foundation opens up a wide range of perspectives in extracurricular cultural education work – for example, in youth work, in social institutions offering creative activities, in leisure courses or in continuing education. Students thus obtain a degree that qualifies them for a profession. This can be tailored to personal interests and professional focus areas by choosing specific minor courses, but can also be further deepened with a subsequent Master's degree.

    The content and methodological focus of the programme allows students to deepen their own interests during their studies – for example, through specific projects, elective courses or the individually combinable Minor programme. In the projects, students work in three different tracks that promote different areas of focus and artistic-educational approaches. This results in a personal profile that can be clearly positioned in artistic-educational practice. Work shadowing, internships and cooperation projects also enable students to gain valuable experience in a school or cultural working environment during their studies and to train their own teaching skills.

    Structure of the degree programme

    Structure of the programme

    The Major programme comprises a total of 150 credits and consists of five module areas:

    Module area 1: Projects (63 credits)
    Projects are usually individual and/or collective artistic or creative endeavours of varying scope. They are guided at the outset and receive ongoing support. As the programme progresses, projects become extensive, question-driven endeavours characterised by a fundamentally research-oriented approach. This results in increasingly independent academic work.

    The projects are conducted in parallel in three tracks, which relate to the diverse requirements in the field of art education in terms of their orientation, content, approaches, reflection and transfer processes, media/materials/techniques and the corresponding teaching/learning concepts. The lecturers of the tracks/practices in Art & Design A / B / C formulate the specific characteristics for guidance.

    • Track/Practice A promotes artistic processes in image and space. In particular, drawing, painting, sculptural and installation design are used to explore possibilities of expression and experiment with media-intertwined and open approaches that go beyond these. Special attention is paid to reflection, conceptual differentiation and contemporary contextualisation.
    • In Track/Practice B, media are examined in terms of their potential for communication, communication modes and modes of action. The medium as an informed manifestation that creates and communicates effects in analogue or digital space – one's own body, language, organic, ephemeral or artificial, digital material, etc. Practice B also promotes the use of narrative and performative approaches as well as temporally structured modes of action and expression.
    • Track/Practice C promotes an understanding of design processes and focuses on the teaching and reflection of workshop-related procedures and skills. Competencies in craftsmanship, three-dimensional design and the use of materials are developed, addressing issues of everyday and material culture.

    Module area 2: Studio (15 credits)
    Studio covers formats for developing technical and artistic skills and an introduction to scientific methods. In the case of creative studio courses, there is a compulsory elective from several possible parallel courses with different content orientations.

    Module area 3: Discourses (26 credits)
    The Discourses module area combines theory formation, contextualisation, practical analysis and reflection in the fields of art, design and media theory as well as cultural analysis. Students are introduced to discourses in the subject and its related disciplines, learn to orient themselves within heterogeneous fields of knowledge and generate their own questions from this engagement, which then influence other module areas. Insights are taken up and developed both in artistic and mediating practice and at the level of reflection on these practices. In the case of art/design theory and cultural analysis, there is a compulsory elective consisting of two or three parallel seminars with different content orientations.

    Module area 4: Professionalisation (29 credits)
    The module area Professionalisation covers study content from the fields of education and educational science, general didactics and, in a narrower sense, topics and practices related to the profession and professional field. Some of the modules are part of the professional training required to obtain a teaching diploma for upper secondary schools (in accordance with the EDK regulations on the recognition of teaching diplomas for upper secondary schools). Professionalisation provides insight into the diverse professional field of art education through work shadowing and internships, reflects on experiences and develops initial subject-specific skills in subject didactics, leading to the development of a critical and reflective understanding of the subject. These and other insights from the areas of discourse, studio and projects come together to form a unique artistic teaching approach. A significant part of the vocational training takes place in the area of professionalisation.

    Diploma project (17 credits)
    In the final project module, students develop their bachelor's thesis with a high degree of personal responsibility and person-centred support. The thesis consists of three parts:

    • project work with a self-defined focus to deepen the targeted final competencies,
    • written documentation, and
    • communication and contextualisation of the project work in the context of a public exhibition and a colloquium.

    Skills

    Graduates of the Bachelor of Arts in Art Education:

    • work professionally with craft and artistic/design-related resources and methods;
    • are familiar with a wide range of materials, production methods and technical solutions, and are able to use them with confidence;
    • plan educational projects for a variety of target groups independently and with the necessary pedagogical-didactic knowledge; 
    • are able to teach art and design topics to a wide audience;
    • have theoretical and methodological knowledge of a variety of different cultural and social topic fields;
    • plan and implement artistic-design projects professionally;
    • are able to position, defend and talk about their artistic-design work with conviction in both linguistic and theoretical terms.
    • are self-assured, skilled professionals.

    Admissions requirements

    The Bachelor of Arts in Art Education is aimed at creative, artistically ambitious people with a keen interest in undertaking teaching-educational work with people of different ages. 
    It is geared in particular towards people with an upper secondary, a federal vocational or a specialist baccalaureate who have prior experience in the education, craft, care and/or design fields (vocational education or internship). The Preparatory Courses in Art and Design provide valuable preparation for admission to the degree programme. Special admission (“sur dossier”) is possible.

    The admissions requirements, admission procedures and aptitude tests for degree programmes and study programmes are outlined in the Study regulations.

    Benefits of studying at ZHdK

    • The opportunity to specialize in the school and extra-curricular/non-formal education area is unique both in Switzerland and abroad.
    • The combination of artistic, theoretical and teaching-related skills offers students an extremely broad education in context-related tuition.
    • No other arts university provides this much scope for in-depth practical teaching experience and the corresponding theory at Bachelor level.
    • Zurich University of the Arts brings together a wide range of artistic and design courses under one roof, which enables interdisciplinary exchange.
    • Thanks to the range of minor subject courses, students are able to specialize in areas of interest to pave the way for their individual professional career.