

BSc User Experience Design
About this course
User experience design is the discipline concerned with creating digital products and services that genuinely work for the people who use them. It draws on psychology, design, and technology to understand user needs and behaviours, to translate that understanding into clear and intuitive interfaces and interaction patterns, and to test and refine designs based on evidence of how real users respond. Good UX design is not merely about visual aesthetics: it is about making products that are easy to learn, efficient to use, and that leave users feeling satisfied rather than frustrated. The discipline has become central to how technology products are built, and UX designers work at every stage of the product development cycle, from early research through prototyping and testing to final implementation. At Norwich University of the Arts, user experience design is studied over four years of full-time study. The programme combines the creative and human-centred practice of UX with a rigorous grounding in research methods, design thinking, and the technical context in which digital products exist. You will develop skills in user research, including interviews, surveys, and observation, and in the design methods used to translate research insights into concepts, from sketching and storyboarding through to digital wireframing and interactive prototyping. Usability testing and iteration are central to the process you will learn, and you will develop the ability to articulate and defend your design decisions with reference to evidence and to user-centred principles. The programme also develops your understanding of information architecture, accessibility, and the principles of interaction design. Graduates from user experience design programmes are in high demand across the technology, media, and service design sectors. UX designer, UI designer, interaction designer, product designer, and service designer are the primary role types for which this degree prepares you. Technology companies, design consultancies, banks, healthcare organisations, retailers, and public sector bodies all employ UX designers, as digital product quality becomes a critical differentiator across industries. Many graduates go on to roles as UX researchers, content strategists, or UX leads as their careers develop. Postgraduate study in interaction design, human-computer interaction, or design research is available for those who want to develop specialist expertise.
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