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50% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
HND Visual Communication
About this course
Visual communication is the discipline concerned with how ideas, information, and messages are conveyed through visual means. It encompasses graphic design, typography, illustration, photography, moving image, and the digital tools through which visual content is created and distributed. At the University of the Highlands and Islands, the two-year full-time HND Visual Communication programme develops the creative and technical skills needed to work professionally in visual media, with a flexible approach to study that can accommodate both full-time and reduced-pace options. The programme develops your visual literacy, which is the ability to create, read, and evaluate images and visual designs with understanding and intent. You will work with a range of tools and media, from traditional drawing and layout through to digital design software, developing the technical fluency that visual communication work requires alongside the conceptual thinking that determines what to make and why. Good visual communication is purposeful: it selects, arranges, and emphasises information to serve a particular audience and purpose, and the programme develops your sensitivity to these dimensions alongside practical skill. Typography, colour theory, composition, and the history of design provide the intellectual foundations for the practical work, and project-based learning gives you experience of working to briefs that simulate professional conditions. Graduates of visual communication programmes work across a wide range of creative industries. Graphic design, digital design, advertising, publishing, branding, packaging design, web and interface design, motion graphics, and content creation for digital platforms are among the most common career paths. The HND qualification is often used as a foundation for further study, and graduates may progress to the final year of related degree programmes. Others move directly into professional roles in design studios, in-house creative teams, or as freelancers building their own client bases. The visual and technical skills developed in the programme are broadly applicable in any creative or communications context where visual presentation matters, which is to say, almost everywhere in contemporary professional and commercial life.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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