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New graphic design major approved

Sun, Jun 01, 2014

A new has been approved at Calvin, a change that could increase student enrollment by as many as 50 students per year, according to Russ Bloem, vice president for enrollment.

For years, students had been graduating with interdisciplinary majors that are very similar to the new graphic design major. 鈥淚n past years, there have been many students who have chosen not to come to Calvin because there was no design major,鈥 said , associate professor of art and art history.

鈥淚f half of these students were to apply to Calvin, and 20-25 percent of those would enroll, we would be looking at 45-50 potential new students per year,鈥 wrote Bloem in a letter to raise support.

鈥淥ur counselors attend about 225 college fairs and make over 400 high school visits per year and they estimate that at least one (often more than one) person will ask 鈥楧o you have a graphic arts/design major?鈥 at 7 out of 10 of these events,鈥 Bloem wrote. 鈥淭his would total to 450 or more inquiries in a season.鈥

This process was not simple, however. Since 1989, , professor of art and art history, has pushed for the program鈥檚 approval, but the need for the major was not acknowledged until this year.

鈥淥ver the last 15 years, an average of 3.8 students graduated with a business/graphic design [interdisciplinary] major. In 10 years that number grew to an average of 4.5 students, and in the past five years the number has grown to 5.2,鈥 stated the proposal for the major in the faculty senate agenda.

鈥淭hey had a good proposal this year. It鈥檚 been an ongoing process, but this year there was a special need for it,鈥 said Mark Williams, dean of arts, languages and education.

Amidst the campuswide budget cuts, this addition will not add additional costs, per the faculty senate report: 鈥淣o new staffing is required, nor will there be any shifts in assignments. This major does not represent an expansion of the college鈥檚 program offerings.鈥

The new major is being added to the art department, but the required courses extend into several departments. 鈥淭he major is a collaboration of visual arts, communication arts and sciences, computer science, and business,鈥 said VanReeuwyk. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a wonderful compilation of several departments.鈥

鈥淏ecause we鈥檙e a liberal arts college, students are shaped to think broadly and have a variety of disciplines to draw from,鈥 said Speyers.

Of the required courses, only three are specific graphic design classes, each taught by Speyers.

鈥淭here are three levels to the major. Level one is the semantics鈥攖he visual parts of speech. Level two is the syntactic鈥攈ow these parts of speech fit together. And level three is the pragmatics鈥攕tudents take on a real client,鈥 said Speyers.

Williams pointed out that Grand Rapids shows to be the perfect city for this new major.

鈥淕rand Rapids is becoming a regional center for designers,鈥 said Williams, 鈥渟o there鈥檚 a job market out there for students.鈥

鈥淒esign is a language, a visual problem solving,鈥 Speyers added, 鈥渁nd because our society is driven by images, there is a great importance for students to develop these skills. Design is everywhere.鈥

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