Architecture & Building - Choosing a Course Stoke

Most building-related courses are three- or four-year BScs; the range of degrees is so varied that few institutions offer exactly the same degree course. So make sure you understand what you're getting. Certain building courses also offer the opportunity to attain chartered engineer status.

Leek College of Further Education and School of Art
01538 398 866
Stockwell Street
Leek
Educational Establishment
Barracks Road
Newcastle-under-Lyme
Burton College Learning Shop
+44 (0) 1283 749321
Worthington Way
Burton upon Trent
Willfield Neighbourhood College
01782 234620
Lauder Place Nth, Bentilee
Stoke
Stoke-On-Trent City Council St Thomas More Catholic College Scho
01782 234734
Longton Hall Road
Stoke On Trent
City of Stoke-on-Trent Sixth Form College
01782 848 736
Victoria Road
Stoke-on-Trent
Burton College It Centre
+44 (0) 1889 562880
Church Street
Uttoxeter
The Green Performing Arts
+44 (0) 1785 278278
Lichfield Road
Stafford
Burton College
+44 (0) 1283 494400
Lichfield Street
Burton upon Trent
Stoke On Trent College
01782 341660
54-58 Market Street
Stoke On Trent
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Architecture & Building - Choosing a Course

Choosing a Course

Most building-related courses are three- or four-year BScs; the range of degrees is so varied that few institutions offer exactly the same degree course. So make sure you understand what you're getting. If you know you want to do, for example, building techniques or computer-aided design, make sure it's on offer.

There is often an emphasis on individual learning, so be aware of whether a lecture and class-based course would suit you. Assessment is similarly quite varied, but do expect a large element of coursework for most degrees.

Certain building courses also offer the opportunity to attain chartered engineer status - this requires studying for the Engineering Council examinations - which may help gain employment further down the line.

Four-year courses nearly always include a sandwich year in industry, which can be a great way to get to know the industry and find your niche in the job market. Ask about the provision an institution has for work placement.

In order to practise as an architect in the UK, it is necessary to be on the register of architects, which is held by the UK statutory regulator for architects, the Architects Registration Board. ARB is the sole body charged with prescribing the qualifications, so if you want to practise as an architect, it is important that you check out whether or not the qualification you are thinking of is prescribed by the ARB. If it is, then your route on to the UK Register of Architects will be more straightforward.

And if you want to be a member of the Royal Institute of British Architects, the course needs to be recognised by them too. Not all courses are recognised by the ARB and/or RIBA so check with them which courses they approve. A number of courses are currently awaiting validation, and ARB-prescription is reviewed periodically - normally every four years - so they will be able to provide up-to-the-minute information.

Go and see a range of schools in action before making a choice. Although they must all comply with professional criteria they are surprisingly different in their character depending on their home institution and the interests of the teaching staff.

Course content will vary according to research interests and institutional histories. Some courses are more technical and academic than others, and could include areas such as sustainability, waste management, electronic modelling, or structural engineering, so think carefully about what suits your skills and temperament best. As with all courses, careful examination of prospectuses and visits to departments (ask about their links with architects' practices and arrangements for the 'years out') should enable you to make informed decisions about the most suitable place for you.

Another possibility is architectural technology, which is a relatively new profession and deals with the technical aspects of the specification, design and construction of a building, often acting as the project manag...

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