2015-2016 Graduate Bulletin [ARCHIVED BULLETIN]
Department of Architecture
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Professor Crosbie (Chair), Davis
Associate Professors Fuller, Petry, Sawruk
Assistant Professors As, Holmes
The Master of Architecture program prepares students for a variety of professional careers in the design and construction industries.
In a collaborative, multidisciplinary setting, the Architecture program balances theoretical, technical, professional, and creative knowledge. Students are prepared for careers in architecture and a wide assortment of other design-, construction-, or business-related professions. The pedagogic approach to architecture education is centered on the studio. The studio provides the appropriate environment for the assimilation and synthesis of knowledge gained throughout the curriculum by incorporating design, aesthetic, technology, and the needs of people. The sequence of studio courses provides sequentially more challenging projects and is intended to develop the student’s skills to acknowledge, analyze, articulate, and synthesize solutions pertaining to the built environment. All graduate architecture studio coursess(ARC 511 , ARC 521 , ARC 611 , and ARC 621 ) must be satisfactorily passed in no more than two attempts. Students who do not satisfactorily pass graduate studio classes within two attempts may be dismissed from the graduate architecture program. The final grade for passing ARC 621 - Master’s Thesis must be at least a B-.
For those students who want to broaden their education at the graduate level, they may consider other graduate programs at the University, such as the M.B.A. (Barney School of Business), the M.F.A. (Hartford Art School), and the Master of Engineering. M.Arch students may earn a dual degree in these other disciplines.
To be considered for admission, applicants must have received an undergraduate preprofessional degree in architecture (such as a Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts in Architecture, Architectural Engineering, or Architectural Engineering Technology) from an accredited college, university, or other institution and have a GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. The student’s background and preparation must be such in content and scope as to indicate the ability to complete successfully the curriculum requirements.
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