EasyG said:teesside is a god awful place to live! thats why its so cheap.
the staff are incompetent and lazy and generally dont give a rats about the students. I was on the computer animation course and sometimes staff just wouldn't turn up no notice or anything.
think they had 2 decent lecturers the rest didn't no about current programs etc, or how to use them sometimes. The labs aren't fully equipped with computers often broken. hell it took 7 weeks to get a program we were supposed to use for a module onto the bloody computers in the first place, which quite frankly was disgraceful.
andy8271 said:a first for everything and im going to big up teesside
the games design course is apparently **** hot and its chepa as chips to live there
used to play on there css servers wich uses the same forum as the gamers society or whatever it is. by the sounds of it mot people on the course go on to big name companys
Along with one other student. Yup, total class size = 2.PinkFloyd said:Yeh she's doing the masters degree here.
no.Xtremepenguin said:Will he learn animation, modelling, texturing, drawing , concept design etc from that degree?
I'd take that article with a pinch of salt. One thing they said was "Despite having high entry requirements, the course is oversubscribed". I don't think 160 ucas points (equivalent of DDE at A-level) can ever be consider high entry requirements.It had a multi page feature in pc gamer not long ago and they were very impressed with the facilities if i remember correctly
No, it's 240, more like CCC. Still not that high though.Psyk said:I don't think 160 ucas points (equivalent of DDE at A-level) can ever be consider high entry requirements.
Ok they must have upped it since I applied. I already had enough points on AS levels alone to meet the 160 points requirement.Phnom_Penh said:No, it's 240, more like CCC. Still not that high though.
Psyk said:Ok they must have upped it since I applied. I already had enough points on AS levels alone to meet the 160 points requirement.
lol no it definitely wasn't. That's why I didn't go there. I only applied out of curiosity really. I was never serious about doing it, I just wanted to check it out.daz said:Is this really the degree and university for you in that case?
But what's going to look best at a glance, a "Bsc Games Design" degree, or a "BSc (Honours) Computer Graphics and Visualisation"?JaFFa said:Those saying its best to do a computing degree, theres really not that much difference. I have 1 module different to taht of a comp sci, whilst it branches off a bit more in the other years, I think the things it branches into are worthwhile (graphical mathematics, advanced programming, AI, etc).
Welshy said:But what's going to look best at a glance, a "Bsc Games Design" degree, or a "BSc (Honours) Computer Graphics and Visualisation"?
Not necessarily(sp?) if there's possibly hundreds of applicantsPsypher5 said:if you go into the right work they wont just glance, they will know what the course entails and such like surely?
YupPinkFloyd said:Yeh she's doing the masters degree here.
She rocksps, the crazy woman lecturer, Bobby is awesome. She's so funnyrips it out of a few members of the group constantly, she doesn't take too well to people being cheeky though.
Ripper^ said:i go to staffs (internet technology). Live at home and drive there everyday so I don't know what the accomodations like but its a nice uni and I enjoy it there on the most part. Alothough sandwhiches are ridiculously expensive!