Metadata
Title
Undergraduate Degrees
Category
undergraduate
UUID
8ff5bd2d02844753ac219a7ca704d144
Source URL
https://design.cmu.edu/about-our-programs/undergraduate-degrees
Parent URL
https://design.cmu.edu/news/michele-hratko-designing-dancers-symposium
Crawl Time
2026-03-25T05:33:10+00:00
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Undergraduate Degrees

Source: https://design.cmu.edu/about-our-programs/undergraduate-degrees Parent: https://design.cmu.edu/news/michele-hratko-designing-dancers-symposium

Frequently Asked Questions

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Programs

Undergraduate Degrees

At its heart, design is about solving problems. In a competitive global marketplace, businesses and institutions are embracing the value of design, and the demand for professionals in the field has never been greater. Here at the School of Design, we offer a Bachelor's of Design (BDes), a BXA and a Minor in Design.

Frequently Asked Questions

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Jump To...

In the Bachelor’s of Design program, you’ll have the option to select a track to focus your education on: products design (industrial design), environments design for environments (physical spaces and related digital experiences), or communication designs (graphic design and screen-based digital interactions).

This is us

In Design, we’re a like-minded, close-knit group of makers from all backgrounds with broad interests.

UI/UX designers, product designers, environment designers, graphic/communication designers, illustrators, biomedical designers, animators, industrial designers, and creative technologists, all housed under one department.

We make a lot of stuff

From day one, you’ll be welcomed into a studio with around 40 other students who will become your best friends, collaborators, employees and maybe even a future spouse. (It’s happened!)

You’ll live, eat, play, and work together for four years, making it just about the best community you could ever ask for.

Alongside of focused studies in design, student personal interests can be explored through elective courses within the School of Design or across the University.

So what even is Design?

We decided the best way to explain what even is design (and what you can do with it) was to ask a few of our amazing alumni...

Alumni! What is Design to you?

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Yoshi Torralva

Yoshi Torralva (BDes '22) is a New York based designer at Pentagram.

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Yoshi Torralva (BDes '22) is a New York based designer at Pentagram.

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Emily Zhou

Emily Zhou (BDes '21) Emily is a multidisciplinary designer with an interest in tangible interactions + technology.

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Emily Zhou (BDes '21) Emily is a multidisciplinary designer with an interest in tangible interactions + technology.

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Emily Spooner

Emily Spooner (BDes '22) is a Junior Industrial Designer at PlayPower, Inc.

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Emily Spooner (BDes '22) is a Junior Industrial Designer at PlayPower, Inc.

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Amber Lee

Amber Lee (BDes '21) is an art director and visual designer specializing in spatial graphics, digital platforms, and branding.

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Amber Lee (BDes '21) is an art director and visual designer specializing in spatial graphics, digital platforms, and branding.

Choose your track

As the demand for design increases, so does the range of design expertise. When you start out as a working professional, you may want to concentrate in a single area or, with expertise gained from practice or advanced education, work across broad areas of design.

Undergraduate design majors at Carnegie Mellon earn a Bachelor of Design degree (BDes). The degree is equivalent in rank to a Bachelor of Fine Art (BFA), but conveys the growing importance of design disciplines as separate and distinct from fine art.

After completing our foundation year of design study, you’ll choose your track according to your goals and interests: Communications, Products, or Environments. Each track prepares you for entry-level professional practice opportunities in design or design study at an advanced level.

Products

Environments

Communications

Design Studies

Throughout your undergraduate education, you'll be immersed in a series of Design Studies courses. Design Studies at Carnegie Mellon explores the theoretical foundations of design and its impact on the world in the 21st century. These courses provoke inquiry into the cultural, political, and ecological conditions that design both shapes—and is shaped by.

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Study with the best. Work with industry.

Our faculty members bring an array of impressive skill sets from a variety of academic and professional backgrounds. They’re known experts in products (industrial design), communications, and environments design and leading authorities in design research, fine art, philosophy, human-computer interaction, and business. They also have a solid history of successful collaboration with prominent companies, nonprofits, and academic partners.

Studio courses and faculty research frequently include industry and research projects—which means you’ll have exciting opportunities to interact with and present to professional designers, or even work as a research assistant.

Our programs are founded on a framework that responds to changes in the field of design, but they also seek to shape the future of the discipline and advance the field. Whatever direction you choose in your studies here, our approach prepares you for top jobs in leading companies and organizations today—while teaching you to design with future generations in mind.

Information for High School Educators

We offer information sessions for high school educators looking for more information on the career opportunities that are possible with an education in design. Please check here for details about the next session.

Check out the Orange Book!

Flip through our Orange Book for the BDes program. This booklet contains pictures, descriptions of all of our tracks and a glimpse of what the arc of your education will look like here at the School of Design.

Read the Orange Book here.