ECTS - Creative Presentation in Digital Arts
Creative Presentation in Digital Arts (ART297) Course Detail
| Course Name | Course Code | Season | Lecture Hours | Application Hours | Lab Hours | Credit | ECTS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Creative Presentation in Digital Arts | ART297 | Fall and Spring | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 4 |
| Pre-requisite Course(s) |
|---|
| N/A |
| Course Language | English |
|---|---|
| Course Type | Elective Courses |
| Course Level | Natural & Applied Sciences Master's Degree |
| Mode of Delivery | Face To Face |
| Learning and Teaching Strategies | Lecture, Discussion, Drill and Practice. |
| Course Lecturer(s) |
|
| Course Objectives | This course aims at providing an innovative approach to create a model of a product and making an animation used for tv, cinema and web based commercials and presentations. Besides having a general knowledge in 3D animation and modeling, learning scene editing of a 3d animation is one of the main goals. |
| Course Learning Outcomes |
The students who succeeded in this course;
|
| Course Content | 3D modeling techniques suitable for 3D product presentation, workflows of multiple software design, scene lighting render and animation settings, editing presentation animation, using render passes layers in compositing and color correction process. |
Weekly Subjects and Releated Preparation Studies
| Week | Subjects | Preparation |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Definition of 3D modelling, learning the workflow, process in 3ds Max and Maxons Cinema 4D | |
| 2 | Choosing the product to model in 3D and animation based modelling techniques. | |
| 3 | Modelling process continues and retopolgy for texturing. | |
| 4 | Ways to create environment and scene for presentation and animation. | |
| 5 | UV texturing, UV map editing, material creating and settings. | |
| 6 | Finishing the texture material, scene and environment. | |
| 7 | Midterm | |
| 8 | Starting to create animation and ways to make animation more creative by using third party plugins. | |
| 9 | Camera movements and ways of trespassing between camera movements. | |
| 10 | Lights, kinds of lights, lights and shadows settings and using lights for making presentation more dramatic. | |
| 11 | Render settings, What is render pass, ways of rendering for production based editing. | |
| 12 | Softwares using for compositing. After Effects and Compositing. | |
| 13 | Logic of Sequence editing with render passes. Editing and professional workflow. | |
| 14 | Personal Project: Revision of the project and exporting the animation video with compositing. | |
| 15 | Personal Project: Submission of the project and critics. | |
| 16 | Final Evaluation |
Sources
| Other Sources | 2. Autodesk. 3ds Max Yazılımı. https://www.autodesk.com.tr/products/3ds-max/overview |
|---|---|
| 3. Adobe. Pt. https://www.allegorithmic.com/products/substance-painter | |
| 3. Etabek, H. D. (2017). Cinema 4D by Maxon. Abaküs Yayınevi. | |
| 4. Maxon. Cinema 4d. https://www.maxon.net/en/cinema-4d | |
| 5. Özsağlam, M. S. ve Bayraktar, C. (2012). 3ds Max. Seçkin Yayıncılık. |
Evaluation System
| Requirements | Number | Percentage of Grade |
|---|---|---|
| Attendance/Participation | 15 | 10 |
| Laboratory | - | - |
| Application | - | - |
| Field Work | - | - |
| Special Course Internship | - | - |
| Quizzes/Studio Critics | - | - |
| Homework Assignments | 1 | 10 |
| Presentation | - | - |
| Project | 1 | 30 |
| Report | - | - |
| Seminar | - | - |
| Midterms Exams/Midterms Jury | 1 | 20 |
| Final Exam/Final Jury | 1 | 30 |
| Toplam | 19 | 100 |
| Percentage of Semester Work | 70 |
|---|---|
| Percentage of Final Work | 30 |
| Total | 100 |
Course Category
| Core Courses | X |
|---|---|
| Major Area Courses | |
| Supportive Courses | |
| Media and Managment Skills Courses | |
| Transferable Skill Courses |
The Relation Between Course Learning Competencies and Program Qualifications
| # | Program Qualifications / Competencies | Level of Contribution | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||
| 1 | An ability to apply advanced knowledge of computing and/or informatics to solve software engineering problems. | |||||
| 2 | Develop solutions using different technologies, software architectures and life-cycle approaches. | |||||
| 3 | An ability to design, implement and evaluate a software system, component, process or program by using modern techniques and engineering tools required for software engineering practices. | |||||
| 4 | An ability to gather/acquire, analyze, interpret data and make decisions to understand software requirements. | |||||
| 5 | Skills of effective oral and written communication and critical thinking about a wide range of issues arising in the context of working constructively on software projects. | |||||
| 6 | An ability to access information in order to follow recent developments in science and technology and to perform scientific research or implement a project in the software engineering domain. | |||||
| 7 | An understanding of professional, legal, ethical and social issues and responsibilities related to Software Engineering. | |||||
| 8 | Skills in project and risk management, awareness about importance of entrepreneurship, innovation and long-term development, and recognition of international standards of excellence for software engineering practices standards and methodologies. | |||||
| 9 | An understanding about the impact of Software Engineering solutions in a global, environmental, societal and legal context while making decisions. | |||||
| 10 | Promote the development, adoption and sustained use of standards of excellence for software engineering practices. | |||||
ECTS/Workload Table
| Activities | Number | Duration (Hours) | Total Workload |
|---|---|---|---|
| Course Hours (Including Exam Week: 16 x Total Hours) | 16 | 3 | 48 |
| Laboratory | |||
| Application | |||
| Special Course Internship | |||
| Field Work | |||
| Study Hours Out of Class | 5 | 2 | 10 |
| Presentation/Seminar Prepration | |||
| Project | 1 | 20 | 20 |
| Report | |||
| Homework Assignments | 1 | 5 | 5 |
| Quizzes/Studio Critics | |||
| Prepration of Midterm Exams/Midterm Jury | 1 | 7 | 7 |
| Prepration of Final Exams/Final Jury | 1 | 10 | 10 |
| Total Workload | 100 | ||
