国际学生入学条件
Students seeking a two-year Master of Architecture (M.Arch) professional degree must hold either a Bachelor of Art in Architecture or a Bachelor of Science in Architecture degree. This degree program offers students with a four-year undergraduate degree in architecture an opportunity to complete the professional education necessary for licensure and to focus their study in classical and traditional architecture and urbanism.
The School of Architecture does not list a strict minimum GPA for admission, but does see an applicant's GPA in a previous course of study as one key indicator of future academic performance. Generally, the Admissions Committee seeks a GPA of 3.0 or higher on a 4.0 scale.
The University of Notre Dame recommends a minimum score of 7.5 (TOEFL) or 100 (IELTS) and the School of Architecture graduate programs do as well.
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雅思考试总分
7.5
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雅思考试指南
- 雅思总分:7.5
- 托福网考总分:100
- 托福笔试总分:160
- 其他语言考试:NA
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申请截止日期: 请与IDP顾问联系以获取详细信息。
课程简介
The Notre Dame School of Architecture graduate programs in architecture and urban design promote built environments that are durable, useful, and beautiful, and which are supportive of strong communities. The School seeks to train designers, scholars, preservationists, and advocates for the built environment who will play a leading role in their professions and may translate their skills and advocacy to a variety of disciplines and arenas.<br><br>Toward these ends, the graduate curriculum promotes a holistic approach to design education and the understanding of detail, building, and city as a continuous and interdependent scalar spectrum. It engages both intellectual endeavor and the practical teaching of craft in order that the best lessons of historic precedent might be learned, expanded upon, and combined with a judicious use of contemporary strategies, materials, and methodologies in order to contribute toward buildings and urbanism which are environmentally and culturally sustainable.<br><br>Until recently, the School of Architecture graduate programs offered two different ''tracks'', focused respectively on classical architecture and urban design. The intent was to offer students an opportunity, for two semesters following their foundational semester(s), to delve into the particular issues of one scale or the other. As part of the School's recent decision to reinforce the inseparability of building design and urbanism, students are no longer required to select one of two tracks which have been seen by some as disparate fields of study. The unbundling of the course selections does not eliminate any of the courses that made up the two tracks. Instead, these courses may now be selected by students on an a la carte basis, allowing greater flexibility for students interested in exploring multiple scales and issues in greater depth.
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