X-Nico

2 unusual facts about Design and Technology


Craft and Design

Design and Technology (also Craft Design and Technology, D&T, D.T, or Craft and Design in Scotland), a National Curriculum academic subject of the UK educational system that can be taken at all levels from primary school upwards, and is also offered in several other countries such as Brunei, Bermuda, Singapore and Botswana

IADT

Dún Laoghaire Institute of Art, Design and Technology – a speciaised, public-funded college within the technological sector in Ireland, located in Dún Laoghaire, Dublin and incorporating the National Film School



see also

Landau Forte Academy, Amington

Other highlights include drama and recording studios, a whole-school IT network (the school houses a Cisco Systems Oracle Database academy), design and technology centre, a suite of three art studios, a 32-seat language laboratory (French and German were traditionally taught, Spanish has been added in recent years) and nine science laboratories.

Manuel Lima

Lima has a BFA degree in Industrial Design from the Faculty of Architecture at Technical University of Lisbon and a MFA in Design and Technology from Parsons School of Design.

Monterey Trail High School

Monterey Trail High School school has a Design and Technology Academy (DATA), designed to provide students with career technical skills in the areas of Engineering, Computer Science, and Enviroscapes.

Osmanoğlu family

Prince (Şehzade) Mahmud Namık Osmanoğlu born in London, 27 April 1975, MFA in Design and Technology from Parsons The New School for Design, New York City, USA.

Parkland Middle School

Special courses offered at the school include, but are not limited to, Aerospace Design and Technology, Comparative Planetology and Orbital Mechanics, Honors Physics, and Unmanned Space Exploration.

The Doyle School of Design and Technology

The Doyle School of Design and Technology was founded by American Old Blue, John Doyle who is a reputed British-American engineer and multimillionaire entrepreneur.

Viridian design movement

The name was chosen to refer to a shade of green that does not quite look natural, indicating that the movement was about innovative design and technology, in contrast with the "leaf green" of traditional environmentalism.