Promising Fashion Designers Can Get an Early Start at High School of Fashion Industries

By Pat Lowe

There's a high school in New York that might make you rethink your concept of design schools. This is because it contradicts the idea that you can't start working toward some kind of degree in fashion until you've finished your public education and then attending a post-secondary program at a fashion design school. While that sort of school is still where students of fashion need to end up if they are planning a career in the industry, it's possible for them to get a significant jumpstart before they ever get to that level of education.

That's right, among the many sorts of design schools, the High School of Fashion Industries in New York City gets potential designers started much earlier than any other institute. It starts in Grade 9, actually, teaching subjects such as draping, pattern making, fashion history and so forth.

Students can focus on clothing for men, women or children, and get a good head start for enrolling in institutes of fashion design after they are finished high school. In fact, it is feasible they might even be given credit for courses in those institutions, and graduate early.

This is not to say that the High School of Fashion Industries neglects the academic side of its students' education. Its fashion design programs are not a substitute for that important aspect of public schooling. If you look at their website, they concentrate just as strongly on science and math, social studies, English and so on. This is not a school that tries to bypass what every student needs in order to function well in society. It just helps with some extra education for those students who might be eyeing design schools after high school.

The students at this high school graduate as very well rounded citizens. Not only do they have a good grounding in academic subjects, but are ready to head toward fashion design careers if that's their goal. They've got a head start on much of the knowledge they'd need to learn at the design schools, and probably a better chance of being accepted at those schools. These students are well suited to go in almost any direction they want after graduation.

About the Author:

0 comments:

Guides Complete