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   An Introduction to Interior Design Schools
  ...a discussion of education and career choices for interior designers.

Do you enjoy TV shows such as "Trading Spaces," "Surprised by Design," or at least half of the HGTV network schedule? When you visit a friend's house for the first time, do you find yourself thinking about how the furnishings could be improved or better positioned? In a cathedral or museum, do the room spaces interest you as much as the art they contain? If so, you might make a good interior designer. You can get a wide variety of interior-design training from many institutions; if you do well, the continuing strong demand for professional interior-design services virtually assures you a rewarding career.

For most of the world's history, interior design was reserved for large public buildings and the dwellings (in life and in death) of the extremely wealthy and powerful: palaces, temples, tombs, and the like. "Ordinary people" hardly had the resources to survive, much less beautify the places where they lived. But when a middle class began to emerge during the early Renaissance, interior design spread to the masses; designers have been improving the look, feel, and usefulness of even the smallest of homes and other buildings ever since.

Interior design is about more than ornamentation; it's about creating a total environment inside a building or vehicle that best allows or induces people to do the things that the building is meant for. Sculptures, computers, and drill presses can be designed without being overly concerned about where they'll be placed, what other things will be nearby, or what people will be doing in their vicinity besides using/appreciating them. That's decidedly not the case for interiors. Interiors are inhabited; they are art that people live, work, and play in. Because they involve such complex webs of interaction between space, objects, and human needs and behaviors, designing interiors can require much more consideration and planning than other design types.

You can learn interior design at several types of schools:

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Choosing an interior-design program is very much like choosing any other type of educational program. But in addition to considering class sizes and the locations, costs, lengths, and types of programs, as you would in other fields, you should investigate the facilities of any campus-based interior-design program: How good is their design studio, and the computer hardware and software you'll use for design work? Also, what are the qualifications of their faculty? Does the program have relationships with architectural or interior-design firms that will help you get real-world experience as a student? You'll probably want to attend a program accredited by the Foundation for Interior Design Education Research (FIDER), which has been holding schools in North America to a single standard for interior-design education since 1999. And perhaps the most important question: What percentage of the program's graduates have historically gone on to successful careers as professional interior designers?

Here are some of the different subjects you might learn if you study interior design:

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Which brings us to what happens after you graduate. Interior designers have terrific employment opportunities with architectural firms, corporations, industrial concerns, retail stores and chains, government agencies, and many other companies. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics expects employment for designers to "grow faster than the average for all occupations" through the year 2010, although competition for positions will be keen. However, even if job competition is high, people who have been trained in interior design are better suited than those in many other occupations to create or partner in their own businesses. The BLS notes that "[t]hree out of 10 designers are self-employed—almost 5 times the proportion for all professional and related occupations." According to 1997 business-census calculations, the US was then home to almost 10,000 interior-design firms, averaging only 3.5 employees per firm. Here are some of the career specialties that an education in interior design can prepare you for:

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To become officially licensed to practice interior design in many US states and Canadian provinces, you'll need to pass the certification exam offered by the National Council for Interior Design Qualifications (NCIDQ). Passing this exam is also a requirement for full or resistered membership in many professional interior-design organizations, including the International Interior Design Association (IIDA), Interior Designers of Canada (IDC), the Institute of Store Planners (ISP), and the world's largest such association, the American Society of Interior Designers (ASID). If you want to be a kitchen and bath designer, the National Kitchen and Bath Association (NKBA) offers its own set of certifications.

Interior design might not be a "vital pursuit." A lot of the world's people have managed to live without much of it for millenia, and continue to do so to this day. But it can be shown that people are generally healthier in, and more pleased with, well-designed homes; more productive in well-designed workspaces; more spiritually satisfied in well-designed places of worship; and so forth. By studying to become an interior designer, you'll be learning how to improve quality of life, not only for your clients, but for everyone who uses the interiors you make for them, over the interiors' entire term of service. That kind of impact is afforded to very few professions; why not make designs on it today?

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