We believe that the best way to give our students a
cutting-edge, professional-level learning experience
is to provide them with educators who practice what
they teach.
For this reason, the great majority of contracted
academic staff work at the College just one or two
days a week. They are, first and foremost, professional
artists and designers. Even the small number of
academic staff who work at the College full-time each
pursue their individual practice outside teaching hours.
It’s this invaluable perspective – that of working art
and design professionals, constantly embracing and
evolving new ideas – that all our teaching staff are able
to bring to their academic work.
And it doesn’t stop there: hundreds of visiting staff
come to the RCA every year to provide lectures,
seminars, masterclasses, crits and individual
tutorials. They include pre-eminent artists, designers,
intellectuals and industry figures from across the
international stage; people who are attracted to the
College because they want to share their knowledge
and experience and to be involved. They know they
will be working with extremely talented students
– the professionals of tomorrow – and will be finding
inspiration as well as providing it.
Technical staff are another vital resource within the
College and in every department expert technicians
and technical instructors help students to develop
their skills and realise their aims. Often our technicians
have moved into the College from industry and so the
connection with the real world of professional practice
applies here too.
We continually assess the quality of teaching and in
2006 we launched LearnRCA, a programme that offers
staff at the College opportunities to reflect on and
improve how and what they teach.
The College is a small, friendly, face-to-face organisation.
Our goal is to make every student’s experience a
good one and it’s this aim that has helped to shape
the structure of our teaching. Small numbers make
it possible to work in an informal way and to focus
on the individual.
Of course there are formal lectures and tutorials to
attend and, in each year, a formal (oral) examination.
But most of the time, teaching is an informal process
– a challenging, critical and analytical conversation
between equals, centred on the work and conducted at
the level of the individual student or the small group.