Main professional courses: painting, preliminary design, landscape art, landscape design, scenic spot planning, landscape green space planning, landscape architecture design, landscape engineering, landscape dendrology, landscape flower science, plant ecology, landscape history, computer-aided design, landscape economic management, etc. This major requires students to have painting foundation and thinking quality in images.
Graduates can engage in the planning, design, construction and management of urban green space system, various parks, scenic spots, industrial and mining areas and courtyard greening, as well as the teaching and scientific research of garden plant breeding and flower production in urban construction departments, garden departments, scientific research institutions, universities and other enterprises and institutions.
Of course, the above is just a voluntary introduction to the college entrance examination. After entering the landscape architecture major, the general school will study the basic courses in a unified way, with the direction of sophomore or junior (some college entrance examinations will be divided into landscape design and landscape architecture). It is mainly divided into two directions: garden plants and garden design, but they all have the same public courses, such as politics, modern history of China, advanced mathematics, English, college Chinese, biological basis, botany, surveying, applied chemistry, soil and fertilizer science, painting basis (sketch, watercolor, garden drawing, design basis, etc. ), dendrology and floral science.
The contents of specialized courses to be studied in different directions are different. Garden plants are more professional in gardening. They studied genetics, cultivation, taxonomy and biochemistry of plant research. They didn't have to do design and draw many pictures like garden design. Landscape design focuses on cartography, learning landscape engineering, landscape history, landscape design, landscape design, ergonomics, engineering mechanics, landscape structure design, scenic spot planning, garden green space planning, urban landscape ecology, urban planning theory, garden computer drawing (CAD, PS, 3DMAX) and so on. There are also other elective courses such as landscape ecology, landscape aesthetics, introduction to nature protection, residential appreciation, landscape ecology and so on. But the schools are different, and the curriculum will be different, but most of these courses will be the same.
Finally, I would like to make a suggestion and quote my previous answer: If I study landscape planning and design, I think freshmen should learn English well and sophomores should know what they want to learn. At the same time, we should also take a good look at the ideas of landscape design, see more things designed by others, draw more pictures and practice our own hand-drawn foundation. Gardeners are saints and look at everything, so you should have a broad vision and decorate your mind more. When you are a junior, you should set your direction, accumulate more theoretical knowledge, collect research and design drawings, and participate in special hand-drawing and computer training when you have time to improve yourself. Hand-painted Lushan Mountain is very good (drawing many pictures is very bitter), and computers are mainly proficient in CAD (plane), sketchup (modeling) and ps (rendering). I used to study 3D modeling, but now sketchup is mostly used in landscape architecture. Senior students can carefully prepare for the postgraduate entrance examination. It is best to start reading English words 1 month, read them several times, remember more, and then arrange others slowly. Hehe, the postgraduate entrance examination is a complicated problem. Different schools have different professional subjects, so you will understand. Finally, I hope you study hard, stupid birds learn knowledge first, and don't wait until senior three to regret it. I wish you a full and happy college life.
Landscape architecture is a complex specialty, which requires a certain research on planning, art, history, ecology, relevant norms and design theories, and a broad vision, so as to truly design something with culture, content and suitability. Read more books and charge yourself! Come on!