I walked out of the wheat field and now I am engaged in e-commerce in Hangzhou.
At that time, my school selection criteria were the same as yours.
First, directly exclude online training.
Second, exclude pure software training (because visual communication is more important than software in college theoretical classes, when you finish learning theory, your explosive power in software is very strong, so what you said at that time was excluded)
It was not until a long time later that I went to the wheat field. What attracted me was these theoretical courses on plane composition and color composition, and the study time that could last all night. So I paid the tuition at that time. To this day, those theoretical classes are still very important to me. I often read the notes recorded before. More importantly, the color structure and structure didn't make me plagiarize like others.
After learning the theory, you can decompose and analyze other people's works. Why are others good-looking? What's the ingredient? Learning to decompose is the first step, and the second step is to build your own work style, so that you can be more competitive in this field.
It's a little far-fetched In short, theoretical courses are very important and will run through the industry you enter. It's much better to have time to go to the wheat field and look at their syllabus than to ask online here.
There is no end to learning, and I am still trying to climb the peak.