Photoshop Uc Berkeley Student

  1. Ucla
  2. Photoshop Uc Berkeley Student Portal
  3. Photoshop Uc Berkeley Student Missing
  4. Photoshop Uc Berkeley

Summer 2021 Update: Cal Housing is committed to offering student housing during the 2021 Summer Sessions, which will be offered via remote instruction.

Many of our services are now being offered in new ways. To find the latest information on course reserves, book returns, 24/7 online help, and more, visit our Library services and resources during COVID-19 page. Feb 17, 2021 The 8 best Photoshop classes from schools, universities, and colleges: Photoshop Bootcamp intensive Photoshop course. Introduction to Photoshop Training Class. Photoshop I Foundation Skills at Montgomery College. Photoshop I at UC Berkeley Extension. Photoshop I at UCLA Extension. Adobe Photoshop CC Basics Course at the University of Arkansas.

Current (continuing) UC Berkeley students have the option to live in on-campus housing during the summer! There are many benefits of living on-campus during the summer: set term contracts (reside in and pay for your specific session dates), no hidden costs (utilities included), and the convenience of living a few minutes from campus! Continuing students also have the added bonus of receiving a discounted rate during the summer. Don’t miss out -- apply now!

  1. Enrolled Existing UC Berkeley Student. Summer 2021 Update: Cal Housing is committed to offering student housing during the 2021 Summer Sessions, which will be offered via remote instruction. Current (continuing) UC Berkeley students have the option to live in on-campus housing during the summer!
  2. Free Student Access to Adobe Creative Cloud. The Adobe Creative Cloud suite is now available free of charge to UCB students, staff and faculty. With Adobe Creative Cloud, you can download applications such as InDesign, Photoshop and Illustrator onto institutionally-owned and personal computers.

COVID-19 Policies: If you live in campus housing during the summer, you will be required to adhere to public health policies designed to reduce transmission of COVID-19. All students living in campus housing during the summer will be required to get tested for COVID-19 upon Move-In. Unvaccinated students will need to get tested weekly, as well as self-sequester for 7 days upon arrival. For more information, please visit the campus surveillance testing page.

What are the COVID-19 policies for students living in campus housing this summer?

COVID-19 Policies: If you live in campus housing during the summer, you will be required to adhere to public health policies designed to reduce transmission of COVID-19. All students living in campus housing during the summer will be required to get tested for COVID-19 upon Move-In. Unvaccinated students will need to get tested weekly, as well as self-sequester for 7 days upon arrival.

While you are living in campus housing, you are required to:

  • Wear a face covering that covers both the nose and mouth unless you are inside your room or apartment, brushing your teeth, taking a shower, or eating.

  • Maintain a physical distance of six feet or more at all times.

  • Respect the needs of those in your residential household grouping (students sharing the same restroom as you), follow shared community expectations, and communicate with one another regularly. Use the University Health Services best practices as a guiding point.

  • Only interact with students within your residential household grouping when indoors (no one else).

  • Do not visit the spaces of other residential household groupings, even those in your building (for example visiting other floors or other suites), unless you are using the laundry room or going to the front desk.

  • Respect the Residential Code of Conduct no guest policy. No guests beyond your residential household grouping are allowed in your room; this includes visitors from other residential household groupings within your building.

  • Follow local public health ordinances, such as wearing a face covering or physical distancing, when leaving your residence hall.

  • Follow testing requirements and recommendations, as shared by University Health Services.

  • Frequently wash your hands.

The housing portal opens February 1st, 2021, and assignments are done on a first-come, first-serve basis.

  • PHASE 1:

    • Step 1: Go to the online application home page.

    • Step 2: In the top left corner, click on the 'Visit University Log In' link.

    • Step 3: Enter your CalNet ID and passphrase to log in.

    • Step 4: Select Summer 2021 as the housing term for which you are applying.

    • Step 5: Follow each step of the online application, selecting “Save & Continue” at the bottom of each page.

    • Step 6: Once you have completed Phase 1, your application has been submitted and is under review. You will receive an email regarding the status of your summer housing application within 7 business days of submission.

    • Step 7: Be sure to check your berkeley.edu or the housing portal every few days for an offer.

University housing at UC Berkeley seeks to provide all students with safe, affirming spaces to find community. Part of this is working collaboratively and proactively with LGBTQ students to insure that they feel like their floor and roommates are welcoming and inclusive, and that they have access to facilities that are designed with their needs in mind.

In addition, one of our housing coordinators, the Accommodations Coordinator, works with students in advance of their stay on campus to place them into communities designed to provide more support, often by placing them in a room with a requested roommate, with other students who also request Gender Inclusive Housing or Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Pansexual, Queer or Questioning (LGBPQ) Affirming Housing, or with students who self-identify as aspiring allies to the LGBTQ community.

If you are interested in requesting a Gender Inclusive or LGBPQ Affirming space, please note so in the housing application.

Students who require a single for an accommodation must submit documentation via email to summerhousing@berkeley.edu.

Individual applicants may note specific roommate preference(s) by completing the 'Manage Roommate' step of the Phase 1 portion of the online application.Roommate preferences must be mutual, students must be of the same gender, and must accept a contract for the same session and room type, in order for the request to be considered by the Summer Sessions Housing Office.If your housing accommodations are arranged for you by your University, registration center, or agent, you must communicate your roommate preferences to your liaison as early as possible, in order for the request to be considered by the Summer Sessions Housing Office.

Residence hall contracts include room and board, with a Standard Meal Plan. The contract may not be purchased without the meal plan. Meal plan flex dollars are the currency with which residents use their meal plan.

If you do not wish to have a meal plan included, please consider applying for on-campus apartments or a single room for the summer. Single rooms are only offered in Martinez Commons apartments.

More information regarding meal plans will be released on February 1st, 2021.

Session A/AD/B

Martinez Commons
Unit 1
Garden Village

Session C

Davis

Blackwell
Martinez Commons
Garden Village
Panoramic Berkeley
New Sequoia

Session D

Photoshop

Unit 1
Garden Village
Martinez Commons

PHASE 2:

Step 1: After receiving your housing offer, review the Terms & Conditions and accept your offer.

Step 2: You will be required to pay the $300 advance payment in order to hold your space

Demographics

If you miss your deadline to accept your contract offer, there is no guarantee that the space will remain available. If you miss your advance payment deadline or fail to pay your housing bill in full by the deadline, your housing contract will be cancelled.

You will be charged for your contract no earlier than 10 days before your session start date. Billing charges align with financial aid disbursement. Please be sure to check your Cal Central account frequently so you do not miss any deadlines.

  • Housekeeping

    • You are responsible for cleaning your own room. You may borrow a vacuum cleaner from your Resident Assistant or the Front Desk. Daily housekeeping services are provided, except on administrative holidays, for the common areas: lounges, hallways, stairwells and bathrooms.

  • Laundry & Vending machines

    • Coin-operated laundry machines are available in each summer housing location.

Your room is furnished with an extra-long bed, 36' x 80' mattress, drapes, desk, chair, wastebasket, closet, and shelving. Please leave all items in your room when you check out. You will be billed for any missing items after your departure.

Personal microwaves and refrigerators are not allowed in UC Berkeley residence hall rooms.

Students who require a refrigerator unit for a medical condition or holiday observance are responsible for submitting an accommodation request to summerhousing@berkeley.edu.

The following items are not permitted in the residence halls:

Pets, waterbeds, weapons of any kind, illegal drugs, candles, incense, flame-lit lamps, barbecues, halogen lamps, cooking equipment, your own microwaves, and refrigerators.

For non-standard accommodations regarding service animals, please contact summerhousing@berkeley.edu.

The Cal 1 Card is used to access your building and meal plan.

Use your Cal 1 Card to:

  • gain access into your residence halls
  • swipe into the dining halls/use your meal points

Visit the Cal 1 Card Office if your card is damaged or demagnetized.

Location: 212 Sproul Hall, Berkeley CA.

Hours: Monday through Friday 9:00AM to 4:30PM

Replacement fee: $25

  • We know that access to computers during your stay is critical to academic success. All residents are eligible to use the Unit 1 Academic Center, featuring multiple PCs and Macintosh Workstations supporting popular software (i.e., Microsoft Office Suite, Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, etc.). These computers are also installed with a link to the campus library catalogs, email, and the Internet.

  • The Academic Center is located in the Central Building. Staff are available to answer questions and troubleshoot problems. You can sign up for a free Academic Center Account to use the computers.

  • Color ink jet printing is available for a nominal fee.

  • In-Room Internet Connections

    • A Student Technology Services welcome folder will be distributed to all residents at check-in. It will include information about getting online through Student Technology Services' services and support.

  • All residents are eligible for free wireless Internet connection through Student Technology Services. Student Technology Services provides wireless coverage to registered computers in resident rooms, lounges, and common areas. You will receive a Student Technology Services welcome folder during move-in, which will detail how to get connected and how to contact support services. Student Technology Services supports wireless internet connections for computers running Windows XP/Vista and Macintosh OS 10.4 or higher. Windows 95/98/Me and Mac OS 10.3 and below are not allowed on the network as they do not meet campus minimum security standards.

  • Security and Other Requirements

    • To connect to the network, you will need your CalNet login and passphrase for authentication.

  • All computers connected to the campus network MUST meet campus minimum security standards which require:

    • Updated antivirus software

    • Automatic software patching (e.g. Windows Update)

    • A personal firewall

    • A strong administrator password

    • For detailed information about the requirements and how to meet them, please visit Student Technology Services' BeSecure page.

  • Technical Support

    • Technical support is available in the following ways:

      • Helpdesk phone line: 510.642.HELP (4357)

      • Helpdesk email: sts-help@berkeley.edu

      • In-person Residential Computing Consultant: Make an appointment through Student Technology Services to see an in-person consultant during office hours.

Students are required to move out on the specified move out dates listed on their contract.

No late stays or extensions will be approved. Students will need to find alternative housing outside of the contract dates if their flight arrives after the move out date.

UC Berkeley is committed to providing a healthy, smoke-free environment for students, faculty, and staff. Accordingly, no smoking is permitted in student rooms or inside buildings, including lounges, balconies and breezeways, and stairways. Smoking is only permitted outside in designated areas.

To request a cancellation to your contract, you must provide written email correspondence to (summerhousing@berkeley.edu) including your full name, Student ID Number, and reason for cancellation. Cancellations are NOT guaranteed and the resident will be liable for room and board fees until a replacement is found and/or the request is approved by the Summer Sessions Housing department. Please be sure to review the cancellation policy outlined in the Terms and Conditions of Residence.

Graphic artist Nikita Vyas created our anniversary website and was rewarded with a free course

Share

We are so excited to announce that we are celebrating our 130th anniversary! Since 1891, it has been our pleasure to serve and support our students’ academic and professional goals. We remain committed to our mission of sharing the high academic standards of UC Berkeley with our community.

And our students are getting involved in celebrating this milestone! Read on to see how:

Taking the Leap Into Web Graphic Designing

Designing for the web is, naturally, one of the most important skills a graphic designer can have. Web Design With HTML5 and CSS3 was created to give designers a foundation in web design and development.

Sometimes it spurs students to pivot into web development. For others, it helps them as designers to better interact with web developers to deliver designs that are more efficiently integrated into responsive and accessible sites.

For Nikita Vyas, it was the latter.


The final project in that class was to design a site to commemorate our 130th anniversary. Instructor Steve Fuller gave students our historical timeline and a stockpile of photos, and then tasked them to present the information and photos in a creative way.

Nikita runs down some of her initial thought processes:

  • “Initial brainstorming of the website included the creation of wireframes. I sketched two versions each of the layouts for the homepage, decade page and 2021 page.
  • “After finalizing one of the two layouts, I used Adobe XD to create low-fidelity designs, keeping in mind the 12-column grid system and responsiveness.
  • “The next step was to create high-fidelity designs and build a prototype. One of the challenges was incorporating the 130-year logo in the navigation bar. It was a vertical logo, and the logo's content was not readable when sized down and placed in the navigation bar. As a solution I put it as the hero image so that it looks as if the light is originating from the logo, which resonates with its tagline. I placed the UC Berkeley Extension logo on the navigation bar instead, which links to the main website.”

Nikita then continues to specify some of the steps she took when she was thick in the building out of the site:

  • “The website was designed to maintain simplicity, clarity and a smooth user experience.
  • “The layout is clean and minimal, which aligns with the style of the UC Berkeley and UC Berkeley Extension websites.
  • “In terms of the breakdown of the structure, the site contains a total of nine pages: one homepage, one page dedicated to the current year 2021 and seven pages for two decades each.
  • “Iconic and historical images are interspersed with facts about important events or achievements from each decade. For the placement of images, I have used carousels with a Lightbox integrated into them. Several photos, being old, needed retouching and further processing in Adobe Photoshop.
  • “Final coding of the website was done using HTML and CSS, keeping in mind the response and dynamic nature of the website.
  • “To make the website look clean and less text-heavy, I used accordions for the body copy. “All elements are responsive and easily visible to make it user-friendly and accessible.
  • “I had access to UC Berkeley’s branding guidelines when choosing the colors, graphics, images and videos.”

When talking about her experiences during the site design and build, Nikita shares what interested her most about our history.

“How the university has evolved and adapted to the times and how accessible it has been through different times and circumstances,” she explains. “For example, during World War II, Extension classes and correspondence courses became an important way for service personnel to continue their education. From teaching on commuter trains, or, through correspondence courses, to the current online format, Extension has constantly evolved through time, making education as accessible as possible to a wide array of people and helping them launch their careers.”

It’s a challenge to design your first website from scratch. It’s a triumph when that first effort gains recognition as the best of the submissions in a competition. We are so proud of Nikita Vyas’ elegant design, which is just one element of her portfolio as she continues her education with us to switch careers into graphic design.

Ucla

Investing In Her Creativity

While Nikita always harbored a love for creativity and art, her education focused on business: a bachelor’s in business administration and management from the International Institute of Professional Studies and then an M.B.A. in accounting and finance from Christ University in Bangalore.

Upon completing her M.B.A., Nikita landed a tax consultant position at Deloitte Tax Services Indian Pvt. Ltd., preparing tax returns for the firm’s U.K.-based clients. A little more than a year into the position, Nikita realized she couldn’t see herself doing this for her entire professional life. She was more interested in the design of those financial reports than the numbers.

“My passion for creativity pulled me toward graphic design.”

Intent on a more creative field, Nikita started taking courses, gaining certificates in graphic and web design, and then, through Coursera, completed a graphic design specialization offered by the California Institute of the Arts. All of this education complemented graphic design contract work in Southern California.

While she was learning new skills through these courses, Nikita desired a more formal education to truly make her career switch. So she turned to our Professional Program in Graphic Design.

“I immediately knew this was what I was looking for,” Nikita shares. “The program is affordable, has a very good selection of courses, and has classes in the evening and on weekends keeping in mind the schedule of working professionals. All of that worked out very well for me.”

Going Virtual

Photoshop uc berkeley students

Nikita had never attempted a fully online program before, but she started this journey in the middle of the COVID pandemic in September 2020 when all of our courses went online. Completing the program in just one year, Nikita is still enthusiastic about learning online.

“Getting educated seemed impossible in the middle of a pandemic, but UC Berkeley Extension courses made it very accessible,” she says. “The instructors are very friendly and approachable and made sure we could get the best learning in the online setting. The way the classes were taught, I don't think I missed any aspect of an in-person setting, except getting to meet everyone physically. There were ample opportunities to interact, stay in touch and learn from each other.”

In fact, it was the camaraderie with her cohort that remains one of her favorite memories of the program.

Photoshop Uc Berkeley Student Portal

“The classes were filled with people from many different backgrounds, and they were all talented and creative people with their own rich histories,” Nikita offers. “With the help of group feedback sessions, I got some really good suggestions and they were always very nice and polite with their critique. There was no jealousy or competition but only passion in appreciating and learning from each other.”

Perfecting a Portfolio

While Nikita enjoyed all seven required courses in the program, one of her favorites was Graphic and Web Design Portfolio. Taught by Program Director Ivan Trujillo, it’s a class that other program graduates—such as Ankita Mantri—have pointed out as a particularly valuable experience.

“The portfolio class helped me realize my design potential,” Nikita enthuses, “but it also helped me do the best to present my work in the most professional manner. I knew that my portfolio required a lot of changes, but I did not know what was missing. Ivan and his feedback helped me take it to a whole new level.”

Nikita has finished the program and is now working part time as a digital marketing and graphic design specialist at Urbani Real Estate Marketing while holding down an internship with aiXplain, Inc.

But her education with us continues! Because she won the 130-year-anniversary website competition, Nikita was awarded a free course.

Photoshop Uc Berkeley Student Missing

Perhaps 2D Animation and Video Editing or Essentials of User Experience (UX) Design, Nikita? Whatever course you choose, we’re confident you will continue to excel.

Photoshop Uc Berkeley

Find your own path to a compelling career with the Professional Program in Graphic Design.