Good questions.
I am studying that same Masters you mentioned. It is at the Heriot Watt University in Edinburgh with the teaching being carried out by the Edinburgh College of Art.
I am a qualified land surveyor which I worked as for about 4 years. I then joined a Heavy Construction company and worked for them for nearly ten years including nearly three years as a golf course constructor.
I then left that company to start my own golf course design company. The work was coming in but I had no formal education in landscape design. I felt that although I had more construction experience than most architects that I didn't have as much vision on a project as a landscape architect seem to have. i.e looking at the project not just as the golf course but also it's surroundings.
I felt I needed the degree to also back up my theories.
Has the course been worth it for me and others on the course?
Those that are qualified landscape architects have found some of it boring as they are repeating things they have already learnt.
My attitude to the course has changed as the course went on. I was quite negative at the start and thought that they should be teaching us more. However, now I realise that they are not here to teach us Golf Course Architecture but to guide in the right direction and then it is up us as students to research what we need to complete the tasks given to us.
Apparently, we are very lucky this year as the experience within the group from the golf business is much higher than it has ever been. There are a number of guys from construction, one is a landscape architect, three have degrees in soil science, one owns two golf courses himself so there is a good mix of people. The other thing is that we are a very, very tight group. We stick together in most things we do and pub nights are very regular were the discussion on architecture does get heated, which is great.
We also have had two fantastic weeks together playing golf. The first week was a week in St. Andrews were we visited various golf courses and met the Head Greenkeepers to get the history of the course. We would then play these courses. In the evening we always met in the same pub and again a discussion of the day took place.
The second week was a week on the Heathlands. This year we convinced the tutor not to go down early which was a mistake last year. They went down (by minibus 8 - 10 hour drive) in February which apparently was a nightmare! We flew down on cheap flights and convinced the college to pay for the hire cars. The weather was fantastic as we went in the last week of last term (late March). Again, every night we met in the pub to discuss architecture and women!!
The thing I like most about the course is not just the amount of golf courses you get to visit but the diversity of the essays and education we receive even though I don't agree with everything!!
We have had subjects such as Geomorphology, Climate Change, Wetland creation, ecology, planning, AutoCAD, History of Landscape Architecture and History of Golf course architecture. As well as the usual site analysis and design fundamentals.
We have spent a whole term talking and working on routing golf courses which is the skeleton of golf course design while still being encouraged to express our individuality in our designs.
I have never heard of aptitude tests being carried out on young students in Europe and I would love to know Jeff's source.
I will come back with more comments over the weekend and hopefully Chris Hunt and Cliff Stansfield can come back with comments as they were on last years course,
Brian Phillips.