<p>Hi, I'll be applying for Computer Science major this fall and i am very good with Web Designs and over all development so i am not sure if i should submit a web design as an art supplement. My question is'nt if its good enough or not but will the universities accept a web design as an art supplement?</p>
<p>From what I’ve read/concluded, I don’t think so. Most universities mean actual art (like painting), music, dance, and theater when discussing Art Supplements. What would you submit anyways? The HTML/CSS code, a screenshot, a link? Most admissions committees won’t accept code, and none of those are truly art.</p>
<p>I would recommend putting Web Development down as an extracurricular activity and describing what types of websites you’ve made or how they’ve benefited people. Or, you can lump it in with other programming languages/activities (that’s what I’m doing, at least).</p>
<p>Hope that helps!</p>
<p>@npatelaz it is an art man -_-</p>
<p>nah, it’s certainly better than jumping around in pre-determined shapes, or whatever “real art” is.</p>
<p>Check what each college website says. They usually have guidelines on what you can send or link to.</p>
<p>@iamzaain While you might consider it an art, I haven’t seen any college websites which consider it to be so (and I’ve looked, because I had the same question). Regardless, check the websites of whatever places you’re applying to, and they’ll have the guidelines for what they consider art.</p>
<p>Also, I’m curious as to what you are thinking of submitting (like the link, the code, etc).</p>
<p>I think it might be a good idea to submit it, but not lumped as an art supplement, since those are usually evaluated by the faculty in those departments.</p>
<p>It certainly wouldn’t hurt to directly contact the admissions departments at the schools you’re applying to and ask them. As HappyHelper noted, arts supplements are often directly evaluated by the department, not the admissions folks. So -depending on the art department and whether they offer web graphic design- that might not be the best route for your submission. The admissions rep can also give you an idea of whether they would even care to see it at all, or not.</p>