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** CAO - a few important points ... ** !

  • 07-11-2018 10:10pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,509 ✭✭✭✭


    It's that time of year again, so a few comments on the basic principles underlying the CAO process.

    The points system
    Points are not set by the colleges, or the CAO. They are based on supply and demand, by the Leaving Cert points of the applicants. If the students applying for a course all score very highly, the points will go up, and vice versa.

    Say for example, a course has 20 places. The CAO will run through the list of people who have met the minimum requirements for the course, and offer the course to the top 20 people. The points of the last person to be offered the course are the points that are published as the "cut-off" for the course. If any of those people refuse the offer, the course is then offered to the next person on the list. Whatever points this person is on will become the points published for 2nd round offers, and so on.

    CAO
    The whole CAO application process works on a basic principle ... that YOU know what you want!

    It is important to understand this, and to understand how the system is set up based on that principle.

    When the CAO gets round to offering places, you will be offered the first course on your list for which you have enough points, and everything below that on the list vanishes instantly. If you missed a higher ranked option on your list by a few points, and the points drop in a later round, you may well be offered that ... but you will never be offered a lower option on your list, even if the points for it were higher than the course you were offered, and you achieved those points.

    The system presumes you knew your own mind when you ranked your choices.

    Which is why it is absolutely essential that you rank your CAO choices in the order in which YOU would like to be offered them ... NOT according to what way you think the points might go, not in order of supposed status, not for any other reason except "I really want to do X, that goes down first; if I don't get X, then Y is my next preference ..." and so on.



    Or ... as one of your own peers put it a couple of years ago ...
    dan_d wrote: »

    Golden Rule for the CAO, which most people don't seem to cop...

    Put the course you want the most in the top position, regardless of whether or not you think you'll get the points.

    Once you are offered a course on your CAO form, you cannot be offered any course in a position lower than this. However, you could be offered a higher up course on your form in subsequent rounds. You won't get it if you don't at least ask!!!!


    The CAO itself puts it this way:

    Order of Preference:

    It is MOST IMPORTANT that you state your course choices in view of genuine preference and/or career plans.

    IT IS A MISTAKE to base your choices only on your present expectation of examination performance or the points levels of previous years.

    There is no need to fear that a statement of your genuine order of preference will militate against you. If you are not successful in your first choice this will have no effect on your chances of obtaining a place in one of your lower preferences.


    So ... why am I basically repeating the same thing three times?!

    Because year after year, this is the thing which trips people up, no matter how often it is said!!



    *** Link to CAO Handbook ***

    Please *do* put aside an hour at some stage to read through it ... it will repay you as the year goes on. Even if you don't recall every detail, you will have a better idea where to find what you want / check on details.


    Link to CAO log-in page ... log into your CAO account here!
    .




    How the CAO works:

    Offer of highest preference

    You will be offered a place in the highest of your course preferences to which you are entitled (if any).

    This will be done, independently, in respect of Level 8 and Level 7/Level 6 choices.

    You may, therefore, receive two offers at the same time; one for the highest Level 8 preference to which you are entitled and the other for the highest Level 7/Level 6 preference to which you are entitled.

    Exclusion from lower preferences

    IMPORTANT: When you have been offered a place in one of your course preferences, you are excluded from further consideration for any course which is lower in your order of preference than the one in which you have been offered a place.

    This means that while you may subsequently move upwards in your order of preference (if places become available due to withdrawals) you will not be considered for a place in a course which is a lower preference than that already offered.

    Later offers for higher preference

    If you are being offered a place in a course which is not your first preference, you may subsequently be offered a place in a course of higher preference if such a place becomes available.

    This applies whether or not the earlier offer has been accepted. It is NOT necessary to accept an offer in order to be considered for a higher preference if it becomes available later. There is no guarantee, of course, that a higher preference will become available.

    Non-acceptance of subsequent offers

    Having accepted an offer of a place, you are not obliged to accept a subsequent offer. You may retain the original offer simply by ignoring the subsequent one.


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13 scarke1


    My nephew is in 6th year and is considering taking a year out before college but is unsure of what he wants to do. He says he will not fill in the CAO this month.

    What happens if he doesnt fill the CAO form in ?

    Thanks


  • Posts: 25,611 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    scarke1 wrote: »
    My nephew is in 6th year and is considering taking a year out before college but is unsure of what he wants to do. He says he will not fill in the CAO this month.

    What happens if he doesnt fill the CAO form in ?

    Thanks
    Then he could end up being very sore if the course he wants goes up by a few points next year. There's no point in not filling it in. If he wants to take a year out he can get the course and defer it for a year. He can still fill it in next year if he changes his mind.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13 scarke1


    Thats why I am telling him to fill it in and then defer but he says there is no point...i have a feeling he doesnt want to go to college fullstop and this way he wont....how long can he go without filling it in i wonder...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,397 ✭✭✭✭rainbowtrout


    scarke1 wrote: »
    Thats why I am telling him to fill it in and then defer but he says there is no point...i have a feeling he doesnt want to go to college fullstop and this way he wont....how long can he go without filling it in i wonder...

    Applications are accepted up to 1st February. After that there is a late application process which costs more (don't remember the exact cut off date for that), but you can't apply for courses that require extras such as a portfolio, interview or HPAT (art, drama, medicine etc) through the late application.

    Even at that, he can change his choices as many times as he wants for free until 1st July once he is in the system.

    If he chooses now and then defers, he is under no obligation to take that place next year. If he defers and wants the place, he simply applies to the CAO the following year and only writes that course on the form. If he puts any other courses on the form then the deferred place is cancelled.

    Perhaps say to him that he's under no obligation to take the place, but just to consider it as a back up, if it would take the pressure off.


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