Hontou wrote: » One of my children took a year out to work after their leaving cert last year to earn money to go to college. The plan was to do engineering in UCD and they have the points based on last year's. (I know they may go up). They found out they can do a level 7 mechanical engineering degree while doing an apprenticeship and are going through the process of interviews for this at the moment. This seems to be a fantastic option. Get paid and get a degree simultaneously. The qualification will come from an IT as opposed to a traditional university and they can do a level 8 top up in future apparently. Financially it seems to be a no brainer (if they get it). Is there a catch? Are they selling themselves short bearing in mind they have the points for the more traditional route? Surely engineering (and most skills) are better through learning by doing. I'm asking as friends are telling me that they are better off going to college. I personally know nothing about engineering so don't know how to advise but feel I should as a parent.
Hontou wrote: » The interviews are with multinational pharmaceutical companies. The work is in manufacturing but I think the engineering is mechanical or some kind of processing. They are not after the student social life but that may change. Presumably they would be surrounded by young people in the factories anyway? They have been working part time and Summers for a few years which has given maturity and independence but still only 18.
Turbulent Bill wrote: » OP, it's worth remembering that a technician role (from an apprenticeship) and an engineering role (from a degree) need different skillsets, not really a continuation of one to another. Both are equally valid careers, but IMHO your daughter is better taking a detailed look at what both entail and picking what they prefer. Obviously they can transition and do a Level 8 etc. in future, but it's more money and time to do this. From personal experience, what you think you want to do leaving school and what you end up preferring (and being good at) can be very different.
mikhail wrote: » UCD's engineering courses are level 9, with an option to exit at level 8 that fewer and fewer students are taking. A level 7 qualification and a level 9 one are apples and oranges. The details vary from discipline to discipline, some would have an overlap in terms of careers while others are nearly completely different jobs. I'm not a mechanical engineer, so I can't comment on that one. The current masters courses have excellent internships (mostly paid) in 4th year, which seem to really bridge the practical divide. In general though, I'd say if they're capable of the points for UCD Engineering, they'd be wasted in an IT, and a level 7 qualification would limit their career prospects. There are financial supports if you're going to struggle in that regard. Talk to the university admissions office, and they'll put you in touch with them.
mikhail wrote: » There are financial supports if you're going to struggle in that regard. Talk to the university admissions office, and they'll put you in touch with them.
Alkers wrote: » You can get a level 8 or level 9 from the likes of dit, while working part time.
The level 9s from UCD are extremely similar to the old level 8s, the main difference being the dissertation
Hontou wrote: » ...accommodation in Dublin seems disproportionately expensive...
For the rest of us, colleges in cheaper parts of Ireland makes more sense.
It seems to me that the apprenticeship is the way to go followed by a level 8 and possibly level 9 in a University after it........if they then let students join at that stage.
mikhail wrote: » That's not remotely true. The level 8s have a (slightly smaller) dissertation. The difference is an extra half year of coursework and a 6 month internship.
carrollsno1 wrote: » Do you mind me asking what the actual apprenticeship is?
Hontou wrote: » Some kind of manufacturing with a pharmaceutical company. There seems to be a few positions, some are hands on and others are on a computer.
carrollsno1 wrote: » Have you checked Apprenticeships.ie it gives a fairly detailed run down on all the apprenticeships on offer these days.
mikhail wrote: » So why not go to Galway, Cork, Limerick, etc. for a level 8/9 course?
Turbulent Bill wrote: » That would look like a better option if the issue is just financial (rather than an actual preference for an apprenticeship). There are plenty of good courses across the country, so there's no point just confining the choice to UCD. I've hired graduates and never put much weight on where their Level 8 or 9 came from.