Moonbaby wrote: » Give me a real life example. I know people from all walks, and from their expierences and the backgrounds of their colleagues I don't think that is true at all. At the end of the day a degree is just a entry requirement to a profession. They don't have high expectations of a graduate and after that your based on your work expierence. Where your degree is from and what grade you achieve is rarely relevant. IMO.
Sully wrote: » It is true in the majority of courses. Its a fact of life really.
Sully wrote: » Right, is this topic going anywhere? Or are we going around in circles? ec18 and stick-dan are students in the present day. As am I. Like other (not all) students in the WIT, at present, they do not feel WIT is really ready for University. It deserves to be, but not just yet. There is still a lot going on and I think until things are somewhat more organised - it should not become a University. I personally don't think any of the Unis in Ireland are anything special. I think we got it all wrong when it comes to what a Uni should be. WIT has potential, but I would like it to turn out to be a very good college: offering great courses, great people lecturing in the courses, less of the problems which affect how the courses are run, great facilities that actually work and offering a range of benefits to the South-East and the students who take part in the courses. I think your making some interesting points merlante, and you have your opinion as do others. Who has the right take on things? Who knows.
Moonbaby wrote: » Thats simply not true......I'm in engineering and IT courses are often more pragmatic and so students from ITs are prefered to green uni grads.
ec18 wrote: » But at the moment there is only one building out there I'm sorry but how exactly am I bitter?...any pray tell almighty merlante what qualifies you to say that you know better...I am currently in the WIT and deal with the administration, so my opinion is first hand and based from experience but what are you basing yours on...some god given that rite you believe waterford has to a university?....because for the past few days you've been like a broken needle....missing the point. all that shows that Waterford is not the top IT in Ireland and gives further reason for not upgrading it
fricatus wrote: » Lies, damned lies and statistics... No I'm not, stick-dan, I'm a 34-year-old with a mortgage, so I have to work all the hours God sends me so as to cope But I am a graduate of WRTC, as it was, and proud to say so. I graduated in 1995, and by all accounts, the leaps forward that WIT has taken since then are staggering. A cousin of mine and another very good friend are lecturers there, and were students there back in the day, and they back this up. Myself, I don't have any link with the place, other than it being my alma mater, but even to drive by and see the concentration of buildings on the Cork Road campus is proof that massive progress has been made since my time there. When I left, all that was there was the main building (the third floor had just been completed), the other building (the one with the Well) across the bridge, and the student residences over towards Browne's Road. We had a crappy prefab library at the back of the Well that we called "the Fridge". The influx of students that you talk about is a red herring: there is a quota on student numbers in each course and that can be varied as resources permit. Student numbers will stay the same, or more likely, rise at the same rate as at present; what will change is that points for each course will rise. However, you're talking about two major mess-ups this year that somehow prove that WIT is not ready for an upgrade. I'm not expecting you to name names and go into detail, but can you give us an idea of what kind of mess-ups we're talking about? How do they demonstrate that WIT should not be upgraded? Do these simply not happen in TCD, UCG, etc., or do we just not hear about them?
stick-dan wrote: » Any more contradictions you would like to add merlante? Read your last line of that post.The quality of WIT has everything to do with weather WIT is ready to be upgraded yet. Come on like be realistic. What, you want WIT to be upgraded just because it will help the community and not help bring a higher standard of education like the purpose of a university is supposed to do?Is that what you would like to see? Get real and get WIT it.:)
stick-dan wrote: » Right so point listened to there. But now go off and do some research and tell me what university in ireland offers a great education in all areas??
stick-dan wrote: » Trinity was not designed to offer a great education in all areas. It was designed to offer superb education in the areas it would be covering. For trinity to expand to cover other areas just to provide an all round coverage of subjects would be wrong it would dilute the quality of the university itself.
stick-dan wrote: » I think merlante we both agree on one thing. Leaving aside a timeline we both want WIT at some stage to be a university.:D*(personally i think its not ready and you do that is our only difference of opinion.)
stick-dan wrote: » But i have asked the following question in this thread already. What are the cold hard facts and findings that have been conducted that suggest WIT is so good. Leave aside all the benefit to the town, the south east ,etc. What is so great about the Institution itself that warrants it to be a university. I want to know that answer.Enlighten me please.:)
ec18 wrote: » merlante you keep mentioning carraignore campus....but there is nothing there for students yet....construction has only just started that won't be a viable alternative at least a year if not more
ec18 wrote: » all that shows that Waterford is not the top IT in Ireland and gives further reason for not upgrading it
Deleted User wrote: » By your rhetoric, then Sligo IT needs to be upgraded to a university too.
stick-dan wrote: » Are you Actually in the college at the moment because i am as is ec18. We both encountered two different major mess-ups this year so far in conjunction with the college and that's only this year. It is stupid for you to be insisting that ec18 means that we can't be upgrading the college due to the canteen or paint. We are not that fickle. The college is not ready at the moment.As was said earlier in the thread the cork road campus would not be capable to cope with a large influx of would be university students if WIT was granted university status right now.
mayordenis wrote: » judging by how quick the last few buildings have gone up it'll be a fully functional campus by the morning.
merlante wrote: » I don't care what a few bitter students have to say about the IT. I know better. The reality of the matter is, whether or not the WIT is upgraded has very little to do with the quality of the WIT,.
Nolanger wrote: »
merlante wrote: » If your 'glorified IT' can teach all courses to all levels, including Arts courses, and have equal access to research funding, and in all other ways compete with 'glorified ITs' in other regions, then I'll take your 'glorified IT' over the current IT any day, as will Limerick, Galway, Maynooth, DCU, etc. Being recognised internationally is only one of many criteria that make a good university. Our 'glorified ITs' and regular ITs have been supplying graduates to blue chip US companies in Ireland, such as Intel, Microsoft, etc. for many years now, and long may that continue. Germany has very few acknowledged 'world class' universities, but only a fool would write off German third level education. If you knew what you were talking about you would know that Trinity is not the best college in Ireland to study certain subjects, which some of the 'glorified ITs' do far better. But hey, who cares about good education, it's all about the name right? And in any case, all universities in Ireland attract top class academics, some more than others it's true, but all of them have more scope to do so than the WIT at the moment. The IT is as ready as DCU or UL or NUIM were when they were upgraded. I don't care what a few bitter students have to say about the IT. I know better. The reality of the matter is, whether or not the WIT is upgraded has very little to do with the quality of the WIT, which already surpasses what is expected of an IT, it will be a political decision informed by mainly demographic and strategic concerns.
Deleted User wrote: » Population decline in the north west?Even Leitrim's population increased in the last census WIT:Let's face it,it does well for an IT but would it really adapt to being an university?
merlante wrote: » No, Sligo is a much smaller centre, which is in population decline, in a much smaller, much more sparsely populated region. The demographic argument for a university in Waterford and the south east is more compelling than the arguments for universities in the Mid west, Maynooth or DCU. Sligo on the other hand might warrant a university in about 150 years time if things go their way.
stick-dan wrote: » Merlante you are the one missing the point no doubt. "The idea of a university as i am sure you will agree with is that a university is a place of the highest standard of education available that students who are truly determined to succeed will strive to gain entry into. " So we have seven universities in Ireland. Woop di Do!!! The only university in Ireland is trinity the rest are glorified IT's fact. Trinity is the only university which would stand high in prestige. The rest all bow in it's shadow. So you want WIT to become another glorified IT with University Status but NOT with university education? You earlier in the initial stages of the thread said that if WIT was to get university status it could attract top class lecturers.Reality check, compare the education faculty there to Trinity!My god you would want to be attracting a lot of top class minds to lecture there to match Trinity. Damn near the entire work force apart from a select few brilliant minds within WIT that are wasted there. Come on like they are nowhere near ready.Have you not noticed that it is the current students of WIT on this thread saying it is not ready. It would be easy for us to push for university status for WIT so we may have a chance at university degrees but we truly believe it isn't ready.
Sully wrote: » Employers have a tendency to take on Uni Students rather then IT Students. If I had a degree in Computer Science from an IT and stick-dan had it from a Uni and we applied for the same job - Dan would probably get it. Why, is beyond me.
merlante wrote: » - To offer parity of educational opportunities to Waterford and the South East. - To offer parity of educational investment to Waterford and the South East. - To support the National Spatial Strategy, where Waterford must serve the same regional function as Cork, Limerick and Galway. - To offer a level playing field in attracting foreign direct investment and high tech. industry. - To offer non-technical degrees. - To make third and fourth level education more accessible to the people of Waterford and the South East. - To address socio-economic deficits extant in Waterford and the South East, including a lower than average number of degree holders in the region, lower than average incomes, less and lesser quality FDI into the region, by far the lowest number of business start-ups of the five cities, less employment opportunities, less tertiary investment, and so on. And yes, if it halts the 'brain drain' or the glut of young middle class people leaving the city, all the better! Not only are they leaving, but their mammies and daddies are subsidising landlords, universities (capitation fees) and small business in Cork, Limerick, Galway and Dublin for 4 years, as if the economies of those cities weren't doing well enough as it was with the combined investment of a university, an IT and whatever private sector investment is brought along with them. The WIT has three campuses (that I know of): the main campus on the Cork rd., the College st. campus and the new Carriganore west campus. All new buildings will be built in Carriganore. As to the Cork rd.'s location, DCU is built in the same sort of area, and nobody is saying it shouldn't be a university because of it. In fact, why you'd invent whole new unthought of arguments against the WIT being upgraded, I don't know. What about Limerick's image incidentally? Not the best image in the world, but they have a university. I really don't get this business of Waterford people coming up with all these crazy extra reasons why the WIT shouldn't be upgraded when opponents of the upgrade have enough as it is. It would not be a big deal in terms of time and money (relatively speaking) to upgrade the WIT to a university, but it would be a massive deal to the local and regional economy. That's the bottom line. It has to happen.
Sully wrote: » Employers have a tendency to take on Uni Students rather then IT Students. If I had a degree in Computer Science from an IT and stick-dan had it from a Uni and we applied for the same job - Dan would probably get it. Why, is beyond me. Plus, Universities get more cash so they can expand more, offer better courses, look for higher grade lecturers as they can afford to pay them etc. It basically just improves what courses and lecturers can teach there, and offers better job opportunities to students. There is a knock-on affect around the area.
conbob wrote: » im just wondering. at the end of the day. whats the difference between a university and an it?