- National University of Ireland, Galway
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National University of Ireland, Galway Ollscoil na hÉireann, Gaillimh Motto Deo Favente Motto in English With the favour of God Established 1845 President Dr James J. Browne Academic staff 526 Students 17,000 Location Galway, Ireland
53°16′40″N 9°03′43″W / 53.277784°N 9.061860°WCoordinates: 53°16′40″N 9°03′43″W / 53.277784°N 9.061860°WColours Affiliations AUA, Coimbra Group, EUA, NUI, IUA, UI Website http://www.oegaillimh.ie/ http://www.nuigalway.ie/ The National University of Ireland, Galway (NUI Galway) (Irish Ollscoil na hÉireann, Gaillimh or OÉ Gaillimh) is a constituent university of the National University of Ireland. It is a tertiary-level educational institution located in Galway, Ireland. The university was founded in 1845 as Queen's College, Galway and was more recently known as University College, Galway (UCG) (Irish: Coláiste na hOllscoile, Gaillimh or COG).
Contents
History
The college opened for teaching in 1849 as Queen's College, Galway with 37 professors and 91 students and a year later became a part of the Queen's University of Ireland. The Irish Universities Act, 1908 made this college a constituent college of the new National University of Ireland, and under a new charter the name of the college was changed to University College, Galway. The university college was given special statutory responsibility under the University College, Galway Act, 1929 in respect of the use of the Irish language as the working language of the college. The university college retained the name University College, Galway until 1997 when the Universities Act, 1997 changed the name to National University of Ireland, Galway. The constituent universities of the National University of Ireland rank among the most prestigious centers of higher learning in the country.
The university is located near the centre of the city and stretches along the River Corrib. The oldest part of the university, the Quadrangle, designed by John Benjamin Keane, is a replica of Christ Church, one of the colleges at the University of Oxford. The stone from which it is built was supplied locally. Newer parts of the university sprang up in the 1970s and were designed by architects Scott Tallon Walker. The 1990s also saw considerable development including the conversion of an old munitions factory into a student centre. Recent developments include a state-of-the-art University Sports Centre (Ionad Spóirt), a new Health Science Building, Cairne's School of business and the Engineering Building.
Presidents of the university
Name of President Year Rev. Dr Joseph W. Kirwan 1845-1849 Edward Berwick 1849-1877 Sir Thomas William Moffett 1877-1897 William Joseph Myles Starkie 1897-1899 Dr Alexander Anderson 1899-1934 Monsignor John Hynes 1934-1945 Monsignor Pádraig de Brún 1945-1959 Dr Martin J. Newell 1960-1975 Dr Colm Ó hEocha 1975-1996 Dr Patrick F. Fottrell 1996-2000 Dr Iognáid G. Ó Muircheartaigh 2000-2008 Dr James J. Browne 2008 to present Recent developments
Like the other constituent universities of the National University of Ireland, the university follows the common college structure. The five Colleges of the University are: - College of Arts, Social Sciences and Celtic Studies - College of Business, Public Policy and Law - College of Engineering and Informatics - College of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences - College of Science.
Staff are represented by the SIPTU trade union (for academic, research, administrative and technical workers) and the Irish Federation of University Teachers (for academic workers only).
The Sunday Times University Guide named the university as Irish University of the Year 2002-2003, 2009-2010.[1] NUI Galway was placed at 232 in the 2010 THE–QS World University Rankings.[2] This increase to 232nd in the world, was the third consecutive jump for NUI Galway, and represented an increase of an incredible 252 places in just three years. This result confirms NUI Galway’s position as one of Ireland’s leading universities, and a growing force in research on the international stage”. The 2011 QS World Rankings put NUIG at 298 worldwide.
Since January 2006 St. Angela's College, Sligo has been a college of the National University of Ireland, Galway; it was previously a recognised college of the National University of Ireland. This change in the relationship will mean that students of St. Angela's College, Sligo will be registered as students of the National University of Ireland, Galway; whilst degrees and diplomas awarded will be those of the National University of Ireland.[3]
NUI Galway has also announced details of plans[4] to make the university a 'campus of the future',[5] at a cost of around €400 million.
NUI Galway formed a strategic alliance with University of Limerick in 2010, allowing for shared resources.[6]
University Rankings
QS World University Rankings Overall Ranking Arts & Humanities Natural Sciences Engineering & IT Social Sciences Life Sciences 2005 437 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 2006 437 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 2007 484 312 389 427 323 386 2008 368 N/A N/A N/A N/A 260 2009 243 272 N/A N/A N/A 250 2010 232 274 301-350 301-350 351-400 301-350 2011 298 389 379 367 N/A 357 Student activities
With approximately 17,000 students, the university boasts an active and vibrant student life, with over 60 sports clubs and over 83 active societies. The oldest society on the campus is the Literary & Debating Society, founded in 1846. Another of the campus's oldest societies is appropriately enough that dedicated to the subject area of history, now known as the Cumann Staire[7] (or the Historical Studies Society). Cumann Staire is a leading member of the Comhaltas na gCumann Staire - Irish History Students' Association and the International Students of History Association.
The Film Society produces original films and founded the NUI Galway Student Cinema; one of the most popular venues for students with multiple films per week. The Business Society aims to get more students thinking about business and opening their minds to new ideas or to help students who want to get involved in business in any form in the future. The Computer Society hosts all other societies emails and websites, and have one of the largest memberships. The Rotaract Society, part of the international Rotary family, hosts the annual charity fashion show, 'Socs in the City'. The college's Drama Society (Dramsoc)[8] has also been long regarded as one of the most important student societies for the arts in Galway having played a part in the formation of Macnas, Druid Theatre Company and The Galway Arts Festival. GUMS, the university's vibrant award winning musical society continues to draw large crowds to its annual musicals in the Black Box Theatre. This event is one of the highlights of the college year calender, usually held in February during the Muscailt Arts festival.
In February the university hosts annually an on-campus arts festival entitled Múscailt[9] (meaning to awake/inspire/celebrate in Irish). The annual festival showcases the emerging artists of the university. Almost every society on campus has input. Various shows, concerts and exhibitions are displayed throughout the college. The week often features various inter-varsity or on-campus competitions and award ceremonies.
The ALIVE Programme[10] - A Learning Initiative and the Volunteering Experience - was established in 2003 by the National University of Ireland, Galway to harness, acknowledge and support the contribution that its students make by volunteering. The programme draws on a strong tradition of student engagement both on and off campus and assists students who wish to actively volunteer while developing tangible and transferable skills alongside practical volunteering experiences. The University announced it would be withdrawing its support for the Students' Union run RAG week in 2009 after the arrests of over 40 students.[11] €32,000 was raised for charity by the week.
International Students
NUI Galway has a strong community of international students, which make up 13% of the student population.[12] It welcomes over 500 Visiting Students from colleges and universities around the world each year, from countries including the USA, Canada and Malaysia. Various societies are present in the University to cater for international students, including the International Students Society, Malaysian Societyand many more.
Notable students
- Michael D. Higgins, Ninth President of Ireland;
- Enda Kenny (Taoiseach of Ireland, T.D., and leader of Fine Gael party);
- Eamon Gilmore (Tánaiste, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade T.D. and leader of Labour Party);
- Pat Rabbitte (Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources,T.D. and former leader of Labour Party);
- Seán Sherlock Minister of State for Research and Innovation, T.D.;
- Máire Whelan S.C. (Attorney General of Ireland);
- Martin Sheen, an actor who had not previously attended University, enrolled at the National University of Ireland, Galway, in 2006 for one semester to study philosophy, English literature and oceanography.[13]
- General Sir Bindon Blood, British military commander;
See also
- Digital Enterprise Research Institute, an NUIG-hosted Centre for Science, Engineering and Technology (CSET) focusing on research in the Semantic Web
- Education in the Republic of Ireland
- J.E. Cairnes School of Business & Economics
- List of alumni of the National University of Ireland, Galway
- List of universities in the Republic of Ireland
- NUI Galway Students' Union
- Sin Newspaper
- University College Galway R.F.C.
References
- ^ Nuigalway.ie
- ^ Topuniversities.com
- ^ Stangelas.com
- ^ Nuigalway.ie
- ^ Nuigalway.ie
- ^ Universities form 'strategic alliance'. RTÉ. Thursday, 18 February 2010 20:06.
- ^ Cumannstaire.com
- ^ Dramsoc.nuigalway.ie
- ^ Muscailt.oegaillimh.ie
- ^ Nuigalwycki.ie
- ^ The Irish Times, February 2009
- ^ Nuigalway.ie
- ^ The New York Times, April 2006
External links
- Official university site
- NUI Galway Students' Union
- SuperStair site of the Cumann Staire
- Aistir International History Student Conference
- Comhaltas na gCumann Staıre - Irish History Students' Association
- Martin Ryan Marine Science Institute
- Sciencespin.com
- Seaweed Site
- Algaebase
Universities in Ireland Universities NUI Constituent Universities DU Constituent College Other degree awarding authorities See also: Institutes of Technology in Ireland | Universities in Northern IrelandCoimbra Group of European research universities Aarhus · Barcelona · Bergen · Bologna · Bristol · Budapest · Cambridge · Coimbra · Dublin · Edinburgh · Galway · Geneva · Göttingen · Granada · Graz · Groningen · Heidelberg · Iaşi · Istanbul · Jena · Kraków · Leiden · Leuven · Louvain-la-Neuve · Lyon · Montpellier · Oxford · Padua · Pavia · Poitiers · Prague · St. Petersburg · Salamanca · Siena · Tartu · Thessaloniki · Turku I · Turku II · Uppsala · Würzburg
Categories:- National University of Ireland, Galway
- National University of Ireland
- Universities and colleges in the Republic of Ireland
- Education in County Galway
- Educational institutions established in 1845
- Coimbra Group
- 1845 establishments in Ireland
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