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Waterford Institute of Technology | |
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Institiúid Teicneolaíchta Phort Láirge | |
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Motto: | Foirfe chun fónaimh (Resolved to Serve) |
Established: | 1970 |
Type: | Public |
Chairman: | Redmond O'Donoghue |
Director: | Kieran R. Byrne |
Staff: | 1,000 |
Students: | 10,000 |
Location: | Waterford, Republic of Ireland |
Website: | http://www.wit.ie |
Waterford Institute of Technology (WIT) is a state funded third-level educational institution situated in the city of Waterford, Ireland. The Institute has six Schools and 16 Departments.
The institute opened in 1970 as a regional technical college and adopted its present name on May 7th, 1997[1]. Professor Kieran Byrne has been Director of the Institute since May 2001.
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[edit] History
- See also: Regional Technical College
Before the founding of the RTC, there was no tertiary education in the area. In the past there had been two third-level level institutions in the city, St John’s Seminary and De La Salle Brothers teacher training college, but both had been closed.
Waterford politicians made strenuous but unsuccessful efforts to locate a university in Waterford at the time of the formation of the Queen's University of Ireland in the 1840s. The cause was led by Thomas Wyse, Waterford’s then Member of Parliament, who was perhaps chosen unwisely as he was not influential in Parliament, having strong Napoleonic links (he married a niece of Napoleon I of France), being a Catholic and leaning towards an independent Ireland. Galway, a much smaller city at the time, won out over Waterford, perhaps because of the necessity for geographical dispersion or to bolster the Irish language. Wyse wrote in the round on the matter in his text "Education reform or the necessity of a national system of education" (London, 1836).
The institute was founded in 1970 as Regional Technical College, Waterford. Once founded, the regional technical college grew very quickly as a result of the obviously strong regional need for tertiary education. In 1998 the college adopted its present name by order of the Minister for Education Niamh Bhreathnach, with Dublin Institute of Technology being the only other institution with the "institute of technology" title at the time in Ireland. Following a change of government and enormous political pressure on behalf of other regional technical colleges, especially Cork Regional Technical College, all other regional technical colleges were renamed similarly by Minister for Education Micheál Martin.
When Kieran Byrne took over as Director in 2001, he began a policy of expansion. In the years since 2001 the Institute has adopted its new white colour scheme; a third floor devoted to lecturer’s offices was added to the original building; a new library; state of the art IT building, known as the Walton Building; Extensions to the ’69 building, including a new restaurant; a nursing building and May 2008 the newest edition, the Tourism and Leisure studies building was handed over to the college.
In September 2005, the institute opened a new campus at the edge of the city at Carriganore to house a Research and Innovation Centre. Any more construction the institute intends to undertake, after the planned construction of the Engineering and Science building, will take place on this new campus.
Since 2001 Institute has conferred its own awards at all levels from Higher Certificate to PhD, subject to standards set and monitored by the Higher Education and Training Awards Council (HETAC) which was established by the Government in June 2001, under the Qualifications (Education and Training) Act, 1999. [2] In October 2005 the institute was selected by the The Sunday Times newspaper as the "Institute of Technology of the Year" in Ireland.
The institute now has a student population of approximately 6000 full-time students and 3500 part-time students. The Staff currently consists of approximately 470 Full-time academic, 300 part-time and 300 support staff.
[edit] Campus
The Institute has 4 campuses: Cork Road, College Street, Applied Technology Building and Carriganore.
The main campus is located on the N25 Cork Road. It was established in 1970 and houses the majority of the institutes departments. The Engineering, Science, Business and Health Science Schools are located on this campus. The buildings on this campus are: The original ’69 building, the ’77 extension, WIT library, IT Building, Nursing Building, College Hall, Tourism and Leisure Building, “T-Block”. In late 2005 the Minister for Education and Science Mary Hannafin announced four new buildings (an Engineering & Science Building, an Architecture Building, a Business & Enterprise Building and a Tourism & Leisure Building) as part of a €1.2 billion investment in higher education. It is unsure how many of these will be located on this campus. The Tourism & Leisure Building was located here.
The College Street Campus is the second largest campus currently. The buildings were purchased from the Good Shepherd Order of Nuns. The once convent houses a beautiful Pugin-designed chapel which is used for concerts and ceremonies. The Humanities and Education schools are officially located here, but are in reality spread between this and the main campus.
The Applied Technology Building, which is on lease from IDA Ireland, is located in Waterford’s Industrial Estate. This is just a 2 minute walk from the back of the main campus. While thought by most students to be a “spill-over” of the main campus, due to its close proximity, it is officially a separate campus. It houses engineering workshops and technology based facilities as well as the Careers Centre and the Engineering Research area.
The Carriganore campus, or west campus, is located outside the city near the Waterford Bypass. It is the goal of the Institute that this campus become the colleges main campus in years to come.
[edit] Organisation
The Institute is divided into 6 schools and divided between these schools is 16 departments. A full list of these is below.
[edit] Schools and Departments of the institute
- School of Business
- Dept. of Accountancy & Finance
- Dept. of Management & Organisation
- Graduate Business Studies
- School of Education
- Adult and Continuing Education
- Literacy Development Centre
- School of Engineering
- Dept. of Architecture
- Dept. of Construction & Civil Engineering
- Dept. of Engineering Technology
- Dept. of Trade Studies
- School of Health Sciences
- Dept. of Health, Sport & Exercise Studies
- Dept. of Nursing
- School of Humanities
- Dept. of Languages, Tourism & Hospitality
- Dept. of Creative Arts
- Dept. of Applied Arts
- School of Science
- Dept. of Chemical & Life Sciences
- Dept. of Computing, Mathematics & Physics
[edit] Research within the institute
The institute is a centre of research within Ireland; amongst the research entities it holds are:
- Advanced Automotive Electronics & Control Group
- Advanced Manufacturing Technology Research Group
- Art/Design History & Practice Research Centre
- Automotive Control Group
- Centre for Film Studies and Comparative Studies in Literature
- Centre for Health Behaviour Research
- Centre for Management Research in Health Care
- Centre for Newfoundland and Labrador Studies
- Centre for Social and Family Research
- Creative Multimedia Centre
- eLearning Technology Group
- Environmental Sensing Research Group
- Estuarine Research Group
- Flexible Wireless Research Group
- Forestry Vegetation & Alternative Management Systems (FORVAMS) Research Group
- Information Systems, Organisations and Learning Research Group
- Macular Pigment Research Group
- Materials Characterisation and Processing Group
- Metal Complexation Research Group
- Microelectronics and Systems Research Group
- Molecular Ecology Research Group
- Nanotechnology Research Group
- Optics Research Group
- Semiconductor Research Group (SRG) & Solid State Research Laboratories (SSL)
- Separation Science Research Group
- Smart Card Operations Research Enterprise Group
- Surface Science Research Group
- Telecommunications Software and Systems Group
- Waterford Crystal Marketing Studies Group
[edit] Student Life
A significant portion of the institute's students live in halls of residence, which adds to the levels of participation in the social and cultural life of the college. These include Riverwalk and Manor Village.
There is an active Students Union in WIT.
Like many other Irish universities and institutes, the institute has an increasingly international student body. The institute has had strong links with many European universities for many years and has more recently grown its links with American and Asian universities.
[edit] List of notable former students
- Martin Cullen (TD & Government Minister)
- David T Croke (Professor of Biochemistry, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland)
- Setanta Ó hAilpín (GAA & Australian Football League player)
- Robert Finnegan (Managing Director of mobile phone operator 3 Ireland)
- Louise Heraghty (98FM)
- Philip Lynch (businessman, CEO of IAWS Group)
- Tom Mulcahy (Former CEO AIB Group; Former Chairman Aer Lingus)
- John Paul Phelan (Senator and currently the youngest member of the house of the Oireachtas)
- John Ronan (Property developer & joint founder of Treasury Holdings)
- Henry Shefflin (GAA player)
[edit] The quest for university status
The institute formally applied in 2006 for university status in accordance with the Universities Act, 1997 [1], and the process of examining the case for redesignation has commenced. In January 2007 Dr Jim Port was engaged by the government to carry out a "preliminary assessment" of the institute's case. [2].
Many have stated another university in Ireland would simply decrease the standard of universities in the state, and have claimed there are too many universities already.[citation needed] Moreover, the proposed moniker for a possible university, 'the University of the South East', has been criticised for its limited regional scope, providing little identity for the institution or the city itself beyond Ireland.[citation needed] An online petition exists of almost 2,000 signatories in favour of a future University of Waterford.[citation needed]
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Official WIT website
- Telecommunications Software and Systems Group (TSSG) website
- WIT Strategic Plan
[edit] References
- ^ Regional Technical Colleges Act, 1992 (Amendment) (No. 2) Order, 1997
- ^ AboutWIT. Retrieved on 2008-05-21.
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