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Old Irish and Celtic Languages and another subject to degree level.
1st year
- 15 credits of Old Irish and Celtic Languages
- Choose up to 3 other subjects (or Critical Skills) from the 5 groups available (max 1 per group – see table on page 103)
2nd & 3rd year
- Old Irish and Celtic Languages as part of a Double Major, Major/Minor or as a Minor
- Continue with 1 of your 1st year subjects
- 2nd and 3rd year optional language modules are available subject to a minimum level of uptake
- Optional 10 credit Electives in 2nd year
Students may apply to study overseas after 2nd year (on Erasmus or Study Abroad) and graduate with a BA (International) after 4 years. See the International Studies website for details. Duration: 3 years (BA) or 4 years (BA International)
Disclaimer
The modules below are indicative of the content associated with this course of study. The modules are subject to change as the curriculum is revised and reviewed annually. Please check periodically for updates.
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Year 1
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We explore environment, place, and space. We ask questions such as: How much climate change are we causing and how quickly? What sorts of attachments to home do people form and what happens when these are disrupted by migration? How is Ireland, and its regions, affected by economic globalisation? - Through Geography, you will get to the heart of contemporary issues such as climate and environmental change, geopolitics, the transformation of modern societies and cultures, global health and social inequality, and how cities are evolving.
- Geography education at Maynooth includes field trips, both in Ireland and overseas.
- Students can choose 15 or 30 credits of Geography in first year and progress into a Single Major degree from second year.
- In your third year, you may opt for an industry placement module (subject to availability) to experience what it’s like to work with an organisation outside the University.
- You will learn to think critically, analysing how and why our world changes. Geography paves the way for active citizenship and lifelong learning.
- Our students develop a special way of thinking ‘spatially’, with space and place at the forefront of their analysis, and learn a range of skills which appeal to employers.
- Our students are taught by international experts in the fields of environment, place and space.
Take either 15 or 30 credits of Geography. If choosing Global Environments (from Group 6) you cannot choose another subject in Group 1, other than Geography - Living Landscapes.
Please note: Global Environments will be available in Group 6 only. This means that if you select GY161 and GY162 you may not take any other Group 6 subjects.
GY1V30
- GEOGRAPHY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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German currently tops the list of the 5 most in-demand foreign languages in Ireland among employers (cpl.com). As the native language to almost 100 million people around the world, German is a critical language for business, science and culture. - Studying German at MU equips you with excellent language, communication, research, intercultural and analytical skills that help you stand out from the crowd.
- We have a wide range of exciting modules taught by international and local experts. Our students have opportunities to focus on linguistics, translation, history, politics, and the literary, visual and business cultures connected to German, alongside the language itself.
- If you’re a beginner, you can fast-track your progress by taking German as a double subject.
Why choose this subject? - Language AND culture: discover how people live, think and interact in German-speaking countries. Our programme is specially designed to allow you to develop advanced competence and fluency in all
- key language areas, while expanding your cultural understanding, intercultural awareness, and your critical thinking and evaluative abilities.
- Small classes taught by experts: our language, linguistics and culture modules are generally taught in small class groups - an environment in which students thrive. Our staff are keen researchers, and this is integrated into our teaching and approach.
- Year Abroad: every student is encouraged to spend a year in a German-speaking country. You can study at a German-speaking university – we have links with over 20 universities in Germany and Austria - or work as a language teacher or be an Erasmus intern (subject to availability).
- Employability: 1,200 positions are currently open to graduates with strong German proficiency and intercultural skills.
Every student will have the opportunity to spend a year in a German-speaking country as an Erasmus student, Language assistant or Erasmus intern (subject to availability). German at MU Erasmus links include: - large cities including Berlin, Munich and Vienna;
- smaller cities such as Graz, Potsdam, Leipzig and Bonn;
- towns like Bielefeld, Marburg and Tübingen.
Interested in teaching German? The Teaching Council of Ireland require all registered teachers of German to have spent a minimum of two months living in a German-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advise at least a three-month residency.
- Either 15 credits of German (if you studied German in school to H4 Leaving Certificate or equivalent level) OR 30 credits of German (if you are a beginner).
- 30 credit beginner: the extra 15 credits for beginners are timetabled outside of groups 1-6 so you may choose other subjects from groups 2-6.
- Only 1 of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
GN1F30
- GERMAN FOR BEGINNERS
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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- Students who wish to take the 15-credit non-beginners option should note that the expectation is that students would normally have achieved at least a H4 at Leaving Certificate (or equivalent). Students with alternative qualifications or experience are welcome to contact the Academic Coordinator from the School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures by email to smllc@mu.ie - please include your student number in all correspondence.
- Within MH101, subjects from groups 2-6 may be selected (one per group).
GN1F15
- GERMAN FOR NON-BEGINNERS
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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Choosing Law is ideal for people who want to experience it in their first year as part of a Bachelor of Arts degree and enjoy flexibility in their second and final year progression options. - Flexibility and choice: students who successfully complete their first year law modules have the option of transferring to one of our specialised Law degrees (MH502 BCL or MH501 LLB). Tailor your degree to your interests while developing a broad skill set which is highly valued by employers
- Law can be taken as a single or double subject in first year allowing students to combine the study of core law subjects with options from up to 31 subject areas.
- At the end of second year, students of the BCL and LLB degrees (having moved from the BA degree) may apply to complete a work placement year in law firm (subject to availability).
- All Law students - BA, BCL and LLB - may apply to complete a year studying abroad at one of our partner institutions.
- Get involved in our numerous student societies: the student Law Society, European Law Students’ Association or Student FLAC (Free Legal Advice Centre) Society.
- Either 15 or 30 credits of Law.
- If taking the 30 credit option: the extra 15 credits are timetabled outside of groups 1-6 so you may choose other subjects from groups 2-6.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
LW1V30
- LAW
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
- In 1st year, Mathematics (Pure) is taken as a double subject (timetabled in groups 1 and 3) with one or two other Arts subjects excluding groups 1 and 3.
- Admission to 2nd Arts Mathematics (Pure) (MT2DM or MT2MJ) is conditional on students obtaining a mark of 50% or better in the 1st year Mathematics (Pure) (MT1F30) examination.
- 1st year minimum entry requirement: Leaving Certificate (or equivalent) H2 Mathematics.
MT1F30
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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'Philosophy' is an ancient Greek word that means ‘love of wisdom’. The wisdom philosophy seeks is concerned with the big questions that everyone will eventually encounter in his or her life: What is happiness? What is love? Is there a god? What is the meaning of it all? Philosophy approaches these questions both historically and systematically. Thinking philosophically requires knowledge of what those who have come before us have thought; but it also requires the ability to evaluate these positions critically. Philosophy explores the foundations of all of reality and of all knowledge. To mention a few examples, there is a philosophy of language and a philosophy of music; political philosophy; ethics; a philosophy of science and a philosophy of religion. There is nothing that cannot be questioned philosophically, and there is no interest that cannot be combined with philosophy. Philosophy is not the most practical of subjects. Yet every society needs philosophers—people who do not just live, love, work, raise children, etc., but who seek answers to the question “why”. This is the case particularly in the world today, which is changing so rapidly that one needs a solid grounding in order not to get lost. Why choose this subject? - A philosophy degree is not a qualification for any particular career; rather, one studies philosophy to lead an 'examined life', as Socrates put it. Studying philosophy is an investment in one’s life.
- This having been said, the expertise gained in philosophy is of great value in many different areas. Philosophy graduates are valued for their quick intelligence, ability to reason deeply, clearly and independently, and for their ability to take an overview on the problem or situation confronting them.
- At Maynooth, philosophy can also be studied in conjunction with mathematics and computer science (BSc in Computational Thinking). This degree pathway brings philosophy to bear on some of the cutting-edge issues of contemporary society.
- 15 credit option only in 1st year.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
PH1F15
- PHILOSOPHY
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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CTL1LSK
- SOCIAL ANALYSIS OF EVERYDAY LIFE
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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SK1USK
- UNIVERSAL CRITICAL SKILLS
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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This option will suit students interested in taking a language with Business (International). - International Business is about conducting business in different countries and managing people and organisations in an increasingly globalised world.
- To effectively compete in this changing business landscape, organisations must offer goods and services across nations, regions, and continents outside of their home market and must also manage increasingly diverse workforces as nations, cultures, and markets converge.
- International Business provides the strategies, insights, and skills to respond to these challenges, enabling organisations to manage diverse people and operations and to compete for customers across the world.
- Business (International) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. a language, Anthropology, Geography amongst others. Languages available include Chinese Studies, French, German, Nua-Ghaeilge and Spanish.
- Our International Business degree is ideal for students with a global outlook who wish to work either in local firms competing abroad or in subsidiaries of foreign multinationals, located either here or abroad.
- International Business students at Maynooth are offered a wide variety of choice. We offer modules that will develop both core business management knowledge as well as modules that provide a more specialist understanding of the international aspects of business.
- International Business students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what they learn in university with insights into another culture.
Please note: if you wish to gain accreditation in Business as a subject eligible for 2nd level teaching (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you should choose Business (Management) – MN1MV30. This Business (International Business) in Arts pathway will NOT guarantee the credits in Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN1IV30
- BUSINESS (INTERNATIONAL)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Please note: if you wish to gain accreditation in Business as a subject eligible for 2nd level teaching (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you should choose Business (Management) – MN1MV30. This Business (International Business) in Arts pathway will NOT guarantee the credits in Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN1IF15
- BUSINESS (INTERNATIONAL)
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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Management is about taking ideas and converting them into action: designing, making, and delivering products and services that customers and citizens want or need. Essentially, it is about organising to get things done. - Managers are generalists and organisers; they need to know the fundamentals of all major aspects of business, from thinking about the business as a whole and its strategic direction, to organising the workforce, managing the effective use of information technology, managing supply chains locally and globally, and effectively managing costs and revenues.
- Managers are at the heart of how these complex functions are seamlessly combined to make the world look simple to customers. Our degree in Business Management (MH404) will equip you with the tools necessary to achieve this.
- Our faculty are a blend of international and local industry experts who bring profound insights into the practicality and complexity of Management.
- Management students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture.
- If you are interested in a career as a second level teacher of business, Business (Management) is the subject to choose from the three business subjects available in MH101.
- Management students at Maynooth are offered unparalleled choice and flexibility. This degree offers you insights into all of the major functions of business, as well as the opportunity to undertake specialist options in the subjects you most enjoy so that you can shape your degree based on your own strengths and interests.
Please note: if you wish to gain accreditation in Business as a subject eligible for 2nd level teaching (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you should choose Business (Management) – MN1MV30. This Business (Management) in Arts pathway includes core modules across the Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN1MV30
- BUSINESS (MANAGEMENT)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Please note: if you wish to gain accreditation in Business as a subject eligible for 2nd level teaching (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you should choose Business (Management) – MN1MV30. This Business (Management) in Arts pathway includes core modules across the Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN1MF15
- BUSINESS (MANAGEMENT)
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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- Marketing is all about customers, understanding their needs, how they behave and why they buy, so that businesses can build long term relationships with them. Creating and managing customers are central themes to what we teach and research at the Maynooth University School of Business.
- Marketing is a wide and varied discipline, connecting a firm to its customers in the marketplace. It is fast-paced and dynamic, interlinking with every other area of business to understand how value is created and captured for the company and its customers.
- Marketing is critical to the growth of a business – a key challenge from small local businesses to large global corporations. Using both traditional and digital tools, marketers must understand customer needs in order to create innovative products and service to meet those needs.
Marketing is both profoundly local and global, selling to one individual customer or to a large international market. Our faculty bring a rich and diverse expertise from both local and international markets across a broad range of topic areas, including digital marketing, online retailing, branding, communications and consumer behaviour. Together we offer students deep insights into the practicalities and applications of marketing, from what makes customers tick to how to make the best of market opportunities. Our approach to Marketing provides students with a deep understanding of the marketing function, as well as wider management and business processes so you can deliver value to customers and your organisation. Options are available which allow you to specialise your degree according to your strengths and interests in the topic areas you enjoy most. Marketing students also have the option of taking a four-year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture. Business (Marketing) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. Psychological Studies, Geography, Law, Anthropology, a language amongst others.
Please note: if you wish to gain accreditation in Business as a subject eligible for 2nd level teaching (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you should choose Business (Management) – MN1MV30. This Business (Marketing) in Arts pathway will NOT guarantee the credits in Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN1KF15
- BUSINESS (MARKETING)
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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Please note: if you wish to gain accreditation in Business as a subject eligible for 2nd level teaching (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you should choose Business (Management) – MN1MV30. This Business (International Business) in Arts pathway will NOT guarantee the credits in Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN1KV30
- BUSINESS (MARKETING)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Criminology is the study of crime, criminal behaviour and the criminal justice system. - At Maynooth, we offer a unique opportunity to study Criminology as part of a broad based Arts degree.
- You can choose Criminology in combination with other Arts subjects (including Law, Psychological Studies etc.) in first year, and then choose to continue with Criminology in second and third year.
- Maynooth University is the only University in the Republic of Ireland offering the opportunity to study Criminology as part of an Arts programme, and one of the few to offer a Law and Criminology degree (if you move from MH101 to MH502 in second year).
- Unique interdisciplinary programme with perspectives from sociology, psychology and economics as well as law.
- Flexibility and choice, including options to transfer into law.
LW1CF15
- CRIMINOLOGY
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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History is the systematic examination of human experience over time. It attempts to explain the origins and evolution of the societies we live in, from as many points of view as possible. - History explores the complex processes of social and economic change, the choice of one set of political or ethical values over another, the context in which new ideas arise, and much more. The written word is one way of gathering information about the past, but new technologies and research methods allow for the study of history to take place through other mediums.
- The Department’s long-standing reputation for excellence and leadership in historical scholarship both in Ireland and internationally is one reason for the popularity of History at Maynooth. We have also kept our discipline vibrant, engaging and of practical value to students. We provide a solid grounding in the practice of history and boast expertise in a wide range of specialist topics such as life in medieval Ireland, the intersection of American and world history, the First World War, and gender and sexual politics.
- Either 15 or 30 credits of History.
- If taking the 30 credit option: the extra 15 credits are timetabled outside of groups 1-6 so you may choose other subjects from groups 1, 3, 4, 5, 6.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
HY1V30
- HISTORY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Studying Music at Maynooth, Ireland’s largest university music department, offers unparalleled choice and expertise, from performance to computer programming, from ancient traditions to contemporary experience, from high art to heavy metal. - Our programmes are designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical, compositional and academic work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in areas that really interest you the most in your final year.
- Performance, composition, music history (musicology including pop/rock) and the music of other cultures (ethnomusicology) are just a selection of different aspects of music you will study in the Music programme.
- Exciting and varied programme of practical, compositional and academic work.
- Students participate in ensembles such as the Chamber Choir and Traditional Music Ensemble.
- In your third year, you have the option to specialise in performance, composition or musicology. Some of the modules available include ‘Music and Entrepreneurship’, ‘Opera in Context’ and 'Popular Music Studies'.
- For those considering teaching Music at second level, the Teaching Council requirements are met by studying Music in the MH101 degree.
Note: Students can take 15 credits in Timetable Group 5 OR 30 credits in Timetable Groups 5 and 2.
MU1V30
- MUSIC
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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CTL1LSK
- SOCIAL ANALYSIS OF EVERYDAY LIFE
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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SK2USK
- UNIVERSAL CRITICAL SKILLS
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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Beginning with words on a page, English is a world-facing subject: it takes you across historical periods, cultures, locations and genres, from poetry and drama to the novel, film, and creative writing too. As a student of English, you will learn about: - Different literary forms from poetry and drama to the novel and film, as well as creative writing.
- The conditions that shape literature from history and geography to questions of gender, race, and class.
- How literary texts enable us to understand our own complex world.
- Different approaches to and theories of literature.
- How different schools of critical thought or areas have shaped and reshaped the subject of English literary studies.
Engaging in critical debate about the meaning and value of literature will help you to: - Foster your critical and creative abilities.
- Develop awareness of the multi-dimensional nature of human situations.
- Approach problems with an open and enquiring mind.
- Gain analytical skills, finely-honed writing skills and develop critical thinking – skills which appeal greatly to future employers. Maynooth University Department of English boasts notable expertise in a wide range of literature from the early modern to the present day, and from Irish literature to American, African, Arab and global literatures. Our lecturers’ research expertise informs their teaching and provides you as a student with current critical thinking in the broad field of English studies. Our degree reflects the changing, global nature of English language literature while also providing you with a thorough understanding of established literary traditions.
Update 16 February 2024 Please note it is not possible to take 30 credits of English in the MH109/MEDST programme due to a timetable clash with a compulsory Media Studies module.
EN1V30
- ENGLISH
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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International development looks at the development challenges and opportunities confronting people and societies living in the Global South (including Africa, Asia and Latin America), while addressing the myriad of global challenges associated with sustainable development for the planet as a whole. As a student of International Development in the Bachelor of Arts degree you will explore issues such as globalisation, climate change, food security, poverty, conflict, disasters and other humanitarian emergencies, human rights, health, education, gender, inequality and empowerment, from an international development perspective. - Gain an understanding of development activism and how development can be planned, organised and managed to meet the needs of all, especially the most marginalised communities around the world.
- We will focus on the roles and effectiveness of international and national development actors (UN, Governments, NGO’s and Civil Society groups) and market actors in meeting development challenges, and in providing a better world for all.
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Either 15 or 30 credits of International Development.
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If taking the 30 credit option: the extra 15 credits are timetabled outside of groups 1-6 so you may choose other subjects from groups 1, 2, 4, 5, 6.
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Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
KD1V30
- INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. - Our Mathematics degrees aim to bridge the gap between school Mathematics and current frontiers of knowledge. You will learn to think hard and rigorously about questions and to solve new problems – invaluable skills that can be transferred to any area of life and any job you hold in future.
- A degree in a Mathematical discipline opens the door to jobs in a variety of fields such as finance, trading, insurance, information technology, education, data analysis, scientific research and development.
- The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject.
- The academic staff in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics have a diverse range of research interests in areas including algebra, analysis, data analysis, dynamics, geometry, number theory, statistical modelling and topology.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
- 15 credit option only in 1st year.
- Recommended O3/H7 Leaving Certificate Mathematics.
MS1F15
- MATHEMATICAL STUDIES
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
- In 1st year, Mathematics (Pure) is taken as a double subject (timetabled in groups 1 and 3) with one or two other Arts subjects excluding groups 1 and 3.
- Admission to 2nd Arts Mathematics (Pure) (MT2DM or MT2MJ) is conditional on students obtaining a mark of 50% or better in the 1st year Mathematics (Pure) (MT1F30) examination.
- 1st year minimum entry requirement: Leaving Certificate (or equivalent) H2 Mathematics.
MT1F30
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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CTL1LSK
- SOCIAL ANALYSIS OF EVERYDAY LIFE
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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SK3USK
- UNIVERSAL CRITICAL SKILLS
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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Anthropology is the comparative study of human society and culture. By closely observing and analyzing different ways of life around the world, from tribal villages to Wall Street offices, anthropologists create new knowledge about human nature and what it means to be human today. - You will learn how to research cultural practices and social institutions such as: religion and ritual, kinship and family, economy and the market, politics and government, language and performance, science and technology, traditional healing and biomedicine, and much more.
- You can also study forensic anthropology, which applies skeletal analysis and archaeological techniques to solve criminal cases.
- You will engage in practical, experiential learning, including ethnographic fieldwork projects.
- Anthropology fosters creativity and imagination by helping us to think beyond our own pre-conceived world views. By cultivating better understanding across cultures, anthropologists also confront forms of prejudice, injustice and inequality.
- Either 15 or 30 credits of Anthropology.
- If taking the 30 credit option: the extra 15 credits are timetabled outside of groups 1-6 so you may choose other subjects from groups 1, 2, 3, 5, 6.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
AN1V30
- ANTHROPOLOGY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Economics is a social science that helps us to understand the behaviour of decision makers such as consumers, firms, workers, governments, investors, central banks, policy makers. - Economists are not defined by the subject matter that they study but rather by the way they approach a given topic. Economics provides a framework for understanding problems and learning how to solve them.
- There is a misconception about economics. People tend to think that economics is all about money and profits, but economics is much more than that. It is about understanding the past, predicting the future, and making evidence-based policy recommendations.
- Economists aim to find feasible solutions to help improve people's lives. This involves tackling important societal problems such as: how to reduce gender in equality and racial discrimination, how to create international cooperation to protect the environment, how to break the poverty trap in less-developed countries, how to reduce crime.
- Economists use game theory to analyse strategic interaction to answer questions such as: What is the optimal pricing and advertisement strategy for a firm? How should we set political campaign financing rules to improve the quality of our democracy? How should patents be designed to foster innovation but not curtail competition?
- Economists use statistical techniques to understand the market and how people respond to incentives. By determining causal relationships, economists can make evidence-based policy recommendations at the firm and state level.
- 15 credit option only in 1st year.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
- Recommend O4/H7 Leaving Certificate Mathematics.
EC1F15
- ECONOMICS
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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Finance is taught as an application of Economics. It examines the role of government and international organisations in the management and regulation of financial markets. Finance is the study of investment risk and reward. You don’t need to have any previous knowledge of Finance, only an interest in how the financial sector and the economy works and a desire to know more. The ability to work in a second language is an advantage for Finance graduates. As an Arts student, you may combine Finance with Chinese, French, German, or Spanish – all are available at beginner/non-beginner level (except Chinese - only beginner level). The Department is made up of an accomplished group of academics with an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching.
- 15 credit option only in 1st year.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
- Recommend O4/H7 Leaving Certificate Mathematics.
FN1F15
- FINANCE
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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Music Technology is a unique opportunity to combine Music Technology with Music, Computer Science and a wide range of other disciplines. - Strikes a balance between practice and theory. You gain hands-on experience of the practical skills involved in music technology while learning about essential concepts.
- Wide in scope, including recording and sound engineering, computer music programming, sound design, composition, acoustics and psychoacoustics.
- Studying Music Technology offers an opportunity to develop and combine your creative and technical abilities. Facilities include a recording studio; a live room; a 5.1 mastering studio; Mac laboratories utilising Pro Tools software; field recording resources.
- Our programme is designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical and theoretical work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in the areas that interest you the most in your final year. Final year students oversee significant recording and composition projects, or work towards instrument and software development.
MU1TF15
- MUSIC TECHNOLOGY
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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Students of the Modern Irish course study the language (spoken and written) and aspects of literature and culture. - Our students learn about the diversity and rich heritage of the Irish language, and also acquire skills which will be advantageous to them throughout their lives, irrespective of which career they choose. They will accomplish this in a friendly, open Department that has a strong commitment to Irish and to learning.
- Spoken and written Irish are obviously central to our course and students are given every encouragement and support to improve their oral and written skills. To this end, students normally spend a period of residence in the Gaeltacht.
- Our modules allow students to gain a deep appreciation of contemporary Irish literature - poetry, prose and drama. Modules are also offered on earlier periods of Irish literature, including Bardic Poetry, the Fenian Cycle and poetry of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. There also are optional modules on Scottish Gaelic, on Irish personal and place names, on the sean-nós singing tradition, and on Irish-language oral traditions and performing arts. In addition to practical workshops and tutorials on written and spoken Irish, we also offer modules on the sociolinguistics of Irish and on the phonology and dialectology of the modern language.
Many aspects of Irish studies are researched in the Department, both language and literature, old and new, as well as other related areas of study. Among the courses offered are Linguistics, Folklore, Literary Criticism, Scottish Gaelic, Early Modern Irish, Irish Place and Personal Names, the sean-nós singing tradition, and Irish-language/ Gaeltacht performing arts. Irish is studied both as a living language and as a valuable part of Irish and European cultural heritage. All lectures, tutorials and workshops are through the medium of the Irish language, as is all communication with the Department, and while the first-year course places significant emphasis on the written language (i.e. grammar), no prior knowledge of grammar is necessary. There is an Irish language support centre, An Droichead, which provides assistance to students, first year students in particular, who are struggling with the language. This works on a peer-tutoring basis, with second and third year students tutoring groups of no more than five students – allowing students to ask questions, to practice structures, etc Déanann mic léinn na Nua-Ghaeilge staidéar ar an teanga (labhartha agus scríofa) agus ar ghnéithe den litríocht agus den chultúr. - Foghlaimíonn ár mic léinn faoin ilghnéitheacht agus faoin oidhreacht shaibhir atá ag an nGaeilge, chomh maith le scileanna a bheidh úsáideach dóibh le linn a saoil, is cuma cén ghairm a roghnóidh siad. Baineann siad an méid sin amach i Roinn atá cairdiúil agus oscailte agus atá tiomanta don Ghaeilge agus don fhoghlaim.
- Tá ról lárnach ag an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha inár gcúrsa agus tugtar gach spreagadh do mhic léinn a scileanna labhartha agus scríofa a fheabhsú. Chuige sin, caitheann mic léinn tréimhse chónaithe sa Ghaeltacht de ghnáth.
- Tugtar modúil ar an litríocht chomhaimseartha ionas gur féidir le mic léinn eolas grinn a chur ar fhilíocht, ar phrós agus ar dhrámaíocht na Gaeilge. Cuirtear modúil ar fáil fosta ar an
- litríocht a bhaineann le tréimhsí níos luaithe, ina measc sin, filíocht na mBard, an Fhiannaíocht, filíocht an 17ú haois, an 18ú haois agus an 19ú haois. Tá modúil roghnacha ar fáil ar Ghaeilge na hAlban, ar ainmneacha pearsanta agus logainmneacha na hÉireann, agus thraidisiún
- na hamhránaíochta, agus ar thaibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta. Mar aon le ceardlanna praiticiúla agus ranganna teagaisc ar an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha, cuirimid modúl ar shochtheangeolaíocht na Gaeilge agus ar chanúineolaíocht na nuatheanga ar fáil.
- Is iomaí gné de léann na Gaeilge a ndéantar taighde uirthi sa Roinn, idir theanga agus litríocht, idir shean agus nua, chomh maith le réimsí léinn atá gaolmhar don teanga. Orthu sin tá, mar shampla, an Teangeolaíocht, an Béaloideas,
- An Chritic Liteartha, Gaeilge na hAlban, an Nua-Ghaeilge Mhoch, Logainmneacha agus Ainmneacha Pearsanta na Gaeilge, Traidisiún na hAmhránaíochta, Taibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta, agus an Cleachtas Cruthaitheach. Pléitear leis an nGaeilge mar theanga bheo agus mar chuid luachmhar d’oidhreacht chultúrtha na hÉireann agus na hEorpa.
- Trí mheán na Gaeilge a bhíonn na léachtaí, na ranganna teagaisc agus na ceardlanna ar fad, agus déantar gach cumarsáid leis an Roinn trí mheán na Gaeilge. Cé go gcuireann cúrsa na chéad bhliana béim shuntasach ar an teanga scríofa (i.e gramadach), ní theastaíonn réamheolas ar an ngramadach uait.
- Tá ionad tacaíochta Gaeilge, An Droichead, ar fáil a chuireann cabhair ar fáil do mhic léinn, mic léinn na chéad bhliana go háirithe, atá ag streachailt leis an teanga. Piartheagasc atá i gceist, agus mic léinn na dara agus na tríú bliana i mbun grúpaí beaga a stiúradh. Ní bhíonn níos mó ná cúigear mac léinn i ngach grúpa agus bíonn deis ag mic léinn ceisteanna a chur, cleachtadh a dhéanamh ar struchtúir, srl.
- 15 credit option only in 1st year.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
- All applicants are required to present H4 in Leaving Certificate Irish to study Nua-Ghaeilge.
NG1F15
- NUA-GHAEILGE
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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CTL1LSK
- SOCIAL ANALYSIS OF EVERYDAY LIFE
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
SK4USK
- UNIVERSAL CRITICAL SKILLS
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
Computer Science at Maynooth University is the study of the principals and use of computers and software. Students enjoy the huge benefit of studying other Arts subjects with Computer Science in first year with options to take different degree paths afterwards. Advanced topics such as computer vision, theoretical computer studies, robotics, cryptography and artificial intelligence may be studied, depending on the pathway students take. - The Department of Computer Science at Maynooth University was founded in 1987 and is located in the Eolas Building. Our laboratories and equipment provide excellent facilities for practical work and all our courses include a mix of lectures and lab work. Many of our students also spend time working in industry as part of their degree, which enhances their employment opportunities once they graduate.
- We endeavour to provide a supportive and enjoyable atmosphere for learning through our Computer Science Support Centre, extensive assistance during practical work and we are always available outside of lectures to help our students.
- Either 15 or 30 credits of Computer Science.
- If taking the 30 credit option: the extra 15 credits are timetabled outside of groups 1-6 so you may choose other subjects from groups 1, 2, 3, 4, 6.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
- Recommend O3/H7 Leaving Certificate Mathematics.
CS1V30
- COMPUTER SCIENCE
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Studying Music at Maynooth, Ireland’s largest university music department, offers unparalleled choice and expertise, from performance to computer programming, from ancient traditions to contemporary experience, from high art to heavy metal. - Our programmes are designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical, compositional and academic work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in areas that really interest you the most in your final year.
- Performance, composition, music history (musicology including pop/rock) and the music of other cultures (ethnomusicology) are just a selection of different aspects of music you will study in the Music programme.
- Exciting and varied programme of practical, compositional and academic work.
- Students participate in ensembles such as the Chamber Choir and Traditional Music Ensemble.
- In your third year, you have the option to specialise in performance, composition or musicology. Some of the modules available include ‘Music and Entrepreneurship’, ‘Opera in Context’ and 'Popular Music Studies'.
- For those considering teaching Music at second level, the Teaching Council requirements are met by studying Music in the MH101 degree.
Note: Students can take 15 credits in Timetable Group 5 OR 30 credits in Timetable Groups 5 and 2.
MU1V30
- MUSIC
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Sociology is a subject that opens your mind, that helps you to connect your own lived experience to the wider social and economic context, and that offers the opportunity to engage in an empowering form of student-led learning. Our graduates often speak of studying Sociology as a “life changing” experience. The Sociology Department is widely acknowledged as a leading national and international centre of teaching and research excellence, as well as an exemplar of public sociology and engagement. We seek to equip you with the necessary resources and skills – intellectual, methodological, communicative and active citizenship – to meet the challenges of our fast-changing contemporary society and to contribute productively to social transformation.
Sociology is the study of human social life, groups and societies. It is a discipline that teaches you to: - develop critical skills and powers of argumentation based on empirical evidence.
- become a creative thinker and to think outside of the box.
- engage in a constructive enterprise, oriented toward the promotion of equality and social justice.
Taking Politics and/or Sociology to degree level is an ideal preparation to teach Politics and Society at second level following a Professional Master of Education (PME).
SO1F15
- SOCIOLOGY
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
If you want to achieve a high level of competency in a modern European language, as well as learn about Spanish and Latin American culture and society more generally, studying Spanish as part of our BA degree is for you. - As a student of Spanish, you will have a twin focus on language and culture. Through language classes and with supporting material such as film, literature and cultural events, you will aim to become a fluent speaker and writer of Spanish. If you’re a beginner, you can take intensive language classes.
- Over the course of your degree programme, you will receive an excellent grounding in all aspects of Spanish language through core modules in Spanish Grammar, Professional Spanish and Translation. In your second and final years you can choose from a broad range of optional modules, such as Linguistics, Spanish Literature and Cinema, Latin American Literature and Cinema, Catalan and Portuguese.
- This is a unique opportunity and a "lifechanging" experience, as any of our past students who have spent a year abroad can attest. You also have the opportunity to work as a Teaching Assistant in Spain (subject to availability), which is a great asset to have on your CV.
Students interested in teaching Spanish should note that the Teaching Council of Ireland require all registered teachers of Spanish to have spent a minimum of two months living in a Spanish-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advise at least a three-month residency. Students who successfully complete a year abroad as part of their programme are conferred with a 4-year BA International.
- Either 15 credits of Spanish (if you studied Spanish in school to H4 Leaving Certificate or equivalent level) OR 30 credits of Spanish (if you are a beginner).
- 30 credit beginner: the extra 15 credits for beginners are timetabled outside of groups 1-6 so you may choose other subjects from groups 1, 2, 3, 4, 6.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
SPA1F30
- SPANISH FOR BEGINNERS
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
- Students who wish to take the 15-credit non-beginners option should note that the expectation is that students would normally have achieved at least a H4 at Leaving Certificate (or equivalent). Students with alternative qualifications or experience are welcome to contact the Academic Coordinator from the School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures by email to smllc@mu.ie - please include your student number in all correspondence.
- Within MH101, subjects from groups 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 may be selected (one per group).
SPA1F15
- SPANISH FOR NON-BEGINNERS
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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CTL1LSK
- SOCIAL ANALYSIS OF EVERYDAY LIFE
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
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SK5USK
- UNIVERSAL CRITICAL SKILLS
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
You will study Accounting (the language of finance and business) along with up to three other Arts subjects in first year. The unique flexibility of the MU Arts programme provides you with the option of transferring in to one of our designated accounting programmes at the end of first year. - By choosing to study accounting, you are opening up the possibility of becoming a professional accountant which offers a rewarding career with international mobility and high earning potential.
- You will engage with expert faculty, who foster an engaging, friendly, supportive and dynamic learning environment.
- Understanding the language of Accounting will be advantageous to you if you work in a business or set up your own business.
- By choosing to study accounting, you could also pursue a career in teaching.
- The extensive range of subjects available in the BA programme allows you to combine the study of accounting with other subjects that suit your interests. No prior knowledge of accounting is required, as we teach it from first principles.
- Become a highly sought-after graduate possessing the technical accounting and transferable skills required of future business leaders which allows students to pursue rewarding career opportunities.
- Depending on your 1st year results, you may have the opportunity to move from MH101 into one of our specialised degree programmes in accounting, thereby opening up further study and work experience opportunities.
AC1F15
- ACCOUNTING
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
Students are reminded that they should ensure to have a balance of credits over the two semesters.
AC1V30 is the option that should be chosen if you wish to transfer to a denominated degree in Accounting in year 2 namely MH403 (FNAC), MH407 (BUSAC) or MH502 LWA or maximise professional Accounting exemptions.
AC1V30
- ACCOUNTING
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
A wide range of subjects including Chinese language, culture, society and history are covered in this course. Chinese Studies is offered at two levels, one for absolute beginners and one for those who already have some prior knowledge of the language. - In third year you will have the exciting opportunity to study in one of Maynooth University’s partner universities in China. This will improve your language ability, foster intercultural competence and help you to acquire the skills and confidence that you need in today’s job market. Throughout your year abroad Maynooth University’s International Office and Beijing office staff will be there to support you.
- Learning Chinese connects you to over 1.3 billion speakers of Mandarin Chinese worldwide.
- As Ireland rapidly expands its trade in goods and services with China, there is a growing demand for graduates with strong Chinese language skills and an understanding of Chinese society and culture.
- The introduction of Mandarin Chinese as a curricular subject for the Leaving Certificate examination means that there is an emerging need for teachers of Chinese at post-primary level.
- At Maynooth University you have the opportunity to study Chinese along with a wide variety of other subjects. You can choose subjects you are familiar with or entirely new ones! Learning Chinese provides a window to understanding the world. Learning about the Chinese language, culture and society will help you to acquire new skills and develop unique interests that will be of considerable value to you in your future career. These skills and interests will make you stand out from the crowd and enable you to be more competitive in the global market.
CN1F30
- CHINESE STUDIES FOR BEGINNERS
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Students have been studying French at Maynooth since the foundation of the college in 1795. - French is a world language, spoken by 300 million people on several continents and in French territories overseas.
- If you would like to attain a high level of competency in a modern European and world language, as well as learn about French and Francophone cultures past and present, studying French as part of our degree programme is the path for you.
- Over the course of your degree programme, you will receive an excellent grounding in all aspects of French language through core modules in French Grammar, Writing in French, Oral Expression, and Listening Skills. In second year and final year, you may choose from a range of optional modules in French and Francophone culture, such as Politics and Ideas, Literature and Society, Women’s Writing, Linguistics, Translation and Cinema (depending on availability).
What distinguishes French at Maynooth is a strong tradition of teaching the French language, literature and culture, with much teaching taking place through the medium of French (for those taking the non-beginner stream). - Maynooth has a network of exchanges with universities in countries where French is spoken. Studying French opens a world of exciting opportunities.
- As part of this programme, you may also spend a year studying at a French-speaking university or working as a language teacher in France (subject to availability).
- At Maynooth University, students gain a thorough grounding in the language and acquire a familiarity with a world language expressing vibrant cultures and diverse histories. French is offered in a friendly, supportive environment at non-beginner level (Leaving Certificate H4 in French or equivalent recommended) from first year, and also at beginner level (no minimum requirement - but the recommendation is to attend all lectures from the beginning of semester one).
- Students interested in teaching French should note that the Teaching Council of Ireland requires all registered teachers of French to have spent some time living in a French-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advises at least a three-month residency. Students who successfully complete a year abroad as part of their programme are conferred with a 4-year BA International.
It is not permitted to take FR152 on its own; it must be taken with FR152.
FR1F30
- FRENCH FOR BEGINNERS
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
- 15 credit option only in 1st year.
- Students who wish to take the 15-credit non-beginners option should note that the expectation is that students would normally have achieved at least a H4 at Leaving Certificate (or equivalent). Students with alternative qualifications or experience are welcome to contact the Academic Coordinator from the School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures by email to smllc@mu.ie - please include your student number in all correspondence.
- Within MH101, subjects from groups 1-5 may be selected (one per group).
FR1F15
- FRENCH FOR NON-BEGINNERS
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
We explore environment, place, and space. We ask questions such as: How much climate change are we causing and how quickly? What sorts of attachments to home do people form and what happens when these are disrupted by migration? How is Ireland, and its regions, affected by economic globalisation? - Through Geography, you will get to the heart of contemporary issues such as climate and environmental change, geopolitics, the transformation of modern societies and cultures, global health and social inequality, and how cities are evolving.
- Geography education at Maynooth includes field trips, both in Ireland and overseas.
- Students can choose 15 or 30 credits of Geography in first year and progress into a Single Major degree from second year.
- In your third year, you may opt for an industry placement module (subject to availability) to experience what it’s like to work with an organisation outside the University.
- You will learn to think critically, analysing how and why our world changes. Geography paves the way for active citizenship and lifelong learning.
- Our students develop a special way of thinking ‘spatially’, with space and place at the forefront of their analysis, and learn a range of skills which appeal to employers.
- Our students are taught by international experts in the fields of environment, place and space.
Take either 15 or 30 credits of Geography. If choosing Global Environments (from Group 6) you cannot choose another subject in Group 1, other than Geography - Living Landscapes.
Please note: Global Environments will be available in Group 6 only. This means that if you select GY161 and GY162 you may not take any other Group 6 subjects.
GY1V30
- GEOGRAPHY
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Greek and Roman Civilization involves study of the history, literature, art, philosophy and material culture of two of the most influential periods in human history. As an interdisciplinary subject, Classics spans an immense range of human experience over some 1700 years, from the late Bronze Age through to the “fall” of the Roman Empire. Greek and Roman civilizations were of foundational importance for medieval, Renaissance and modern Europe, and can claim an almost global impact. - In Maynooth, students are introduced to the complexities and diversity of the ancient Mediterranean cultures, through many perspectives. Themes explored in individual modules include mythology and the gods; war and heroism; colonies, cities, civilization and “the barbarian”; ideologies of empire; people and elites; women and gender; friendship, sexuality, and norms of beauty; ideas of justice, law, happiness, and the holy.
- All material is studied in English translation. No previous knowledge of the subject is required or expected. Options exist for students to take modules in Greek and/or Latin languages as part of the programme in Greek & Roman Civilization
Tradition and influence. Study of Greek and Roman civilizations goes back to the foundation of Maynooth as a college in 1795. All the “greats” have studied Greece and Rome in some form, including (but not limited to) Karl Marx, W.B. Yeats, Seamus Heaney and J.K. Rowling. The Department enjoys an excellent reputation for both teaching and research. Staff are friendly, and relatively small class sizes allow students to get individual attention and feel at home. Interdisciplinary. Few other degrees offer as much, from heroic epic and lyric songs to philosophical systems to imperial politics. An all-round education that complements many other courses, laying the foundation for success in many careers and walks of life.
- 15 credit option only in 1st year.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
- Students who receive an overall 2:1 in first year (with a 2:1 in a Classical subject) may transfer to the BA in Classics in 2nd year.
GC1F15
- GREEK & ROMAN CIVILIZATION
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematical physics, or theoretical physics, is the study of the fundamental laws of nature that govern our existence; from the interactions of quarks and gluons through the properties of metals and the aerodynamics of flight, to the evolution of stars and galaxies. - Many of the technologies we now take for granted have their origins in fundamental physics research, including PET scanners, lasers, Wi-Fi and the world wide web.
- Theoretical physics challenges our deeply held notions of what the world is like, and has led to developments in thinking from philosophy to genetics and neuroscience.
- The study of Mathematical Physics at Maynooth University has a long and distinguished tradition, of over 200 years. Modern theoretical physics and applied mathematics are exciting and dynamic fields, and this excitement is reflected in the research projects which are pursued in the Department.
- As well as being introduced to the major ideas and developments in theoretical physics and applied mathematics, you will be equipped with the tools to meet current and future developments in science, engineering, finance and other technologies of the future.
- Maynooth offers the unique possibility of combining Mathematical Physics with subjects such as Music, Philosophy or Geography.
- 15 credit option only in 1st year.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
MP1F15
- MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
By studying Media & Cultural Studies, you’ll get to explore the ways that film, television, social media, print media and radio shape your lived experience. - You’ll have the opportunity to research and analyse media genres like advertising and documentary, media subcultures and fandoms, and media technologies and platforms like video streaming and TikTok.
- You’ll develop your employability and professionalism through your exploration of media and cultural industries and working lives.
- This subject is focused on critical dimensions of media and culture. To develop your skills in digital and audio-visual practice, you should apply to MH109 Media Studies
- Develop understanding of how media shapes our ways of being in the world
- Build knowledge of the key practices and processes of the ever growing and ever changing media and cultural industries
- Learn how to engage effectively and critically with an increasingly mediated world
MD1F15
- MEDIA & CULTURAL STUDIES
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Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
Anyone with an interest in history, archaeology, languages or literature will be captivated by the topics on offer in this subject: from Cú Chulainn to Clonmacnoise, all aspects of Medieval Celtic Studies are explored. The diverse range of topics encompasses heroic literature and pre-historic archaeology, Otherworld tales and mythology, and gender and sexuality in medieval Celtic societies. The links between Ireland and the wider Celtic world are explored through literature and archaeology. You can study texts through English translations, and gain insights into the society of medieval Ireland: a world of power struggles, cattle raids, love triangles, infidelity, warfare, kingship and much more. Along the way, students discover that certain fundamental human experiences and anxieties were the same in the early Middle Ages as they are in the twenty-first century. There is an option to study modules in both the Old Irish Language and Middle Welsh. Why choose this subject? - A world-leading centre for the study of Medieval Irish and Celtic Studies, the Department of Early Irish engages in teaching and research in the history, culture, language and literature of medieval Ireland and related societies. Our special strengths lie in the study of medieval Irish literature, in its growth and development and in its relationship to contemporary European culture, as well as in the study of the Early Irish language.
- A diverse and friendly Department, we offer a vibrant and stimulating experience for students. On the research front, the Department has in recent years received several prestigious grants, including a European Research Council grant to support research in the area of Early Medieval Irish literature and language, as well as two Irish Research Council Laureate Awards for frontier research on the history of medicine in medieval Ireland. The Department has also been at the forefront of several major collaborative projects in the area of Digital Humanities.
SG1F15
- MEDIEVAL CELTIC STUDIES
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
In the Politics programme you will explore the way politics shapes our lives, the different forms that politics can take, and how politics is organised in different countries. The degree combines the traditional study of political institutions (parties, parliaments, elections, policy-making and more), political ideologies (such as liberalism and socialism) and ideas (such as justice and freedom) with political sociology (examining the relationship between politics and society and how they shape each other). - Politics students do a placement with a focus on active citizenship, which provides “real world” experience of the issues raised in the teaching programme.
- You will explore Irish and international politics, including a focus on Europe, and Latin America. You will also have an opportunity to carry out research into political life, developing analytical, communication and presentation skills.
- We also offer the opportunity to study three Arts subjects to degree level - Philosophy, Politics and Economics. This 2nd and final year pathway is ideal for students who wish to gain a rich, empirically-based understanding of the challenges posed by globalisation and a globalised economy, political volatility and democracy.
- Politics students have the opportunity to spend a year abroad, to go on staff-led field trips and to become actively involved in the Sociology and Politics Society in the MSU (Maynooth Students’ Union).
- The Network on Power, Politics and Society (PPS) and the Maynooth University Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (MUCEES) are both important parts of the MU Politics programme.
- 15 credit option only in 1st year.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
PO1F15
- POLITICS
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
Psychological Studies in MH101 is a flexible degree option, ideal if you would like to learn about human behaviour in combination with another subject in the BA Arts Double Major pathway. - Unlike MH106 and MH209, Psychological Studies in MH101 will not lead to a professionally accredited degree, however Psychological Studies graduates may be eligible to apply for consideration to entry to a one-year postgraduate programme to achieve a professionally-accredited qualification in psychology (on a competitive basis - limited numbers).
- Flexibility that allows you to study key aspects of Psychology alongside other subjects of interest. For example, you may wish to combine Psychological Studies with subjects like Criminology, Business, Sociology or Geography.
- Teaching will be delivered by leading researchers in Psychology involved in the cutting-edge of the discipline.
- You will develop key transferable skills and learn to think psychologically about the world around you.
- 15 credit option only in 1st year.
- Only one of these can be taken as a double subject since the extra 15 credits for each are taught at the same time: Anthropology, Computer Science, German (beginner), History, International Development, Law, Sociology, Spanish (beginner).
PS1F15
- PSYCHOLOGICAL STUDIES
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
Statistics deals with the collection, analysis and interpretation of data. You will learn how to use statistical models and visualisation methods to unlock valuable information and hidden patterns in large volumes of data. - A degree in Statistics will provide you with tools to address problems of critical importance to humans such as climate change, developing cancer drugs or managing traffic flows.
- We offer Statistics as a Double Major subject which can be combined with most other academic subjects in the Bachelor of Arts degree. This flexibility means you can combine your interest in aspects of society with knowledge of the statistical tools needed to understand data from those fields.
- Data recording is happening at unprecedented levels on local, national and global scales. The ability to transform data into usable knowledge is a highly sought after and desirable skill in today’s workforce, be it in business, science, health or social sciences. This subject will strongly enhance your employability.
Notes
1. Students taking Statistics as a subject in first Arts must also take either Mathematical Studies (MS1F15) or Mathematics (Pure) (MT1F30) as a co-requisite. 2. Statistics and Mathematical Studies/Mathematics (Pure) may be combined in Years 2 and 3, but they do not have to be.
ST1F15
- STATISTICS
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
CTL1LSK
- SOCIAL ANALYSIS OF EVERYDAY LIFE
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
SK6USK
- UNIVERSAL CRITICAL SKILLS
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
ML1SK
- LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
CTL1LSK
- SOCIAL ANALYSIS OF EVERYDAY LIFE
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
SK1US2
- UNIVERSAL CRITICAL SKILLS
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
SK7USK
- UNIVERSAL CRITICAL SKILLS
|
Credits: 15
Not compulsory:
|
|
|
Year 2
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We explore environment, place, and space. We ask questions such as: How much climate change are we causing and how quickly? What sorts of attachments to home do people form and what happens when these are disrupted by migration? How is Ireland, and its regions, affected by economic globalisation? - Through Geography, you will get to the heart of contemporary issues such as climate and environmental change, geopolitics, the transformation of modern societies and cultures, global health and social inequality, and how cities are evolving.
- Geography education at Maynooth includes field trips, both in Ireland and overseas.
- Students can choose 15 or 30 credits of Geography in first year and progress into a Single Major degree from second year.
- In your third year, you may opt for an industry placement module (subject to availability) to experience what it’s like to work with an organisation outside the University.
- You will learn to think critically, analysing how and why our world changes. Geography paves the way for active citizenship and lifelong learning.
- Our students develop a special way of thinking ‘spatially’, with space and place at the forefront of their analysis, and learn a range of skills which appeal to employers.
- Our students are taught by international experts in the fields of environment, place and space.
GY2DM
- GEOGRAPHY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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German currently tops the list of the 5 most in-demand foreign languages in Ireland among employers (cpl.com). As the native language to almost 100 million people around the world, German is a critical language for business, science and culture. - Studying German at MU equips you with excellent language, communication, research, intercultural and analytical skills that help you stand out from the crowd.
- We have a wide range of exciting modules taught by international and local experts. Our students have opportunities to focus on linguistics, translation, history, politics, and the literary, visual and business cultures connected to German, alongside the language itself.
- If you’re a beginner, you can fast-track your progress by taking German as a double subject.
Why choose this subject? - Language AND culture: discover how people live, think and interact in German-speaking countries. Our programme is specially designed to allow you to develop advanced competence and fluency in all
- key language areas, while expanding your cultural understanding, intercultural awareness, and your critical thinking and evaluative abilities.
- Small classes taught by experts: our language, linguistics and culture modules are generally taught in small class groups - an environment in which students thrive. Our staff are keen researchers, and this is integrated into our teaching and approach.
- Year Abroad: every student is encouraged to spend a year in a German-speaking country. You can study at a German-speaking university – we have links with over 20 universities in Germany and Austria - or work as a language teacher or be an Erasmus intern (subject to availability).
- Employability: 1,200 positions are currently open to graduates with strong German proficiency and intercultural skills.
Every student will have the opportunity to spend a year in a German-speaking country as an Erasmus student, Language assistant or Erasmus intern (subject to availability). German at MU Erasmus links include: - large cities including Berlin, Munich and Vienna;
- smaller cities such as Graz, Potsdam, Leipzig and Bonn;
- towns like Bielefeld, Marburg and Tübingen.
Interested in teaching German? The Teaching Council of Ireland require all registered teachers of German to have spent a minimum of two months living in a German-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advise at least a three-month residency.
GN2DM
- GERMAN
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Choosing Law is ideal for people who want to experience it in their first year as part of a Bachelor of Arts degree and enjoy flexibility in their second and final year progression options. - Flexibility and choice: students who successfully complete their first year law modules have the option of transferring to one of our specialised Law degrees (MH502 BCL or MH501 LLB). Tailor your degree to your interests while developing a broad skill set which is highly valued by employers
- Law can be taken as a single or double subject in first year allowing students to combine the study of core law subjects with options from up to 31 subject areas.
- At the end of second year, students of the BCL and LLB degrees (having moved from the BA degree) may apply to complete a work placement year in law firm (subject to availability).
- All Law students - BA, BCL and LLB - may apply to complete a year studying abroad at one of our partner institutions.
- Get involved in our numerous student societies: the student Law Society, European Law Students’ Association or Student FLAC (Free Legal Advice Centre) Society.
Registration notes (please read carefully):
LW259
- Students who have passed LW152 Contract Law in Year 1 cannot take LW259 Contract Law.
- Students who only took 15 credits of Law in Year 1 and who did not take LW152 must take LW259.
LW253
- Students who have passed LW158 Constitutional Law in Year 1 cannot take LW253 Constitutional Law.
- Students who only took either 15 or 22.5 credits of Law in Year 1 must take LW253.
LW2ADM
- LAW
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
Admission to 2nd Mathematics (Pure) (MT2DM) is conditional on students obtaining a mark of 50% or better in the 1st year Mathematics (Pure) (MT1F30/MT1DM/MT1TDM) Examination.
MT2DM
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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'Philosophy' is an ancient Greek word that means ‘love of wisdom’. The wisdom philosophy seeks is concerned with the big questions that everyone will eventually encounter in his or her life: What is happiness? What is love? Is there a god? What is the meaning of it all? Philosophy approaches these questions both historically and systematically. Thinking philosophically requires knowledge of what those who have come before us have thought; but it also requires the ability to evaluate these positions critically. Philosophy explores the foundations of all of reality and of all knowledge. To mention a few examples, there is a philosophy of language and a philosophy of music; political philosophy; ethics; a philosophy of science and a philosophy of religion. There is nothing that cannot be questioned philosophically, and there is no interest that cannot be combined with philosophy. Philosophy is not the most practical of subjects. Yet every society needs philosophers—people who do not just live, love, work, raise children, etc., but who seek answers to the question “why”. This is the case particularly in the world today, which is changing so rapidly that one needs a solid grounding in order not to get lost. Why choose this subject? - A philosophy degree is not a qualification for any particular career; rather, one studies philosophy to lead an 'examined life', as Socrates put it. Studying philosophy is an investment in one’s life.
- This having been said, the expertise gained in philosophy is of great value in many different areas. Philosophy graduates are valued for their quick intelligence, ability to reason deeply, clearly and independently, and for their ability to take an overview on the problem or situation confronting them.
- At Maynooth, philosophy can also be studied in conjunction with mathematics and computer science (BSc in Computational Thinking). This degree pathway brings philosophy to bear on some of the cutting-edge issues of contemporary society.
PH2DM
- PHILOSOPHY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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This option will suit students interested in taking a language with Business (International). - International Business is about conducting business in different countries and managing people and organisations in an increasingly globalised world.
- To effectively compete in this changing business landscape, organisations must offer goods and services across nations, regions, and continents outside of their home market and must also manage increasingly diverse workforces as nations, cultures, and markets converge.
- International Business provides the strategies, insights, and skills to respond to these challenges, enabling organisations to manage diverse people and operations and to compete for customers across the world.
- Business (International) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. a language, Anthropology, Geography amongst others. Languages available include Chinese Studies, French, German, Nua-Ghaeilge and Spanish.
- Our International Business degree is ideal for students with a global outlook who wish to work either in local firms competing abroad or in subsidiaries of foreign multinationals, located either here or abroad.
- International Business students at Maynooth are offered a wide variety of choice. We offer modules that will develop both core business management knowledge as well as modules that provide a more specialist understanding of the international aspects of business.
- International Business students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what they learn in university with insights into another culture.
International Business is about conducting business in different countries and managing people and organisations in an increasingly globalised world. To effectively compete in this changing business landscape, organisations must offer goods and services across nations, regions, and continents outside of their home market and must also manage increasingly diverse workforces as nations, cultures, and markets converge. International Business provides the strategies, insights, and skills to respond to these challenges, enabling organisations to manage diverse people and operations and to compete for customers across the world.
If you are considering possibly pursuing a career as a second level teacher (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you MUST choose Business (Management) as a Double Major or Major subject. The Business (International Business) and the Business (Marketing) in Arts pathways will NOT guarantee the credits in Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN2IDM
- BUSINESS (INTERNATIONAL)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Management is about taking ideas and converting them into action: designing, making, and delivering products and services that customers and citizens want or need. Essentially, it is about organising to get things done. - Managers are generalists and organisers; they need to know the fundamentals of all major aspects of business, from thinking about the business as a whole and its strategic direction, to organising the workforce, managing the effective use of information technology, managing supply chains locally and globally, and effectively managing costs and revenues.
- Managers are at the heart of how these complex functions are seamlessly combined to make the world look simple to customers. Our degree in Business Management (MH404) will equip you with the tools necessary to achieve this.
- Our faculty are a blend of international and local industry experts who bring profound insights into the practicality and complexity of Management.
- Management students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture.
- If you are interested in a career as a second level teacher of business, Business (Management) is the subject to choose from the three business subjects available in MH101.
- Management students at Maynooth are offered unparalleled choice and flexibility. This degree offers you insights into all of the major functions of business, as well as the opportunity to undertake specialist options in the subjects you most enjoy so that you can shape your degree based on your own strengths and interests.
Management is about taking ideas and converting them into action: designing, making, and delivering products and services that customers and citizens want or need. Essentially, it is about organising to get things done. Managers are generalists and organisers; they need to know the fundamentals of all major aspects of business, from thinking about the business as a whole and its strategic direction, to organising the workforce, managing the effective use of information technology, managing supply chains locally and globally, and effectively managing costs and revenues. Managers are at the heart of how these complex functions are seamlessly combined to make the world look simple to customers.
If you are considering possibly pursuing a career as a second level teacher (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you MUST choose Business (Management) as a Double Major or Major subject. The Business (International Business) and the Business (Marketing) in Arts pathways will NOT guarantee the credits in Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN2MDM
- BUSINESS (MANAGEMENT)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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- Marketing is all about customers, understanding their needs, how they behave and why they buy, so that businesses can build long term relationships with them. Creating and managing customers are central themes to what we teach and research at the Maynooth University School of Business.
- Marketing is a wide and varied discipline, connecting a firm to its customers in the marketplace. It is fast-paced and dynamic, interlinking with every other area of business to understand how value is created and captured for the company and its customers.
- Marketing is critical to the growth of a business – a key challenge from small local businesses to large global corporations. Using both traditional and digital tools, marketers must understand customer needs in order to create innovative products and service to meet those needs.
Marketing is both profoundly local and global, selling to one individual customer or to a large international market. Our faculty bring a rich and diverse expertise from both local and international markets across a broad range of topic areas, including digital marketing, online retailing, branding, communications and consumer behaviour. Together we offer students deep insights into the practicalities and applications of marketing, from what makes customers tick to how to make the best of market opportunities. Our approach to Marketing provides students with a deep understanding of the marketing function, as well as wider management and business processes so you can deliver value to customers and your organisation. Options are available which allow you to specialise your degree according to your strengths and interests in the topic areas you enjoy most. Marketing students also have the option of taking a four-year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture. Business (Marketing) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. Psychological Studies, Geography, Law, Anthropology, a language amongst others.
Creating a customer is central to Marketing. Effective marketing requires an understanding of the business as a whole and of the managerial value creation and capture process. Marketing is critical for the organic growth of a business – a key challenge for small to medium enterprises in Ireland and worldwide, as well as multinational organisations located in Ireland. It helps organisations to create value and profits by enabling them to better understand the needs of customers in order to provide them with innovative products and services.
If you are considering possibly pursuing a career as a second level teacher (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you MUST choose Business (Management) as a Double Major or Major subject. The Business (International Business) and the Business (Marketing) in Arts pathways will NOT guarantee the credits in Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN2KDM
- BUSINESS (MARKETING)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Criminology is the study of crime, criminal behaviour and the criminal justice system. - At Maynooth, we offer a unique opportunity to study Criminology as part of a broad based Arts degree.
- You can choose Criminology in combination with other Arts subjects (including Law, Psychological Studies etc.) in first year, and then choose to continue with Criminology in second and third year.
- Maynooth University is the only University in the Republic of Ireland offering the opportunity to study Criminology as part of an Arts programme, and one of the few to offer a Law and Criminology degree (if you move from MH101 to MH502 in second year).
- Unique interdisciplinary programme with perspectives from sociology, psychology and economics as well as law.
- Flexibility and choice, including options to transfer into law.
This subject is for students taking Criminology and Politics within MH101 (ARTS)
Notes re. LW157 (Criminal Law I)
- Students should not take LW292 (Advanced Criminal Law) unless you have already successfully completed LW157.
- Students should not take LW271 if you have previously successfully completed LW157.
LW2CPDM
- CRIMINOLOGY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Notes re. LW157 (Criminal Law I)
- You cannot take LW292 (Advanced Criminal Law) unless you have already successfully completed LW157.
- Students should not take LW271 if you have previously successfully completed LW157.
LW2CDM
- CRIMINOLOGY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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History is the systematic examination of human experience over time. It attempts to explain the origins and evolution of the societies we live in, from as many points of view as possible. - History explores the complex processes of social and economic change, the choice of one set of political or ethical values over another, the context in which new ideas arise, and much more. The written word is one way of gathering information about the past, but new technologies and research methods allow for the study of history to take place through other mediums.
- The Department’s long-standing reputation for excellence and leadership in historical scholarship both in Ireland and internationally is one reason for the popularity of History at Maynooth. We have also kept our discipline vibrant, engaging and of practical value to students. We provide a solid grounding in the practice of history and boast expertise in a wide range of specialist topics such as life in medieval Ireland, the intersection of American and world history, the First World War, and gender and sexual politics.
Semester 1. Students must take one only from the following group: HY218, HY240, HY293 Semester 2. Students must take one only from the following group: HY219, HY241, HY294
HY2DM
- HISTORY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Beginning with words on a page, English is a world-facing subject: it takes you across historical periods, cultures, locations and genres, from poetry and drama to the novel, film, and creative writing too. As a student of English, you will learn about: - Different literary forms from poetry and drama to the novel and film, as well as creative writing.
- The conditions that shape literature from history and geography to questions of gender, race, and class.
- How literary texts enable us to understand our own complex world.
- Different approaches to and theories of literature.
- How different schools of critical thought or areas have shaped and reshaped the subject of English literary studies.
Engaging in critical debate about the meaning and value of literature will help you to: - Foster your critical and creative abilities.
- Develop awareness of the multi-dimensional nature of human situations.
- Approach problems with an open and enquiring mind.
- Gain analytical skills, finely-honed writing skills and develop critical thinking – skills which appeal greatly to future employers. Maynooth University Department of English boasts notable expertise in a wide range of literature from the early modern to the present day, and from Irish literature to American, African, Arab and global literatures. Our lecturers’ research expertise informs their teaching and provides you as a student with current critical thinking in the broad field of English studies. Our degree reflects the changing, global nature of English language literature while also providing you with a thorough understanding of established literary traditions.
EN2DM
- ENGLISH
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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International development looks at the development challenges and opportunities confronting people and societies living in the Global South (including Africa, Asia and Latin America), while addressing the myriad of global challenges associated with sustainable development for the planet as a whole. As a student of International Development in the Bachelor of Arts degree you will explore issues such as globalisation, climate change, food security, poverty, conflict, disasters and other humanitarian emergencies, human rights, health, education, gender, inequality and empowerment, from an international development perspective. - Gain an understanding of development activism and how development can be planned, organised and managed to meet the needs of all, especially the most marginalised communities around the world.
- We will focus on the roles and effectiveness of international and national development actors (UN, Governments, NGO’s and Civil Society groups) and market actors in meeting development challenges, and in providing a better world for all.
KD2DM
- INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. - Our Mathematics degrees aim to bridge the gap between school Mathematics and current frontiers of knowledge. You will learn to think hard and rigorously about questions and to solve new problems – invaluable skills that can be transferred to any area of life and any job you hold in future.
- A degree in a Mathematical discipline opens the door to jobs in a variety of fields such as finance, trading, insurance, information technology, education, data analysis, scientific research and development.
- The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject.
- The academic staff in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics have a diverse range of research interests in areas including algebra, analysis, data analysis, dynamics, geometry, number theory, statistical modelling and topology.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
1. MS2DM students can progress to MS3SM, MS3MJ or MS3DM.
MS2DM
- MATHEMATICAL STUDIES
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
Admission to 2nd Mathematics (Pure) (MT2DM) is conditional on students obtaining a mark of 50% or better in the 1st year Mathematics (Pure) (MT1F30/MT1DM/MT1TDM) Examination.
MT2DM
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Anthropology is the comparative study of human society and culture. By closely observing and analyzing different ways of life around the world, from tribal villages to Wall Street offices, anthropologists create new knowledge about human nature and what it means to be human today. - You will learn how to research cultural practices and social institutions such as: religion and ritual, kinship and family, economy and the market, politics and government, language and performance, science and technology, traditional healing and biomedicine, and much more.
- You can also study forensic anthropology, which applies skeletal analysis and archaeological techniques to solve criminal cases.
- You will engage in practical, experiential learning, including ethnographic fieldwork projects.
- Anthropology fosters creativity and imagination by helping us to think beyond our own pre-conceived world views. By cultivating better understanding across cultures, anthropologists also confront forms of prejudice, injustice and inequality.
AN2DM
- ANTHROPOLOGY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Economics is a social science that helps us to understand the behaviour of decision makers such as consumers, firms, workers, governments, investors, central banks, policy makers. - Economists are not defined by the subject matter that they study but rather by the way they approach a given topic. Economics provides a framework for understanding problems and learning how to solve them.
- There is a misconception about economics. People tend to think that economics is all about money and profits, but economics is much more than that. It is about understanding the past, predicting the future, and making evidence-based policy recommendations.
- Economists aim to find feasible solutions to help improve people's lives. This involves tackling important societal problems such as: how to reduce gender in equality and racial discrimination, how to create international cooperation to protect the environment, how to break the poverty trap in less-developed countries, how to reduce crime.
- Economists use game theory to analyse strategic interaction to answer questions such as: What is the optimal pricing and advertisement strategy for a firm? How should we set political campaign financing rules to improve the quality of our democracy? How should patents be designed to foster innovation but not curtail competition?
- Economists use statistical techniques to understand the market and how people respond to incentives. By determining causal relationships, economists can make evidence-based policy recommendations at the firm and state level.
Note The optional module FN205 is a prerequisite for FN307 which is an optional module in the third year of the course. If students do not opt to take FN205 in Year 2 , they can do so in Year 3 but will then not be able to take FN307 as both modules are offered in semester 1.
EC2DM
- ECONOMICS
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Finance is taught as an application of Economics. It examines the role of government and international organisations in the management and regulation of financial markets. Finance is the study of investment risk and reward. You don’t need to have any previous knowledge of Finance, only an interest in how the financial sector and the economy works and a desire to know more. The ability to work in a second language is an advantage for Finance graduates. As an Arts student, you may combine Finance with Chinese, French, German, or Spanish – all are available at beginner/non-beginner level (except Chinese - only beginner level). The Department is made up of an accomplished group of academics with an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching.
FN2DM
- FINANCE
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Music Technology is a unique opportunity to combine Music Technology with Music, Computer Science and a wide range of other disciplines. - Strikes a balance between practice and theory. You gain hands-on experience of the practical skills involved in music technology while learning about essential concepts.
- Wide in scope, including recording and sound engineering, computer music programming, sound design, composition, acoustics and psychoacoustics.
- Studying Music Technology offers an opportunity to develop and combine your creative and technical abilities. Facilities include a recording studio; a live room; a 5.1 mastering studio; Mac laboratories utilising Pro Tools software; field recording resources.
- Our programme is designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical and theoretical work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in the areas that interest you the most in your final year. Final year students oversee significant recording and composition projects, or work towards instrument and software development.
MU2TDM
- MUSIC TECHNOLOGY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Students of the Modern Irish course study the language (spoken and written) and aspects of literature and culture. - Our students learn about the diversity and rich heritage of the Irish language, and also acquire skills which will be advantageous to them throughout their lives, irrespective of which career they choose. They will accomplish this in a friendly, open Department that has a strong commitment to Irish and to learning.
- Spoken and written Irish are obviously central to our course and students are given every encouragement and support to improve their oral and written skills. To this end, students normally spend a period of residence in the Gaeltacht.
- Our modules allow students to gain a deep appreciation of contemporary Irish literature - poetry, prose and drama. Modules are also offered on earlier periods of Irish literature, including Bardic Poetry, the Fenian Cycle and poetry of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. There also are optional modules on Scottish Gaelic, on Irish personal and place names, on the sean-nós singing tradition, and on Irish-language oral traditions and performing arts. In addition to practical workshops and tutorials on written and spoken Irish, we also offer modules on the sociolinguistics of Irish and on the phonology and dialectology of the modern language.
Many aspects of Irish studies are researched in the Department, both language and literature, old and new, as well as other related areas of study. Among the courses offered are Linguistics, Folklore, Literary Criticism, Scottish Gaelic, Early Modern Irish, Irish Place and Personal Names, the sean-nós singing tradition, and Irish-language/ Gaeltacht performing arts. Irish is studied both as a living language and as a valuable part of Irish and European cultural heritage. All lectures, tutorials and workshops are through the medium of the Irish language, as is all communication with the Department, and while the first-year course places significant emphasis on the written language (i.e. grammar), no prior knowledge of grammar is necessary. There is an Irish language support centre, An Droichead, which provides assistance to students, first year students in particular, who are struggling with the language. This works on a peer-tutoring basis, with second and third year students tutoring groups of no more than five students – allowing students to ask questions, to practice structures, etc Déanann mic léinn na Nua-Ghaeilge staidéar ar an teanga (labhartha agus scríofa) agus ar ghnéithe den litríocht agus den chultúr. - Foghlaimíonn ár mic léinn faoin ilghnéitheacht agus faoin oidhreacht shaibhir atá ag an nGaeilge, chomh maith le scileanna a bheidh úsáideach dóibh le linn a saoil, is cuma cén ghairm a roghnóidh siad. Baineann siad an méid sin amach i Roinn atá cairdiúil agus oscailte agus atá tiomanta don Ghaeilge agus don fhoghlaim.
- Tá ról lárnach ag an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha inár gcúrsa agus tugtar gach spreagadh do mhic léinn a scileanna labhartha agus scríofa a fheabhsú. Chuige sin, caitheann mic léinn tréimhse chónaithe sa Ghaeltacht de ghnáth.
- Tugtar modúil ar an litríocht chomhaimseartha ionas gur féidir le mic léinn eolas grinn a chur ar fhilíocht, ar phrós agus ar dhrámaíocht na Gaeilge. Cuirtear modúil ar fáil fosta ar an
- litríocht a bhaineann le tréimhsí níos luaithe, ina measc sin, filíocht na mBard, an Fhiannaíocht, filíocht an 17ú haois, an 18ú haois agus an 19ú haois. Tá modúil roghnacha ar fáil ar Ghaeilge na hAlban, ar ainmneacha pearsanta agus logainmneacha na hÉireann, agus thraidisiún
- na hamhránaíochta, agus ar thaibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta. Mar aon le ceardlanna praiticiúla agus ranganna teagaisc ar an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha, cuirimid modúl ar shochtheangeolaíocht na Gaeilge agus ar chanúineolaíocht na nuatheanga ar fáil.
- Is iomaí gné de léann na Gaeilge a ndéantar taighde uirthi sa Roinn, idir theanga agus litríocht, idir shean agus nua, chomh maith le réimsí léinn atá gaolmhar don teanga. Orthu sin tá, mar shampla, an Teangeolaíocht, an Béaloideas,
- An Chritic Liteartha, Gaeilge na hAlban, an Nua-Ghaeilge Mhoch, Logainmneacha agus Ainmneacha Pearsanta na Gaeilge, Traidisiún na hAmhránaíochta, Taibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta, agus an Cleachtas Cruthaitheach. Pléitear leis an nGaeilge mar theanga bheo agus mar chuid luachmhar d’oidhreacht chultúrtha na hÉireann agus na hEorpa.
- Trí mheán na Gaeilge a bhíonn na léachtaí, na ranganna teagaisc agus na ceardlanna ar fad, agus déantar gach cumarsáid leis an Roinn trí mheán na Gaeilge. Cé go gcuireann cúrsa na chéad bhliana béim shuntasach ar an teanga scríofa (i.e gramadach), ní theastaíonn réamheolas ar an ngramadach uait.
- Tá ionad tacaíochta Gaeilge, An Droichead, ar fáil a chuireann cabhair ar fáil do mhic léinn, mic léinn na chéad bhliana go háirithe, atá ag streachailt leis an teanga. Piartheagasc atá i gceist, agus mic léinn na dara agus na tríú bliana i mbun grúpaí beaga a stiúradh. Ní bhíonn níos mó ná cúigear mac léinn i ngach grúpa agus bíonn deis ag mic léinn ceisteanna a chur, cleachtadh a dhéanamh ar struchtúir, srl.
NG2DM
- NUA-GHAEILGE
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Computer Science at Maynooth University is the study of the principals and use of computers and software. Students enjoy the huge benefit of studying other Arts subjects with Computer Science in first year with options to take different degree paths afterwards. Advanced topics such as computer vision, theoretical computer studies, robotics, cryptography and artificial intelligence may be studied, depending on the pathway students take. - The Department of Computer Science at Maynooth University was founded in 1987 and is located in the Eolas Building. Our laboratories and equipment provide excellent facilities for practical work and all our courses include a mix of lectures and lab work. Many of our students also spend time working in industry as part of their degree, which enhances their employment opportunities once they graduate.
- We endeavour to provide a supportive and enjoyable atmosphere for learning through our Computer Science Support Centre, extensive assistance during practical work and we are always available outside of lectures to help our students.
CS2DM
- COMPUTER SCIENCE
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Studying Music at Maynooth, Ireland’s largest university music department, offers unparalleled choice and expertise, from performance to computer programming, from ancient traditions to contemporary experience, from high art to heavy metal. - Our programmes are designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical, compositional and academic work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in areas that really interest you the most in your final year.
- Performance, composition, music history (musicology including pop/rock) and the music of other cultures (ethnomusicology) are just a selection of different aspects of music you will study in the Music programme.
- Exciting and varied programme of practical, compositional and academic work.
- Students participate in ensembles such as the Chamber Choir and Traditional Music Ensemble.
- In your third year, you have the option to specialise in performance, composition or musicology. Some of the modules available include ‘Music and Entrepreneurship’, ‘Opera in Context’ and 'Popular Music Studies'.
- For those considering teaching Music at second level, the Teaching Council requirements are met by studying Music in the MH101 degree.
Registration Notes: 1. MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348. 2. BMUS students transferring into ARTS/MH101: you must take MU218 instead of MU217.
MU2DM
- MUSIC
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Sociology is a subject that opens your mind, that helps you to connect your own lived experience to the wider social and economic context, and that offers the opportunity to engage in an empowering form of student-led learning. Our graduates often speak of studying Sociology as a “life changing” experience. The Sociology Department is widely acknowledged as a leading national and international centre of teaching and research excellence, as well as an exemplar of public sociology and engagement. We seek to equip you with the necessary resources and skills – intellectual, methodological, communicative and active citizenship – to meet the challenges of our fast-changing contemporary society and to contribute productively to social transformation.
Sociology is the study of human social life, groups and societies. It is a discipline that teaches you to: - develop critical skills and powers of argumentation based on empirical evidence.
- become a creative thinker and to think outside of the box.
- engage in a constructive enterprise, oriented toward the promotion of equality and social justice.
Taking Politics and/or Sociology to degree level is an ideal preparation to teach Politics and Society at second level following a Professional Master of Education (PME).
SO2DM
- SOCIOLOGY
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
This subject is for students taking Sociology and Criminology.
SO2CDM
- SOCIOLOGY (WITH CRIMINOLOGY)
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
This subject is for students taking Sociology and Politics.
SO2PDM
- SOCIOLOGY (WITH POLITICS)
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
If you want to achieve a high level of competency in a modern European language, as well as learn about Spanish and Latin American culture and society more generally, studying Spanish as part of our BA degree is for you. - As a student of Spanish, you will have a twin focus on language and culture. Through language classes and with supporting material such as film, literature and cultural events, you will aim to become a fluent speaker and writer of Spanish. If you’re a beginner, you can take intensive language classes.
- Over the course of your degree programme, you will receive an excellent grounding in all aspects of Spanish language through core modules in Spanish Grammar, Professional Spanish and Translation. In your second and final years you can choose from a broad range of optional modules, such as Linguistics, Spanish Literature and Cinema, Latin American Literature and Cinema, Catalan and Portuguese.
- This is a unique opportunity and a "lifechanging" experience, as any of our past students who have spent a year abroad can attest. You also have the opportunity to work as a Teaching Assistant in Spain (subject to availability), which is a great asset to have on your CV.
Students interested in teaching Spanish should note that the Teaching Council of Ireland require all registered teachers of Spanish to have spent a minimum of two months living in a Spanish-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advise at least a three-month residency. Students who successfully complete a year abroad as part of their programme are conferred with a 4-year BA International.
SPA2DM
- SPANISH
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
You will study Accounting (the language of finance and business) along with up to three other Arts subjects in first year. The unique flexibility of the MU Arts programme provides you with the option of transferring in to one of our designated accounting programmes at the end of first year. - By choosing to study accounting, you are opening up the possibility of becoming a professional accountant which offers a rewarding career with international mobility and high earning potential.
- You will engage with expert faculty, who foster an engaging, friendly, supportive and dynamic learning environment.
- Understanding the language of Accounting will be advantageous to you if you work in a business or set up your own business.
- By choosing to study accounting, you could also pursue a career in teaching.
- The extensive range of subjects available in the BA programme allows you to combine the study of accounting with other subjects that suit your interests. No prior knowledge of accounting is required, as we teach it from first principles.
- Become a highly sought-after graduate possessing the technical accounting and transferable skills required of future business leaders which allows students to pursue rewarding career opportunities.
- Depending on your 1st year results, you may have the opportunity to move from MH101 into one of our specialised degree programmes in accounting, thereby opening up further study and work experience opportunities.
AC2DM
- ACCOUNTING
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
A wide range of subjects including Chinese language, culture, society and history are covered in this course. Chinese Studies is offered at two levels, one for absolute beginners and one for those who already have some prior knowledge of the language. - In third year you will have the exciting opportunity to study in one of Maynooth University’s partner universities in China. This will improve your language ability, foster intercultural competence and help you to acquire the skills and confidence that you need in today’s job market. Throughout your year abroad Maynooth University’s International Office and Beijing office staff will be there to support you.
- Learning Chinese connects you to over 1.3 billion speakers of Mandarin Chinese worldwide.
- As Ireland rapidly expands its trade in goods and services with China, there is a growing demand for graduates with strong Chinese language skills and an understanding of Chinese society and culture.
- The introduction of Mandarin Chinese as a curricular subject for the Leaving Certificate examination means that there is an emerging need for teachers of Chinese at post-primary level.
- At Maynooth University you have the opportunity to study Chinese along with a wide variety of other subjects. You can choose subjects you are familiar with or entirely new ones! Learning Chinese provides a window to understanding the world. Learning about the Chinese language, culture and society will help you to acquire new skills and develop unique interests that will be of considerable value to you in your future career. These skills and interests will make you stand out from the crowd and enable you to be more competitive in the global market.
CN2DM
- CHINESE STUDIES
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Students have been studying French at Maynooth since the foundation of the college in 1795. - French is a world language, spoken by 300 million people on several continents and in French territories overseas.
- If you would like to attain a high level of competency in a modern European and world language, as well as learn about French and Francophone cultures past and present, studying French as part of our degree programme is the path for you.
- Over the course of your degree programme, you will receive an excellent grounding in all aspects of French language through core modules in French Grammar, Writing in French, Oral Expression, and Listening Skills. In second year and final year, you may choose from a range of optional modules in French and Francophone culture, such as Politics and Ideas, Literature and Society, Women’s Writing, Linguistics, Translation and Cinema (depending on availability).
What distinguishes French at Maynooth is a strong tradition of teaching the French language, literature and culture, with much teaching taking place through the medium of French (for those taking the non-beginner stream). - Maynooth has a network of exchanges with universities in countries where French is spoken. Studying French opens a world of exciting opportunities.
- As part of this programme, you may also spend a year studying at a French-speaking university or working as a language teacher in France (subject to availability).
- At Maynooth University, students gain a thorough grounding in the language and acquire a familiarity with a world language expressing vibrant cultures and diverse histories. French is offered in a friendly, supportive environment at non-beginner level (Leaving Certificate H4 in French or equivalent recommended) from first year, and also at beginner level (no minimum requirement - but the recommendation is to attend all lectures from the beginning of semester one).
- Students interested in teaching French should note that the Teaching Council of Ireland requires all registered teachers of French to have spent some time living in a French-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advises at least a three-month residency. Students who successfully complete a year abroad as part of their programme are conferred with a 4-year BA International.
FR2DM
- FRENCH
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Greek and Roman Civilization involves study of the history, literature, art, philosophy and material culture of two of the most influential periods in human history. As an interdisciplinary subject, Classics spans an immense range of human experience over some 1700 years, from the late Bronze Age through to the “fall” of the Roman Empire. Greek and Roman civilizations were of foundational importance for medieval, Renaissance and modern Europe, and can claim an almost global impact. - In Maynooth, students are introduced to the complexities and diversity of the ancient Mediterranean cultures, through many perspectives. Themes explored in individual modules include mythology and the gods; war and heroism; colonies, cities, civilization and “the barbarian”; ideologies of empire; people and elites; women and gender; friendship, sexuality, and norms of beauty; ideas of justice, law, happiness, and the holy.
- All material is studied in English translation. No previous knowledge of the subject is required or expected. Options exist for students to take modules in Greek and/or Latin languages as part of the programme in Greek & Roman Civilization
Tradition and influence. Study of Greek and Roman civilizations goes back to the foundation of Maynooth as a college in 1795. All the “greats” have studied Greece and Rome in some form, including (but not limited to) Karl Marx, W.B. Yeats, Seamus Heaney and J.K. Rowling. The Department enjoys an excellent reputation for both teaching and research. Staff are friendly, and relatively small class sizes allow students to get individual attention and feel at home. Interdisciplinary. Few other degrees offer as much, from heroic epic and lyric songs to philosophical systems to imperial politics. An all-round education that complements many other courses, laying the foundation for success in many careers and walks of life.
GC2DM
- GREEK & ROMAN CIVILIZATION
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematical physics, or theoretical physics, is the study of the fundamental laws of nature that govern our existence; from the interactions of quarks and gluons through the properties of metals and the aerodynamics of flight, to the evolution of stars and galaxies. - Many of the technologies we now take for granted have their origins in fundamental physics research, including PET scanners, lasers, Wi-Fi and the world wide web.
- Theoretical physics challenges our deeply held notions of what the world is like, and has led to developments in thinking from philosophy to genetics and neuroscience.
- The study of Mathematical Physics at Maynooth University has a long and distinguished tradition, of over 200 years. Modern theoretical physics and applied mathematics are exciting and dynamic fields, and this excitement is reflected in the research projects which are pursued in the Department.
- As well as being introduced to the major ideas and developments in theoretical physics and applied mathematics, you will be equipped with the tools to meet current and future developments in science, engineering, finance and other technologies of the future.
- Maynooth offers the unique possibility of combining Mathematical Physics with subjects such as Music, Philosophy or Geography.
Note: Students must consult with the course director before choosing their optional modules.
MP2ADM
- MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
By studying Media & Cultural Studies, you’ll get to explore the ways that film, television, social media, print media and radio shape your lived experience. - You’ll have the opportunity to research and analyse media genres like advertising and documentary, media subcultures and fandoms, and media technologies and platforms like video streaming and TikTok.
- You’ll develop your employability and professionalism through your exploration of media and cultural industries and working lives.
- This subject is focused on critical dimensions of media and culture. To develop your skills in digital and audio-visual practice, you should apply to MH109 Media Studies
- Develop understanding of how media shapes our ways of being in the world
- Build knowledge of the key practices and processes of the ever growing and ever changing media and cultural industries
- Learn how to engage effectively and critically with an increasingly mediated world
MD2CDM
- MEDIA & CULTURAL STUDIES
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Anyone with an interest in history, archaeology, languages or literature will be captivated by the topics on offer in this subject: from Cú Chulainn to Clonmacnoise, all aspects of Medieval Celtic Studies are explored. The diverse range of topics encompasses heroic literature and pre-historic archaeology, Otherworld tales and mythology, and gender and sexuality in medieval Celtic societies. The links between Ireland and the wider Celtic world are explored through literature and archaeology. You can study texts through English translations, and gain insights into the society of medieval Ireland: a world of power struggles, cattle raids, love triangles, infidelity, warfare, kingship and much more. Along the way, students discover that certain fundamental human experiences and anxieties were the same in the early Middle Ages as they are in the twenty-first century. There is an option to study modules in both the Old Irish Language and Middle Welsh. Why choose this subject? - A world-leading centre for the study of Medieval Irish and Celtic Studies, the Department of Early Irish engages in teaching and research in the history, culture, language and literature of medieval Ireland and related societies. Our special strengths lie in the study of medieval Irish literature, in its growth and development and in its relationship to contemporary European culture, as well as in the study of the Early Irish language.
- A diverse and friendly Department, we offer a vibrant and stimulating experience for students. On the research front, the Department has in recent years received several prestigious grants, including a European Research Council grant to support research in the area of Early Medieval Irish literature and language, as well as two Irish Research Council Laureate Awards for frontier research on the history of medicine in medieval Ireland. The Department has also been at the forefront of several major collaborative projects in the area of Digital Humanities.
SG2DM
- MEDIEVAL CELTIC STUDIES
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
In the Politics programme you will explore the way politics shapes our lives, the different forms that politics can take, and how politics is organised in different countries. The degree combines the traditional study of political institutions (parties, parliaments, elections, policy-making and more), political ideologies (such as liberalism and socialism) and ideas (such as justice and freedom) with political sociology (examining the relationship between politics and society and how they shape each other). - Politics students do a placement with a focus on active citizenship, which provides “real world” experience of the issues raised in the teaching programme.
- You will explore Irish and international politics, including a focus on Europe, and Latin America. You will also have an opportunity to carry out research into political life, developing analytical, communication and presentation skills.
- We also offer the opportunity to study three Arts subjects to degree level - Philosophy, Politics and Economics. This 2nd and final year pathway is ideal for students who wish to gain a rich, empirically-based understanding of the challenges posed by globalisation and a globalised economy, political volatility and democracy.
- Politics students have the opportunity to spend a year abroad, to go on staff-led field trips and to become actively involved in the Sociology and Politics Society in the MSU (Maynooth Students’ Union).
- The Network on Power, Politics and Society (PPS) and the Maynooth University Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (MUCEES) are both important parts of the MU Politics programme.
PO2DM
- POLITICS
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Psychological Studies in MH101 is a flexible degree option, ideal if you would like to learn about human behaviour in combination with another subject in the BA Arts Double Major pathway. - Unlike MH106 and MH209, Psychological Studies in MH101 will not lead to a professionally accredited degree, however Psychological Studies graduates may be eligible to apply for consideration to entry to a one-year postgraduate programme to achieve a professionally-accredited qualification in psychology (on a competitive basis - limited numbers).
- Flexibility that allows you to study key aspects of Psychology alongside other subjects of interest. For example, you may wish to combine Psychological Studies with subjects like Criminology, Business, Sociology or Geography.
- Teaching will be delivered by leading researchers in Psychology involved in the cutting-edge of the discipline.
- You will develop key transferable skills and learn to think psychologically about the world around you.
PS2DM
- PSYCHOLOGICAL STUDIES
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Statistics deals with the collection, analysis and interpretation of data. You will learn how to use statistical models and visualisation methods to unlock valuable information and hidden patterns in large volumes of data. - A degree in Statistics will provide you with tools to address problems of critical importance to humans such as climate change, developing cancer drugs or managing traffic flows.
- We offer Statistics as a Double Major subject which can be combined with most other academic subjects in the Bachelor of Arts degree. This flexibility means you can combine your interest in aspects of society with knowledge of the statistical tools needed to understand data from those fields.
- Data recording is happening at unprecedented levels on local, national and global scales. The ability to transform data into usable knowledge is a highly sought after and desirable skill in today’s workforce, be it in business, science, health or social sciences. This subject will strongly enhance your employability.
Notes
1. ST2ADM is for students taking Statistics as a double major along with another Arts subject but not Mathematical Studies or Mathematics (Pure).
2. A Pass or Pass by Compensation result in either 1st Year (Arts) Mathematical Studies (MS1F15) or 1st Year (Arts) Mathematics (Pure) (MT1F30) is required for entry to any 2nd Year (Arts) Statistics programme. However, students do not need to have taken 1st Year (Arts) Statistics to enter 2nd Year (Arts) Statistics.
ST2ADM
- STATISTICS
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Notes
1. ST2DM is for students taking Statistics as a double major along with 2nd Year Double Major Mathematical Studies or 2nd Year Double Major Mathematics (Pure).
2. A Pass or Pass by Compensation result in either 1st Year (Arts) Mathematical Studies (MS1F15) or 1st Year (Arts) Mathematics (Pure) (MT1F30) is required for entry to any 2nd Year (Arts) Statistics programme. However, students do not need to have taken 1st Year (Arts) Statistics to enter 2nd Year (Arts) Statistics.
ST2DM
- STATISTICS
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Elective streams allow you to make more of your university education, and to take better advantage of the world-class lecturers and interesting subject material that Maynooth has to offer. They may help to broaden your perspective (e.g. by taking an interdisciplinary topic), allow you to interact with students from other disciplines, or help you develop transferable skills for the future in a way that complements your main disciplinary studies (e.g. study of a modern language). An elective stream amounts to one-sixth of the total course work for the year.
Registration for electives will be subject to enrolment limitations, and also must be compatible with the timetabling and other requirements of your main subjects. Some combinations of electives and subjects are excluded.
ACCOUNTING IN SOCIETY
On completion of this elective stream, students should be able to have an understanding of the basic tools of accounting, be able to apply those tools to understand issues of current affairs in the business world, and understand the contribution accounting can make to a wide range of social and global issues.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
AC2EL
- ACCOUNTING IN SOCIETY
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
ANTI-RACISM
This stream will provide students with the knowledge and competencies to critically engage with racism as a systemic form of discrimination in a variety of cultural, historical and geopolitical contexts.
AN2EL
- ANTI-RACISM
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING CHINESE
This elective stream will enable students with no prior learning to acquire the basics of Mandarin Chinese.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
CN2BEL
- BEGINNING CHINESE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING FRENCH
FR2BEL
- BEGINNING FRENCH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING GERMAN
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GN2BEL
- BEGINNING GERMAN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING SPANISH
This elective stream will enable students with no prior learning to acquire the basics of spoken and written Spanish (up to CEFRL levels A 1.2 and A 2.1).
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SPA2BEL
- BEGINNING SPANISH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CATALAN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
CAT2EL
- CATALAN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 5
Not compulsory:
|
COMMUNITY EDUCATION
This elective stream introduces community education and practice. It outlines its history, principles and ambitions and organizes for students to witness community education in action through field visits.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
AD2CEL
- COMMUNITY EDUCATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING CHINESE
This elective stream enables students who have started to learn Chinese in First Year, but discontinue Chinese as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules CN281 and CN282. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
CN2CEL
- CONTINUING CHINESE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING FRENCH
This elective stream enables students who have studied French in First Year (at beginners or advanced levels), but discontinue French as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
FR2CEL
- CONTINUING FRENCH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING GERMAN
This elective stream enables students who have studied German in First Year (at beginners and advanced levels), but discontinue German as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules GN281 and GN282.
GN2CEL
- CONTINUING GERMAN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING NUA GHAEILGE
This elective stream enables students who have studied Irish in First Year (at beginners and advanced levels), but discontinue Irish as a full subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
NG2CEL
- CONTINUING NUA GHAEILGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING SPANISH
This elective stream enables students who have studied Spanish in First Year (at beginners or advanced levels), but discontinue Spanish as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules SPA281 and SPA282. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SPA2CEL
- CONTINUING SPANISH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES AND DIGITAL PROTOTYPING
Join the maker movement; no prior experience necessary. Find out what people really need and learn to design cool and exciting new products that combine great design and interactive programmable electronics.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GE2EL
- CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES AND DIGITAL PROTOTYPING
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
EDEN ENTREPRENEURSHIP DESIGN AND INNOVATION
This annual competition is open to all students and sets a challenge to conceive a business idea through creative problem solving, research and experimental entrepreneurship. Industry sponsors award several cash prizes. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
PD2DEL
- EDEN ENTREPRENEURSHIP DESIGN AND INNOVATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
ENGAGING WITH CIVIL SOCIETY
This elective stream complements any discipline with both theoretically grounded and practical ‘know-how’ for working in civil society, and engaging specifically with value-driven NGOs and voluntary groups.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SP2EL
- ENGAGING WITH CIVIL SOCIETY
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
FILM AND SCREEN STUDIES
This stream introduces students to film and screen studies in semester one, focusing on the technical analysis of moving images, their cultural history and social significance; in semester two, students choose a module through which to explore film within national contexts and genres (Irish, Latin American cinema, or documentary film) or in relation to other art forms, such as music and literature.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
MD2EL
- FILM AND SCREEN STUDIES
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
FOUNDATIONS IN SCIENCE WRITING AND COMMUNICATION
SK2EL
- FOUNDATIONS IN SCIENCE WRITING AND COMMUNICATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN SOCIETY AND CULTURE
This interdisciplinary elective stream aims to introduce students to current issues and debates in Gender and Sexuality Studies as they relate to their own lives.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GN2GEL
- GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN SOCIETY AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
Has human activity, driven by consumption, climate and environmental change, pushed earth systems, upon which we collectively depend, beyond irreversible tipping points, and if so, what are the emergent socio-political crises and dilemmas threatening human survival and how can we transition to a just and sustainable future?
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GY2EL
- GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GOOD AND EVIL
To consider questions raised by the human experience of good and evil, and how it may impact understandings of God, humanity, ethics, and social issues of crime, punishment and reconciliation.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
TH2GEL
- GOOD AND EVIL
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GREAT BOOKS
This stream will explore the "Great Books" that have inspired, empowered, challenged and consoled millions of people throughout human history by allowing them to better understand themselves and the world they live in.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
EN2BEL
- GREAT BOOKS
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INFLUENTIAL IDEAS IN ECONOMICS
EC2EL
- INFLUENTIAL IDEAS IN ECONOMICS
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INTENSIVE INTRODUCTORY LATIN
LN2BEL
- INTENSIVE INTRODUCTORY LATIN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INTRODUCTION TO ANCIENT GREEK
GR2BEL
- INTRODUCTION TO ANCIENT GREEK
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN THE DIGITAL AGE
Students will study the principles of valid argument and address some important philosophical issues that arise within the interplay of technology and the human being in the 'Digital Age' today.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
PH2LEL
- INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN THE DIGITAL AGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
IRISH CULTURAL HERITAGE
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
NG2IEL
- IRISH CULTURAL HERITAGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
POR2EL
- PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
PRIORITISING PEOPLE AND PLANET
KD2AEL
- PRIORITISING PEOPLE AND PLANET
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
SERVICE INNOVATION
PD2SEL
- SERVICE INNOVATION
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
SKILLS FOR SUCCESS:PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
EX2EX-“Prioritise your future career by selecting a module that gives you the opportunity to meet employers, develop a strong sense of self-awareness, an elective that enables you to identify and develop a range of employability skills, as well as to enhance your application and interview technique, ensuring that you are well equipped to secure internships and to successfully enter the graduate labour market”.
This module is offered in both semester 1- EX201 and repeated in semester 2 - EX202.
Students register for one module only. EX201 or EX202.
Students cannot register for both modules
Please Note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
EX2EX
- SKILLS FOR SUCCESS:PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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Credits: 5
Not compulsory:
|
THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE IRISH EQUINE INDUSTRY
MN2EQEL
- THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE IRISH EQUINE INDUSTRY
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
WONDROUS PEOPLE AND PLACES: AN INTRODUCTION TO CELTIC LITERATURE
SG2EL
- WONDROUS PEOPLE AND PLACES: AN INTRODUCTION TO CELTIC LITERATURE
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
We explore environment, place, and space. We ask questions such as: How much climate change are we causing and how quickly? What sorts of attachments to home do people form and what happens when these are disrupted by migration? How is Ireland, and its regions, affected by economic globalisation? - Through Geography, you will get to the heart of contemporary issues such as climate and environmental change, geopolitics, the transformation of modern societies and cultures, global health and social inequality, and how cities are evolving.
- Geography education at Maynooth includes field trips, both in Ireland and overseas.
- Students can choose 15 or 30 credits of Geography in first year and progress into a Single Major degree from second year.
- In your third year, you may opt for an industry placement module (subject to availability) to experience what it’s like to work with an organisation outside the University.
- You will learn to think critically, analysing how and why our world changes. Geography paves the way for active citizenship and lifelong learning.
- Our students develop a special way of thinking ‘spatially’, with space and place at the forefront of their analysis, and learn a range of skills which appeal to employers.
- Our students are taught by international experts in the fields of environment, place and space.
GY2MJ
- GEOGRAPHY
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Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
Admission to 2nd Arts Mathematics (MT2MJ) is conditional on students obtaining a mark of 50% or better in the 1st year Mathematics (MT1F30) Examination.
MT2MJ
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
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Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
'Philosophy' is an ancient Greek word that means ‘love of wisdom’. The wisdom philosophy seeks is concerned with the big questions that everyone will eventually encounter in his or her life: What is happiness? What is love? Is there a god? What is the meaning of it all? Philosophy approaches these questions both historically and systematically. Thinking philosophically requires knowledge of what those who have come before us have thought; but it also requires the ability to evaluate these positions critically. Philosophy explores the foundations of all of reality and of all knowledge. To mention a few examples, there is a philosophy of language and a philosophy of music; political philosophy; ethics; a philosophy of science and a philosophy of religion. There is nothing that cannot be questioned philosophically, and there is no interest that cannot be combined with philosophy. Philosophy is not the most practical of subjects. Yet every society needs philosophers—people who do not just live, love, work, raise children, etc., but who seek answers to the question “why”. This is the case particularly in the world today, which is changing so rapidly that one needs a solid grounding in order not to get lost. Why choose this subject? - A philosophy degree is not a qualification for any particular career; rather, one studies philosophy to lead an 'examined life', as Socrates put it. Studying philosophy is an investment in one’s life.
- This having been said, the expertise gained in philosophy is of great value in many different areas. Philosophy graduates are valued for their quick intelligence, ability to reason deeply, clearly and independently, and for their ability to take an overview on the problem or situation confronting them.
- At Maynooth, philosophy can also be studied in conjunction with mathematics and computer science (BSc in Computational Thinking). This degree pathway brings philosophy to bear on some of the cutting-edge issues of contemporary society.
PH2MJ
- PHILOSOPHY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
This option will suit students interested in taking a language with Business (International). - International Business is about conducting business in different countries and managing people and organisations in an increasingly globalised world.
- To effectively compete in this changing business landscape, organisations must offer goods and services across nations, regions, and continents outside of their home market and must also manage increasingly diverse workforces as nations, cultures, and markets converge.
- International Business provides the strategies, insights, and skills to respond to these challenges, enabling organisations to manage diverse people and operations and to compete for customers across the world.
- Business (International) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. a language, Anthropology, Geography amongst others. Languages available include Chinese Studies, French, German, Nua-Ghaeilge and Spanish.
- Our International Business degree is ideal for students with a global outlook who wish to work either in local firms competing abroad or in subsidiaries of foreign multinationals, located either here or abroad.
- International Business students at Maynooth are offered a wide variety of choice. We offer modules that will develop both core business management knowledge as well as modules that provide a more specialist understanding of the international aspects of business.
- International Business students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what they learn in university with insights into another culture.
International Business is about conducting business in different countries and managing people and organisations in an increasingly globalised world. To effectively compete in this changing business landscape, organisations must offer goods and services across nations, regions, and continents outside of their home market and must also manage increasingly diverse workforces as nations, cultures, and markets converge. International Business provides the strategies, insights, and skills to respond to these challenges, enabling organisations to manage diverse people and operations and to compete for customers across the world.
MN2IMJ
- BUSINESS (INTERNATIONAL)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Management is about taking ideas and converting them into action: designing, making, and delivering products and services that customers and citizens want or need. Essentially, it is about organising to get things done. - Managers are generalists and organisers; they need to know the fundamentals of all major aspects of business, from thinking about the business as a whole and its strategic direction, to organising the workforce, managing the effective use of information technology, managing supply chains locally and globally, and effectively managing costs and revenues.
- Managers are at the heart of how these complex functions are seamlessly combined to make the world look simple to customers. Our degree in Business Management (MH404) will equip you with the tools necessary to achieve this.
- Our faculty are a blend of international and local industry experts who bring profound insights into the practicality and complexity of Management.
- Management students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture.
- If you are interested in a career as a second level teacher of business, Business (Management) is the subject to choose from the three business subjects available in MH101.
- Management students at Maynooth are offered unparalleled choice and flexibility. This degree offers you insights into all of the major functions of business, as well as the opportunity to undertake specialist options in the subjects you most enjoy so that you can shape your degree based on your own strengths and interests.
Management is about taking ideas and converting them into action: designing, making, and delivering products and services that customers and citizens want or need. Essentially, it is about organising to get things done. Managers are generalists and organisers; they need to know the fundamentals of all major aspects of business, from thinking about the business as a whole and its strategic direction, to organising the workforce, managing the effective use of information technology, managing supply chains locally and globally, and effectively managing costs and revenues. Managers are at the heart of how these complex functions are seamlessly combined to make the world look simple to customers.
If you are considering possibly pursuing a career as a second level teacher (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you MUST choose Business (Management) as a Double Major or Major subject. The Business (International Business) and the Business (Marketing) in Arts pathways will NOT guarantee the credits in Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN2MMJ
- BUSINESS (MANAGEMENT)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
- Marketing is all about customers, understanding their needs, how they behave and why they buy, so that businesses can build long term relationships with them. Creating and managing customers are central themes to what we teach and research at the Maynooth University School of Business.
- Marketing is a wide and varied discipline, connecting a firm to its customers in the marketplace. It is fast-paced and dynamic, interlinking with every other area of business to understand how value is created and captured for the company and its customers.
- Marketing is critical to the growth of a business – a key challenge from small local businesses to large global corporations. Using both traditional and digital tools, marketers must understand customer needs in order to create innovative products and service to meet those needs.
Marketing is both profoundly local and global, selling to one individual customer or to a large international market. Our faculty bring a rich and diverse expertise from both local and international markets across a broad range of topic areas, including digital marketing, online retailing, branding, communications and consumer behaviour. Together we offer students deep insights into the practicalities and applications of marketing, from what makes customers tick to how to make the best of market opportunities. Our approach to Marketing provides students with a deep understanding of the marketing function, as well as wider management and business processes so you can deliver value to customers and your organisation. Options are available which allow you to specialise your degree according to your strengths and interests in the topic areas you enjoy most. Marketing students also have the option of taking a four-year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture. Business (Marketing) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. Psychological Studies, Geography, Law, Anthropology, a language amongst others.
Creating a customer is central to Marketing. Effective marketing requires an understanding of the business as a whole and of the managerial value creation and capture process. Marketing is critical for the organic growth of a business – a key challenge for small to medium enterprises in Ireland and worldwide, as well as multinational organisations located in Ireland. It helps organisations to create value and profits by enabling them to better understand the needs of customers in order to provide them with innovative products and services.
If you are considering possibly pursuing a career as a second level teacher (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you MUST choose Business (Management) as a Double Major or Major subject. The Business (International Business) and the Business (Marketing) in Arts pathways will NOT guarantee the credits in Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN2KMJ
- BUSINESS (MARKETING)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Criminology is the study of crime, criminal behaviour and the criminal justice system. - At Maynooth, we offer a unique opportunity to study Criminology as part of a broad based Arts degree.
- You can choose Criminology in combination with other Arts subjects (including Law, Psychological Studies etc.) in first year, and then choose to continue with Criminology in second and third year.
- Maynooth University is the only University in the Republic of Ireland offering the opportunity to study Criminology as part of an Arts programme, and one of the few to offer a Law and Criminology degree (if you move from MH101 to MH502 in second year).
- Unique interdisciplinary programme with perspectives from sociology, psychology and economics as well as law.
- Flexibility and choice, including options to transfer into law.
LW2CMJ
- CRIMINOLOGY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
History is the systematic examination of human experience over time. It attempts to explain the origins and evolution of the societies we live in, from as many points of view as possible. - History explores the complex processes of social and economic change, the choice of one set of political or ethical values over another, the context in which new ideas arise, and much more. The written word is one way of gathering information about the past, but new technologies and research methods allow for the study of history to take place through other mediums.
- The Department’s long-standing reputation for excellence and leadership in historical scholarship both in Ireland and internationally is one reason for the popularity of History at Maynooth. We have also kept our discipline vibrant, engaging and of practical value to students. We provide a solid grounding in the practice of history and boast expertise in a wide range of specialist topics such as life in medieval Ireland, the intersection of American and world history, the First World War, and gender and sexual politics.
1. Semester 1. Students must take one only from the following group: HY218, HY240, HY293 Semester 2. Students must take one only from the following group: HY219, HY241, HY294 2. Students are strongly encouraged to register for GC224 if their timetable permits it.
HY2MJ
- HISTORY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Beginning with words on a page, English is a world-facing subject: it takes you across historical periods, cultures, locations and genres, from poetry and drama to the novel, film, and creative writing too. As a student of English, you will learn about: - Different literary forms from poetry and drama to the novel and film, as well as creative writing.
- The conditions that shape literature from history and geography to questions of gender, race, and class.
- How literary texts enable us to understand our own complex world.
- Different approaches to and theories of literature.
- How different schools of critical thought or areas have shaped and reshaped the subject of English literary studies.
Engaging in critical debate about the meaning and value of literature will help you to: - Foster your critical and creative abilities.
- Develop awareness of the multi-dimensional nature of human situations.
- Approach problems with an open and enquiring mind.
- Gain analytical skills, finely-honed writing skills and develop critical thinking – skills which appeal greatly to future employers. Maynooth University Department of English boasts notable expertise in a wide range of literature from the early modern to the present day, and from Irish literature to American, African, Arab and global literatures. Our lecturers’ research expertise informs their teaching and provides you as a student with current critical thinking in the broad field of English studies. Our degree reflects the changing, global nature of English language literature while also providing you with a thorough understanding of established literary traditions.
EN2MJ
- ENGLISH
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
International development looks at the development challenges and opportunities confronting people and societies living in the Global South (including Africa, Asia and Latin America), while addressing the myriad of global challenges associated with sustainable development for the planet as a whole. As a student of International Development in the Bachelor of Arts degree you will explore issues such as globalisation, climate change, food security, poverty, conflict, disasters and other humanitarian emergencies, human rights, health, education, gender, inequality and empowerment, from an international development perspective. - Gain an understanding of development activism and how development can be planned, organised and managed to meet the needs of all, especially the most marginalised communities around the world.
- We will focus on the roles and effectiveness of international and national development actors (UN, Governments, NGO’s and Civil Society groups) and market actors in meeting development challenges, and in providing a better world for all.
KD2MJ
- INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. - Our Mathematics degrees aim to bridge the gap between school Mathematics and current frontiers of knowledge. You will learn to think hard and rigorously about questions and to solve new problems – invaluable skills that can be transferred to any area of life and any job you hold in future.
- A degree in a Mathematical discipline opens the door to jobs in a variety of fields such as finance, trading, insurance, information technology, education, data analysis, scientific research and development.
- The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject.
- The academic staff in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics have a diverse range of research interests in areas including algebra, analysis, data analysis, dynamics, geometry, number theory, statistical modelling and topology.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
MS2MJ
- MATHEMATICAL STUDIES
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
Admission to 2nd Arts Mathematics (MT2MJ) is conditional on students obtaining a mark of 50% or better in the 1st year Mathematics (MT1F30) Examination.
MT2MJ
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Anthropology is the comparative study of human society and culture. By closely observing and analyzing different ways of life around the world, from tribal villages to Wall Street offices, anthropologists create new knowledge about human nature and what it means to be human today. - You will learn how to research cultural practices and social institutions such as: religion and ritual, kinship and family, economy and the market, politics and government, language and performance, science and technology, traditional healing and biomedicine, and much more.
- You can also study forensic anthropology, which applies skeletal analysis and archaeological techniques to solve criminal cases.
- You will engage in practical, experiential learning, including ethnographic fieldwork projects.
- Anthropology fosters creativity and imagination by helping us to think beyond our own pre-conceived world views. By cultivating better understanding across cultures, anthropologists also confront forms of prejudice, injustice and inequality.
AN2MJ
- ANTHROPOLOGY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Economics is a social science that helps us to understand the behaviour of decision makers such as consumers, firms, workers, governments, investors, central banks, policy makers. - Economists are not defined by the subject matter that they study but rather by the way they approach a given topic. Economics provides a framework for understanding problems and learning how to solve them.
- There is a misconception about economics. People tend to think that economics is all about money and profits, but economics is much more than that. It is about understanding the past, predicting the future, and making evidence-based policy recommendations.
- Economists aim to find feasible solutions to help improve people's lives. This involves tackling important societal problems such as: how to reduce gender in equality and racial discrimination, how to create international cooperation to protect the environment, how to break the poverty trap in less-developed countries, how to reduce crime.
- Economists use game theory to analyse strategic interaction to answer questions such as: What is the optimal pricing and advertisement strategy for a firm? How should we set political campaign financing rules to improve the quality of our democracy? How should patents be designed to foster innovation but not curtail competition?
- Economists use statistical techniques to understand the market and how people respond to incentives. By determining causal relationships, economists can make evidence-based policy recommendations at the firm and state level.
Note
The optional module FN205 is a prerequisite for FN307 which is an optional module in the third year of the course. If students do not opt to take FN205 in Year 2 , thy can do so in Year 3 but will then not be able to take FN307 as both modules are offered in semester 1.
EC2MJ
- ECONOMICS
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Finance is taught as an application of Economics. It examines the role of government and international organisations in the management and regulation of financial markets. Finance is the study of investment risk and reward. You don’t need to have any previous knowledge of Finance, only an interest in how the financial sector and the economy works and a desire to know more. The ability to work in a second language is an advantage for Finance graduates. As an Arts student, you may combine Finance with Chinese, French, German, or Spanish – all are available at beginner/non-beginner level (except Chinese - only beginner level). The Department is made up of an accomplished group of academics with an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching.
FN2AMJ
- FINANCE
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Students of the Modern Irish course study the language (spoken and written) and aspects of literature and culture. - Our students learn about the diversity and rich heritage of the Irish language, and also acquire skills which will be advantageous to them throughout their lives, irrespective of which career they choose. They will accomplish this in a friendly, open Department that has a strong commitment to Irish and to learning.
- Spoken and written Irish are obviously central to our course and students are given every encouragement and support to improve their oral and written skills. To this end, students normally spend a period of residence in the Gaeltacht.
- Our modules allow students to gain a deep appreciation of contemporary Irish literature - poetry, prose and drama. Modules are also offered on earlier periods of Irish literature, including Bardic Poetry, the Fenian Cycle and poetry of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. There also are optional modules on Scottish Gaelic, on Irish personal and place names, on the sean-nós singing tradition, and on Irish-language oral traditions and performing arts. In addition to practical workshops and tutorials on written and spoken Irish, we also offer modules on the sociolinguistics of Irish and on the phonology and dialectology of the modern language.
Many aspects of Irish studies are researched in the Department, both language and literature, old and new, as well as other related areas of study. Among the courses offered are Linguistics, Folklore, Literary Criticism, Scottish Gaelic, Early Modern Irish, Irish Place and Personal Names, the sean-nós singing tradition, and Irish-language/ Gaeltacht performing arts. Irish is studied both as a living language and as a valuable part of Irish and European cultural heritage. All lectures, tutorials and workshops are through the medium of the Irish language, as is all communication with the Department, and while the first-year course places significant emphasis on the written language (i.e. grammar), no prior knowledge of grammar is necessary. There is an Irish language support centre, An Droichead, which provides assistance to students, first year students in particular, who are struggling with the language. This works on a peer-tutoring basis, with second and third year students tutoring groups of no more than five students – allowing students to ask questions, to practice structures, etc Déanann mic léinn na Nua-Ghaeilge staidéar ar an teanga (labhartha agus scríofa) agus ar ghnéithe den litríocht agus den chultúr. - Foghlaimíonn ár mic léinn faoin ilghnéitheacht agus faoin oidhreacht shaibhir atá ag an nGaeilge, chomh maith le scileanna a bheidh úsáideach dóibh le linn a saoil, is cuma cén ghairm a roghnóidh siad. Baineann siad an méid sin amach i Roinn atá cairdiúil agus oscailte agus atá tiomanta don Ghaeilge agus don fhoghlaim.
- Tá ról lárnach ag an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha inár gcúrsa agus tugtar gach spreagadh do mhic léinn a scileanna labhartha agus scríofa a fheabhsú. Chuige sin, caitheann mic léinn tréimhse chónaithe sa Ghaeltacht de ghnáth.
- Tugtar modúil ar an litríocht chomhaimseartha ionas gur féidir le mic léinn eolas grinn a chur ar fhilíocht, ar phrós agus ar dhrámaíocht na Gaeilge. Cuirtear modúil ar fáil fosta ar an
- litríocht a bhaineann le tréimhsí níos luaithe, ina measc sin, filíocht na mBard, an Fhiannaíocht, filíocht an 17ú haois, an 18ú haois agus an 19ú haois. Tá modúil roghnacha ar fáil ar Ghaeilge na hAlban, ar ainmneacha pearsanta agus logainmneacha na hÉireann, agus thraidisiún
- na hamhránaíochta, agus ar thaibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta. Mar aon le ceardlanna praiticiúla agus ranganna teagaisc ar an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha, cuirimid modúl ar shochtheangeolaíocht na Gaeilge agus ar chanúineolaíocht na nuatheanga ar fáil.
- Is iomaí gné de léann na Gaeilge a ndéantar taighde uirthi sa Roinn, idir theanga agus litríocht, idir shean agus nua, chomh maith le réimsí léinn atá gaolmhar don teanga. Orthu sin tá, mar shampla, an Teangeolaíocht, an Béaloideas,
- An Chritic Liteartha, Gaeilge na hAlban, an Nua-Ghaeilge Mhoch, Logainmneacha agus Ainmneacha Pearsanta na Gaeilge, Traidisiún na hAmhránaíochta, Taibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta, agus an Cleachtas Cruthaitheach. Pléitear leis an nGaeilge mar theanga bheo agus mar chuid luachmhar d’oidhreacht chultúrtha na hÉireann agus na hEorpa.
- Trí mheán na Gaeilge a bhíonn na léachtaí, na ranganna teagaisc agus na ceardlanna ar fad, agus déantar gach cumarsáid leis an Roinn trí mheán na Gaeilge. Cé go gcuireann cúrsa na chéad bhliana béim shuntasach ar an teanga scríofa (i.e gramadach), ní theastaíonn réamheolas ar an ngramadach uait.
- Tá ionad tacaíochta Gaeilge, An Droichead, ar fáil a chuireann cabhair ar fáil do mhic léinn, mic léinn na chéad bhliana go háirithe, atá ag streachailt leis an teanga. Piartheagasc atá i gceist, agus mic léinn na dara agus na tríú bliana i mbun grúpaí beaga a stiúradh. Ní bhíonn níos mó ná cúigear mac léinn i ngach grúpa agus bíonn deis ag mic léinn ceisteanna a chur, cleachtadh a dhéanamh ar struchtúir, srl.
NG2MJ
- NUA-GHAEILGE
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Computer Science at Maynooth University is the study of the principals and use of computers and software. Students enjoy the huge benefit of studying other Arts subjects with Computer Science in first year with options to take different degree paths afterwards. Advanced topics such as computer vision, theoretical computer studies, robotics, cryptography and artificial intelligence may be studied, depending on the pathway students take. - The Department of Computer Science at Maynooth University was founded in 1987 and is located in the Eolas Building. Our laboratories and equipment provide excellent facilities for practical work and all our courses include a mix of lectures and lab work. Many of our students also spend time working in industry as part of their degree, which enhances their employment opportunities once they graduate.
- We endeavour to provide a supportive and enjoyable atmosphere for learning through our Computer Science Support Centre, extensive assistance during practical work and we are always available outside of lectures to help our students.
CS2MJ
- COMPUTER SCIENCE
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Studying Music at Maynooth, Ireland’s largest university music department, offers unparalleled choice and expertise, from performance to computer programming, from ancient traditions to contemporary experience, from high art to heavy metal. - Our programmes are designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical, compositional and academic work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in areas that really interest you the most in your final year.
- Performance, composition, music history (musicology including pop/rock) and the music of other cultures (ethnomusicology) are just a selection of different aspects of music you will study in the Music programme.
- Exciting and varied programme of practical, compositional and academic work.
- Students participate in ensembles such as the Chamber Choir and Traditional Music Ensemble.
- In your third year, you have the option to specialise in performance, composition or musicology. Some of the modules available include ‘Music and Entrepreneurship’, ‘Opera in Context’ and 'Popular Music Studies'.
- For those considering teaching Music at second level, the Teaching Council requirements are met by studying Music in the MH101 degree.
Registration Note:
MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
MU2MJ
- MUSIC
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Sociology is a subject that opens your mind, that helps you to connect your own lived experience to the wider social and economic context, and that offers the opportunity to engage in an empowering form of student-led learning. Our graduates often speak of studying Sociology as a “life changing” experience. The Sociology Department is widely acknowledged as a leading national and international centre of teaching and research excellence, as well as an exemplar of public sociology and engagement. We seek to equip you with the necessary resources and skills – intellectual, methodological, communicative and active citizenship – to meet the challenges of our fast-changing contemporary society and to contribute productively to social transformation.
Sociology is the study of human social life, groups and societies. It is a discipline that teaches you to: - develop critical skills and powers of argumentation based on empirical evidence.
- become a creative thinker and to think outside of the box.
- engage in a constructive enterprise, oriented toward the promotion of equality and social justice.
Taking Politics and/or Sociology to degree level is an ideal preparation to teach Politics and Society at second level following a Professional Master of Education (PME).
SO2MJ
- SOCIOLOGY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
SO2CMJ
- SOCIOLOGY (WITH CRIMINOLOGY)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Greek and Roman Civilization involves study of the history, literature, art, philosophy and material culture of two of the most influential periods in human history. As an interdisciplinary subject, Classics spans an immense range of human experience over some 1700 years, from the late Bronze Age through to the “fall” of the Roman Empire. Greek and Roman civilizations were of foundational importance for medieval, Renaissance and modern Europe, and can claim an almost global impact. - In Maynooth, students are introduced to the complexities and diversity of the ancient Mediterranean cultures, through many perspectives. Themes explored in individual modules include mythology and the gods; war and heroism; colonies, cities, civilization and “the barbarian”; ideologies of empire; people and elites; women and gender; friendship, sexuality, and norms of beauty; ideas of justice, law, happiness, and the holy.
- All material is studied in English translation. No previous knowledge of the subject is required or expected. Options exist for students to take modules in Greek and/or Latin languages as part of the programme in Greek & Roman Civilization
Tradition and influence. Study of Greek and Roman civilizations goes back to the foundation of Maynooth as a college in 1795. All the “greats” have studied Greece and Rome in some form, including (but not limited to) Karl Marx, W.B. Yeats, Seamus Heaney and J.K. Rowling. The Department enjoys an excellent reputation for both teaching and research. Staff are friendly, and relatively small class sizes allow students to get individual attention and feel at home. Interdisciplinary. Few other degrees offer as much, from heroic epic and lyric songs to philosophical systems to imperial politics. An all-round education that complements many other courses, laying the foundation for success in many careers and walks of life.
Commencing September 2023
GC2MJ
- CLASSICS
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematical physics, or theoretical physics, is the study of the fundamental laws of nature that govern our existence; from the interactions of quarks and gluons through the properties of metals and the aerodynamics of flight, to the evolution of stars and galaxies. - Many of the technologies we now take for granted have their origins in fundamental physics research, including PET scanners, lasers, Wi-Fi and the world wide web.
- Theoretical physics challenges our deeply held notions of what the world is like, and has led to developments in thinking from philosophy to genetics and neuroscience.
- The study of Mathematical Physics at Maynooth University has a long and distinguished tradition, of over 200 years. Modern theoretical physics and applied mathematics are exciting and dynamic fields, and this excitement is reflected in the research projects which are pursued in the Department.
- As well as being introduced to the major ideas and developments in theoretical physics and applied mathematics, you will be equipped with the tools to meet current and future developments in science, engineering, finance and other technologies of the future.
- Maynooth offers the unique possibility of combining Mathematical Physics with subjects such as Music, Philosophy or Geography.
MP2MJ
- MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Anyone with an interest in history, archaeology, languages or literature will be captivated by the topics on offer in this subject: from Cú Chulainn to Clonmacnoise, all aspects of Medieval Celtic Studies are explored. The diverse range of topics encompasses heroic literature and pre-historic archaeology, Otherworld tales and mythology, and gender and sexuality in medieval Celtic societies. The links between Ireland and the wider Celtic world are explored through literature and archaeology. You can study texts through English translations, and gain insights into the society of medieval Ireland: a world of power struggles, cattle raids, love triangles, infidelity, warfare, kingship and much more. Along the way, students discover that certain fundamental human experiences and anxieties were the same in the early Middle Ages as they are in the twenty-first century. There is an option to study modules in both the Old Irish Language and Middle Welsh. Why choose this subject? - A world-leading centre for the study of Medieval Irish and Celtic Studies, the Department of Early Irish engages in teaching and research in the history, culture, language and literature of medieval Ireland and related societies. Our special strengths lie in the study of medieval Irish literature, in its growth and development and in its relationship to contemporary European culture, as well as in the study of the Early Irish language.
- A diverse and friendly Department, we offer a vibrant and stimulating experience for students. On the research front, the Department has in recent years received several prestigious grants, including a European Research Council grant to support research in the area of Early Medieval Irish literature and language, as well as two Irish Research Council Laureate Awards for frontier research on the history of medicine in medieval Ireland. The Department has also been at the forefront of several major collaborative projects in the area of Digital Humanities.
SG2MJ
- MEDIEVAL CELTIC STUDIES
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Elective streams allow you to make more of your university education, and to take better advantage of the world-class lecturers and interesting subject material that Maynooth has to offer. They may help to broaden your perspective (e.g. by taking an interdisciplinary topic), allow you to interact with students from other disciplines, or help you develop transferable skills for the future in a way that complements your main disciplinary studies (e.g. study of a modern language). An elective stream amounts to one-sixth of the total course work for the year.
Registration for electives will be subject to enrolment limitations, and also must be compatible with the timetabling and other requirements of your main subjects. Some combinations of electives and subjects are excluded.
ACCOUNTING IN SOCIETY
On completion of this elective stream, students should be able to have an understanding of the basic tools of accounting, be able to apply those tools to understand issues of current affairs in the business world, and understand the contribution accounting can make to a wide range of social and global issues.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
AC2EL
- ACCOUNTING IN SOCIETY
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
ANTI-RACISM
This stream will provide students with the knowledge and competencies to critically engage with racism as a systemic form of discrimination in a variety of cultural, historical and geopolitical contexts.
AN2EL
- ANTI-RACISM
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING CHINESE
This elective stream will enable students with no prior learning to acquire the basics of Mandarin Chinese.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
CN2BEL
- BEGINNING CHINESE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING FRENCH
FR2BEL
- BEGINNING FRENCH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING GERMAN
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GN2BEL
- BEGINNING GERMAN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING SPANISH
This elective stream will enable students with no prior learning to acquire the basics of spoken and written Spanish (up to CEFRL levels A 1.2 and A 2.1).
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SPA2BEL
- BEGINNING SPANISH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CATALAN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
CAT2EL
- CATALAN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 5
Not compulsory:
|
COMMUNITY EDUCATION
This elective stream introduces community education and practice. It outlines its history, principles and ambitions and organizes for students to witness community education in action through field visits.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
AD2CEL
- COMMUNITY EDUCATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING CHINESE
This elective stream enables students who have started to learn Chinese in First Year, but discontinue Chinese as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules CN281 and CN282. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
CN2CEL
- CONTINUING CHINESE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING FRENCH
This elective stream enables students who have studied French in First Year (at beginners or advanced levels), but discontinue French as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
FR2CEL
- CONTINUING FRENCH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING GERMAN
This elective stream enables students who have studied German in First Year (at beginners and advanced levels), but discontinue German as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules GN281 and GN282.
GN2CEL
- CONTINUING GERMAN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING NUA GHAEILGE
This elective stream enables students who have studied Irish in First Year (at beginners and advanced levels), but discontinue Irish as a full subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
NG2CEL
- CONTINUING NUA GHAEILGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING SPANISH
This elective stream enables students who have studied Spanish in First Year (at beginners or advanced levels), but discontinue Spanish as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules SPA281 and SPA282. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SPA2CEL
- CONTINUING SPANISH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES AND DIGITAL PROTOTYPING
Join the maker movement; no prior experience necessary. Find out what people really need and learn to design cool and exciting new products that combine great design and interactive programmable electronics.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GE2EL
- CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES AND DIGITAL PROTOTYPING
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
EDEN ENTREPRENEURSHIP DESIGN AND INNOVATION
This annual competition is open to all students and sets a challenge to conceive a business idea through creative problem solving, research and experimental entrepreneurship. Industry sponsors award several cash prizes. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
PD2DEL
- EDEN ENTREPRENEURSHIP DESIGN AND INNOVATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
ENGAGING WITH CIVIL SOCIETY
This elective stream complements any discipline with both theoretically grounded and practical ‘know-how’ for working in civil society, and engaging specifically with value-driven NGOs and voluntary groups.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SP2EL
- ENGAGING WITH CIVIL SOCIETY
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
FILM AND SCREEN STUDIES
This stream introduces students to film and screen studies in semester one, focusing on the technical analysis of moving images, their cultural history and social significance; in semester two, students choose a module through which to explore film within national contexts and genres (Irish, Latin American cinema, or documentary film) or in relation to other art forms, such as music and literature.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
MD2EL
- FILM AND SCREEN STUDIES
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
FOUNDATIONS IN SCIENCE WRITING AND COMMUNICATION
SK2EL
- FOUNDATIONS IN SCIENCE WRITING AND COMMUNICATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN SOCIETY AND CULTURE
This interdisciplinary elective stream aims to introduce students to current issues and debates in Gender and Sexuality Studies as they relate to their own lives.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GN2GEL
- GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN SOCIETY AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
Has human activity, driven by consumption, climate and environmental change, pushed earth systems, upon which we collectively depend, beyond irreversible tipping points, and if so, what are the emergent socio-political crises and dilemmas threatening human survival and how can we transition to a just and sustainable future?
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GY2EL
- GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GOOD AND EVIL
To consider questions raised by the human experience of good and evil, and how it may impact understandings of God, humanity, ethics, and social issues of crime, punishment and reconciliation.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
TH2GEL
- GOOD AND EVIL
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GREAT BOOKS
This stream will explore the "Great Books" that have inspired, empowered, challenged and consoled millions of people throughout human history by allowing them to better understand themselves and the world they live in.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
EN2BEL
- GREAT BOOKS
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INFLUENTIAL IDEAS IN ECONOMICS
EC2EL
- INFLUENTIAL IDEAS IN ECONOMICS
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INTENSIVE INTRODUCTORY LATIN
LN2BEL
- INTENSIVE INTRODUCTORY LATIN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INTRODUCTION TO ANCIENT GREEK
GR2BEL
- INTRODUCTION TO ANCIENT GREEK
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN THE DIGITAL AGE
Students will study the principles of valid argument and address some important philosophical issues that arise within the interplay of technology and the human being in the 'Digital Age' today.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
PH2LEL
- INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN THE DIGITAL AGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
IRISH CULTURAL HERITAGE
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
NG2IEL
- IRISH CULTURAL HERITAGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
POR2EL
- PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
PRIORITISING PEOPLE AND PLANET
KD2AEL
- PRIORITISING PEOPLE AND PLANET
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
SERVICE INNOVATION
PD2SEL
- SERVICE INNOVATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
SKILLS FOR SUCCESS:PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
EX2EX-“Prioritise your future career by selecting a module that gives you the opportunity to meet employers, develop a strong sense of self-awareness, an elective that enables you to identify and develop a range of employability skills, as well as to enhance your application and interview technique, ensuring that you are well equipped to secure internships and to successfully enter the graduate labour market”.
This module is offered in both semester 1- EX201 and repeated in semester 2 - EX202.
Students register for one module only. EX201 or EX202.
Students cannot register for both modules
Please Note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
EX2EX
- SKILLS FOR SUCCESS:PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
|
Credits: 5
Not compulsory:
|
THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE IRISH EQUINE INDUSTRY
MN2EQEL
- THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE IRISH EQUINE INDUSTRY
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
WONDROUS PEOPLE AND PLACES: AN INTRODUCTION TO CELTIC LITERATURE
SG2EL
- WONDROUS PEOPLE AND PLACES: AN INTRODUCTION TO CELTIC LITERATURE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
We explore environment, place, and space. We ask questions such as: How much climate change are we causing and how quickly? What sorts of attachments to home do people form and what happens when these are disrupted by migration? How is Ireland, and its regions, affected by economic globalisation? - Through Geography, you will get to the heart of contemporary issues such as climate and environmental change, geopolitics, the transformation of modern societies and cultures, global health and social inequality, and how cities are evolving.
- Geography education at Maynooth includes field trips, both in Ireland and overseas.
- Students can choose 15 or 30 credits of Geography in first year and progress into a Single Major degree from second year.
- In your third year, you may opt for an industry placement module (subject to availability) to experience what it’s like to work with an organisation outside the University.
- You will learn to think critically, analysing how and why our world changes. Geography paves the way for active citizenship and lifelong learning.
- Our students develop a special way of thinking ‘spatially’, with space and place at the forefront of their analysis, and learn a range of skills which appeal to employers.
- Our students are taught by international experts in the fields of environment, place and space.
GY2SM
- GEOGRAPHY
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
History is the systematic examination of human experience over time. It attempts to explain the origins and evolution of the societies we live in, from as many points of view as possible. - History explores the complex processes of social and economic change, the choice of one set of political or ethical values over another, the context in which new ideas arise, and much more. The written word is one way of gathering information about the past, but new technologies and research methods allow for the study of history to take place through other mediums.
- The Department’s long-standing reputation for excellence and leadership in historical scholarship both in Ireland and internationally is one reason for the popularity of History at Maynooth. We have also kept our discipline vibrant, engaging and of practical value to students. We provide a solid grounding in the practice of history and boast expertise in a wide range of specialist topics such as life in medieval Ireland, the intersection of American and world history, the First World War, and gender and sexual politics.
Semester 1. Students must take one only from the following group: HY218, HY240, HY293 Semester 2. Students must take one only from the following group: HY219, HY241, HY294
HY2SM
- HISTORY
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Beginning with words on a page, English is a world-facing subject: it takes you across historical periods, cultures, locations and genres, from poetry and drama to the novel, film, and creative writing too. As a student of English, you will learn about: - Different literary forms from poetry and drama to the novel and film, as well as creative writing.
- The conditions that shape literature from history and geography to questions of gender, race, and class.
- How literary texts enable us to understand our own complex world.
- Different approaches to and theories of literature.
- How different schools of critical thought or areas have shaped and reshaped the subject of English literary studies.
Engaging in critical debate about the meaning and value of literature will help you to: - Foster your critical and creative abilities.
- Develop awareness of the multi-dimensional nature of human situations.
- Approach problems with an open and enquiring mind.
- Gain analytical skills, finely-honed writing skills and develop critical thinking – skills which appeal greatly to future employers. Maynooth University Department of English boasts notable expertise in a wide range of literature from the early modern to the present day, and from Irish literature to American, African, Arab and global literatures. Our lecturers’ research expertise informs their teaching and provides you as a student with current critical thinking in the broad field of English studies. Our degree reflects the changing, global nature of English language literature while also providing you with a thorough understanding of established literary traditions.
A minimum of 50% overall in English in First Year must be achieved in order to register for Single Major.
EN2SM
- ENGLISH
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Anthropology is the comparative study of human society and culture. By closely observing and analyzing different ways of life around the world, from tribal villages to Wall Street offices, anthropologists create new knowledge about human nature and what it means to be human today. - You will learn how to research cultural practices and social institutions such as: religion and ritual, kinship and family, economy and the market, politics and government, language and performance, science and technology, traditional healing and biomedicine, and much more.
- You can also study forensic anthropology, which applies skeletal analysis and archaeological techniques to solve criminal cases.
- You will engage in practical, experiential learning, including ethnographic fieldwork projects.
- Anthropology fosters creativity and imagination by helping us to think beyond our own pre-conceived world views. By cultivating better understanding across cultures, anthropologists also confront forms of prejudice, injustice and inequality.
Students: You must select an additional ten credits from the Electives (below) or ten credits from one of your first year subjects.
AN2SM
- ANTHROPOLOGY
|
Credits: 50
Not compulsory:
|
Economics is a social science that helps us to understand the behaviour of decision makers such as consumers, firms, workers, governments, investors, central banks, policy makers. - Economists are not defined by the subject matter that they study but rather by the way they approach a given topic. Economics provides a framework for understanding problems and learning how to solve them.
- There is a misconception about economics. People tend to think that economics is all about money and profits, but economics is much more than that. It is about understanding the past, predicting the future, and making evidence-based policy recommendations.
- Economists aim to find feasible solutions to help improve people's lives. This involves tackling important societal problems such as: how to reduce gender in equality and racial discrimination, how to create international cooperation to protect the environment, how to break the poverty trap in less-developed countries, how to reduce crime.
- Economists use game theory to analyse strategic interaction to answer questions such as: What is the optimal pricing and advertisement strategy for a firm? How should we set political campaign financing rules to improve the quality of our democracy? How should patents be designed to foster innovation but not curtail competition?
- Economists use statistical techniques to understand the market and how people respond to incentives. By determining causal relationships, economists can make evidence-based policy recommendations at the firm and state level.
Note
The optional module FN205 is a prerequisite for FN307 which is an optional module in the third year of the course. If students do not opt to take FN205 in Year 2 , thy can do so in Year 3 but will then not be able to take FN307 as both modules are offered in semester 1.
EC2SM
- ECONOMICS
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Finance is taught as an application of Economics. It examines the role of government and international organisations in the management and regulation of financial markets. Finance is the study of investment risk and reward. You don’t need to have any previous knowledge of Finance, only an interest in how the financial sector and the economy works and a desire to know more. The ability to work in a second language is an advantage for Finance graduates. As an Arts student, you may combine Finance with Chinese, French, German, or Spanish – all are available at beginner/non-beginner level (except Chinese - only beginner level). The Department is made up of an accomplished group of academics with an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching.
FN2ASM
- FINANCE
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Greek and Roman Civilization involves study of the history, literature, art, philosophy and material culture of two of the most influential periods in human history. As an interdisciplinary subject, Classics spans an immense range of human experience over some 1700 years, from the late Bronze Age through to the “fall” of the Roman Empire. Greek and Roman civilizations were of foundational importance for medieval, Renaissance and modern Europe, and can claim an almost global impact. - In Maynooth, students are introduced to the complexities and diversity of the ancient Mediterranean cultures, through many perspectives. Themes explored in individual modules include mythology and the gods; war and heroism; colonies, cities, civilization and “the barbarian”; ideologies of empire; people and elites; women and gender; friendship, sexuality, and norms of beauty; ideas of justice, law, happiness, and the holy.
- All material is studied in English translation. No previous knowledge of the subject is required or expected. Options exist for students to take modules in Greek and/or Latin languages as part of the programme in Greek & Roman Civilization
Tradition and influence. Study of Greek and Roman civilizations goes back to the foundation of Maynooth as a college in 1795. All the “greats” have studied Greece and Rome in some form, including (but not limited to) Karl Marx, W.B. Yeats, Seamus Heaney and J.K. Rowling. The Department enjoys an excellent reputation for both teaching and research. Staff are friendly, and relatively small class sizes allow students to get individual attention and feel at home. Interdisciplinary. Few other degrees offer as much, from heroic epic and lyric songs to philosophical systems to imperial politics. An all-round education that complements many other courses, laying the foundation for success in many careers and walks of life.
GC2SM
- GREEK AND ROMAN CIVILIAATION
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematical physics, or theoretical physics, is the study of the fundamental laws of nature that govern our existence; from the interactions of quarks and gluons through the properties of metals and the aerodynamics of flight, to the evolution of stars and galaxies. - Many of the technologies we now take for granted have their origins in fundamental physics research, including PET scanners, lasers, Wi-Fi and the world wide web.
- Theoretical physics challenges our deeply held notions of what the world is like, and has led to developments in thinking from philosophy to genetics and neuroscience.
- The study of Mathematical Physics at Maynooth University has a long and distinguished tradition, of over 200 years. Modern theoretical physics and applied mathematics are exciting and dynamic fields, and this excitement is reflected in the research projects which are pursued in the Department.
- As well as being introduced to the major ideas and developments in theoretical physics and applied mathematics, you will be equipped with the tools to meet current and future developments in science, engineering, finance and other technologies of the future.
- Maynooth offers the unique possibility of combining Mathematical Physics with subjects such as Music, Philosophy or Geography.
MP2SM
- MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Elective streams allow you to make more of your university education, and to take better advantage of the world-class lecturers and interesting subject material that Maynooth has to offer. They may help to broaden your perspective (e.g. by taking an interdisciplinary topic), allow you to interact with students from other disciplines, or help you develop transferable skills for the future in a way that complements your main disciplinary studies (e.g. study of a modern language). An elective stream amounts to one-sixth of the total course work for the year.
Registration for electives will be subject to enrolment limitations, and also must be compatible with the timetabling and other requirements of your main subjects. Some combinations of electives and subjects are excluded.
ACCOUNTING IN SOCIETY
On completion of this elective stream, students should be able to have an understanding of the basic tools of accounting, be able to apply those tools to understand issues of current affairs in the business world, and understand the contribution accounting can make to a wide range of social and global issues.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
AC2EL
- ACCOUNTING IN SOCIETY
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
ANTI-RACISM
This stream will provide students with the knowledge and competencies to critically engage with racism as a systemic form of discrimination in a variety of cultural, historical and geopolitical contexts.
AN2EL
- ANTI-RACISM
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING CHINESE
This elective stream will enable students with no prior learning to acquire the basics of Mandarin Chinese.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
CN2BEL
- BEGINNING CHINESE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING FRENCH
FR2BEL
- BEGINNING FRENCH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING GERMAN
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GN2BEL
- BEGINNING GERMAN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING SPANISH
This elective stream will enable students with no prior learning to acquire the basics of spoken and written Spanish (up to CEFRL levels A 1.2 and A 2.1).
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SPA2BEL
- BEGINNING SPANISH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CATALAN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
CAT2EL
- CATALAN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 5
Not compulsory:
|
COMMUNITY EDUCATION
This elective stream introduces community education and practice. It outlines its history, principles and ambitions and organizes for students to witness community education in action through field visits.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
AD2CEL
- COMMUNITY EDUCATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING CHINESE
This elective stream enables students who have started to learn Chinese in First Year, but discontinue Chinese as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules CN281 and CN282. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
CN2CEL
- CONTINUING CHINESE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING FRENCH
This elective stream enables students who have studied French in First Year (at beginners or advanced levels), but discontinue French as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
FR2CEL
- CONTINUING FRENCH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING GERMAN
This elective stream enables students who have studied German in First Year (at beginners and advanced levels), but discontinue German as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules GN281 and GN282.
GN2CEL
- CONTINUING GERMAN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING NUA GHAEILGE
This elective stream enables students who have studied Irish in First Year (at beginners and advanced levels), but discontinue Irish as a full subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
NG2CEL
- CONTINUING NUA GHAEILGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING SPANISH
This elective stream enables students who have studied Spanish in First Year (at beginners or advanced levels), but discontinue Spanish as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules SPA281 and SPA282. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SPA2CEL
- CONTINUING SPANISH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES AND DIGITAL PROTOTYPING
Join the maker movement; no prior experience necessary. Find out what people really need and learn to design cool and exciting new products that combine great design and interactive programmable electronics.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GE2EL
- CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES AND DIGITAL PROTOTYPING
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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EDEN ENTREPRENEURSHIP DESIGN AND INNOVATION
This annual competition is open to all students and sets a challenge to conceive a business idea through creative problem solving, research and experimental entrepreneurship. Industry sponsors award several cash prizes. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
PD2DEL
- EDEN ENTREPRENEURSHIP DESIGN AND INNOVATION
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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ENGAGING WITH CIVIL SOCIETY
This elective stream complements any discipline with both theoretically grounded and practical ‘know-how’ for working in civil society, and engaging specifically with value-driven NGOs and voluntary groups.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SP2EL
- ENGAGING WITH CIVIL SOCIETY
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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FILM AND SCREEN STUDIES
This stream introduces students to film and screen studies in semester one, focusing on the technical analysis of moving images, their cultural history and social significance; in semester two, students choose a module through which to explore film within national contexts and genres (Irish, Latin American cinema, or documentary film) or in relation to other art forms, such as music and literature.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
MD2EL
- FILM AND SCREEN STUDIES
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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FOUNDATIONS IN SCIENCE WRITING AND COMMUNICATION
SK2EL
- FOUNDATIONS IN SCIENCE WRITING AND COMMUNICATION
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN SOCIETY AND CULTURE
This interdisciplinary elective stream aims to introduce students to current issues and debates in Gender and Sexuality Studies as they relate to their own lives.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GN2GEL
- GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN SOCIETY AND CULTURE
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
Has human activity, driven by consumption, climate and environmental change, pushed earth systems, upon which we collectively depend, beyond irreversible tipping points, and if so, what are the emergent socio-political crises and dilemmas threatening human survival and how can we transition to a just and sustainable future?
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GY2EL
- GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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GOOD AND EVIL
To consider questions raised by the human experience of good and evil, and how it may impact understandings of God, humanity, ethics, and social issues of crime, punishment and reconciliation.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
TH2GEL
- GOOD AND EVIL
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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GREAT BOOKS
This stream will explore the "Great Books" that have inspired, empowered, challenged and consoled millions of people throughout human history by allowing them to better understand themselves and the world they live in.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
EN2BEL
- GREAT BOOKS
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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INFLUENTIAL IDEAS IN ECONOMICS
EC2EL
- INFLUENTIAL IDEAS IN ECONOMICS
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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INTENSIVE INTRODUCTORY LATIN
LN2BEL
- INTENSIVE INTRODUCTORY LATIN
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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INTRODUCTION TO ANCIENT GREEK
GR2BEL
- INTRODUCTION TO ANCIENT GREEK
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN THE DIGITAL AGE
Students will study the principles of valid argument and address some important philosophical issues that arise within the interplay of technology and the human being in the 'Digital Age' today.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
PH2LEL
- INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN THE DIGITAL AGE
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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IRISH CULTURAL HERITAGE
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
NG2IEL
- IRISH CULTURAL HERITAGE
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
POR2EL
- PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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PRIORITISING PEOPLE AND PLANET
KD2AEL
- PRIORITISING PEOPLE AND PLANET
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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SERVICE INNOVATION
PD2SEL
- SERVICE INNOVATION
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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SKILLS FOR SUCCESS:PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
EX2EX-“Prioritise your future career by selecting a module that gives you the opportunity to meet employers, develop a strong sense of self-awareness, an elective that enables you to identify and develop a range of employability skills, as well as to enhance your application and interview technique, ensuring that you are well equipped to secure internships and to successfully enter the graduate labour market”.
This module is offered in both semester 1- EX201 and repeated in semester 2 - EX202.
Students register for one module only. EX201 or EX202.
Students cannot register for both modules
Please Note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
EX2EX
- SKILLS FOR SUCCESS:PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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Credits: 5
Not compulsory:
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THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE IRISH EQUINE INDUSTRY
MN2EQEL
- THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE IRISH EQUINE INDUSTRY
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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WONDROUS PEOPLE AND PLACES: AN INTRODUCTION TO CELTIC LITERATURE
SG2EL
- WONDROUS PEOPLE AND PLACES: AN INTRODUCTION TO CELTIC LITERATURE
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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We explore environment, place, and space. We ask questions such as: How much climate change are we causing and how quickly? What sorts of attachments to home do people form and what happens when these are disrupted by migration? How is Ireland, and its regions, affected by economic globalisation? - Through Geography, you will get to the heart of contemporary issues such as climate and environmental change, geopolitics, the transformation of modern societies and cultures, global health and social inequality, and how cities are evolving.
- Geography education at Maynooth includes field trips, both in Ireland and overseas.
- Students can choose 15 or 30 credits of Geography in first year and progress into a Single Major degree from second year.
- In your third year, you may opt for an industry placement module (subject to availability) to experience what it’s like to work with an organisation outside the University.
- You will learn to think critically, analysing how and why our world changes. Geography paves the way for active citizenship and lifelong learning.
- Our students develop a special way of thinking ‘spatially’, with space and place at the forefront of their analysis, and learn a range of skills which appeal to employers.
- Our students are taught by international experts in the fields of environment, place and space.
GY2MI
- GEOGRAPHY
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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German currently tops the list of the 5 most in-demand foreign languages in Ireland among employers (cpl.com). As the native language to almost 100 million people around the world, German is a critical language for business, science and culture. - Studying German at MU equips you with excellent language, communication, research, intercultural and analytical skills that help you stand out from the crowd.
- We have a wide range of exciting modules taught by international and local experts. Our students have opportunities to focus on linguistics, translation, history, politics, and the literary, visual and business cultures connected to German, alongside the language itself.
- If you’re a beginner, you can fast-track your progress by taking German as a double subject.
Why choose this subject? - Language AND culture: discover how people live, think and interact in German-speaking countries. Our programme is specially designed to allow you to develop advanced competence and fluency in all
- key language areas, while expanding your cultural understanding, intercultural awareness, and your critical thinking and evaluative abilities.
- Small classes taught by experts: our language, linguistics and culture modules are generally taught in small class groups - an environment in which students thrive. Our staff are keen researchers, and this is integrated into our teaching and approach.
- Year Abroad: every student is encouraged to spend a year in a German-speaking country. You can study at a German-speaking university – we have links with over 20 universities in Germany and Austria - or work as a language teacher or be an Erasmus intern (subject to availability).
- Employability: 1,200 positions are currently open to graduates with strong German proficiency and intercultural skills.
Every student will have the opportunity to spend a year in a German-speaking country as an Erasmus student, Language assistant or Erasmus intern (subject to availability). German at MU Erasmus links include: - large cities including Berlin, Munich and Vienna;
- smaller cities such as Graz, Potsdam, Leipzig and Bonn;
- towns like Bielefeld, Marburg and Tübingen.
Interested in teaching German? The Teaching Council of Ireland require all registered teachers of German to have spent a minimum of two months living in a German-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advise at least a three-month residency.
GN2MI
- GERMAN
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Choosing Law is ideal for people who want to experience it in their first year as part of a Bachelor of Arts degree and enjoy flexibility in their second and final year progression options. - Flexibility and choice: students who successfully complete their first year law modules have the option of transferring to one of our specialised Law degrees (MH502 BCL or MH501 LLB). Tailor your degree to your interests while developing a broad skill set which is highly valued by employers
- Law can be taken as a single or double subject in first year allowing students to combine the study of core law subjects with options from up to 31 subject areas.
- At the end of second year, students of the BCL and LLB degrees (having moved from the BA degree) may apply to complete a work placement year in law firm (subject to availability).
- All Law students - BA, BCL and LLB - may apply to complete a year studying abroad at one of our partner institutions.
- Get involved in our numerous student societies: the student Law Society, European Law Students’ Association or Student FLAC (Free Legal Advice Centre) Society.
Registration notes (please read carefully):
LW259
- Students who have passed LW152 Contract Law in Year 1 cannot take LW259 Contract Law.
- Students who only took 15 credits of Law in Year 1 and who did not take LW152 should take LW259.
LW253
- Students who have passed LW158 Constitutional Law in Year 1 cannot take LW253 Constitutional Law.
- Students who only took either 15 or 22.5 credits of Law in Year 1 should take LW253.
LW2MI
- LAW
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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'Philosophy' is an ancient Greek word that means ‘love of wisdom’. The wisdom philosophy seeks is concerned with the big questions that everyone will eventually encounter in his or her life: What is happiness? What is love? Is there a god? What is the meaning of it all? Philosophy approaches these questions both historically and systematically. Thinking philosophically requires knowledge of what those who have come before us have thought; but it also requires the ability to evaluate these positions critically. Philosophy explores the foundations of all of reality and of all knowledge. To mention a few examples, there is a philosophy of language and a philosophy of music; political philosophy; ethics; a philosophy of science and a philosophy of religion. There is nothing that cannot be questioned philosophically, and there is no interest that cannot be combined with philosophy. Philosophy is not the most practical of subjects. Yet every society needs philosophers—people who do not just live, love, work, raise children, etc., but who seek answers to the question “why”. This is the case particularly in the world today, which is changing so rapidly that one needs a solid grounding in order not to get lost. Why choose this subject? - A philosophy degree is not a qualification for any particular career; rather, one studies philosophy to lead an 'examined life', as Socrates put it. Studying philosophy is an investment in one’s life.
- This having been said, the expertise gained in philosophy is of great value in many different areas. Philosophy graduates are valued for their quick intelligence, ability to reason deeply, clearly and independently, and for their ability to take an overview on the problem or situation confronting them.
- At Maynooth, philosophy can also be studied in conjunction with mathematics and computer science (BSc in Computational Thinking). This degree pathway brings philosophy to bear on some of the cutting-edge issues of contemporary society.
PH2MI
- PHILOSOPHY
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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This option will suit students interested in taking a language with Business (International). - International Business is about conducting business in different countries and managing people and organisations in an increasingly globalised world.
- To effectively compete in this changing business landscape, organisations must offer goods and services across nations, regions, and continents outside of their home market and must also manage increasingly diverse workforces as nations, cultures, and markets converge.
- International Business provides the strategies, insights, and skills to respond to these challenges, enabling organisations to manage diverse people and operations and to compete for customers across the world.
- Business (International) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. a language, Anthropology, Geography amongst others. Languages available include Chinese Studies, French, German, Nua-Ghaeilge and Spanish.
- Our International Business degree is ideal for students with a global outlook who wish to work either in local firms competing abroad or in subsidiaries of foreign multinationals, located either here or abroad.
- International Business students at Maynooth are offered a wide variety of choice. We offer modules that will develop both core business management knowledge as well as modules that provide a more specialist understanding of the international aspects of business.
- International Business students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what they learn in university with insights into another culture.
International Business is about conducting business in different countries and managing people and organisations in an increasingly globalised world. To effectively compete in this changing business landscape, organisations must offer goods and services across nations, regions, and continents outside of their home market and must also manage increasingly diverse workforces as nations, cultures, and markets converge. International Business provides the strategies, insights, and skills to respond to these challenges, enabling organisations to manage diverse people and operations and to compete for customers across the world.
MN2IMI
- BUSINESS (INTERNATIONAL)
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Management is about taking ideas and converting them into action: designing, making, and delivering products and services that customers and citizens want or need. Essentially, it is about organising to get things done. - Managers are generalists and organisers; they need to know the fundamentals of all major aspects of business, from thinking about the business as a whole and its strategic direction, to organising the workforce, managing the effective use of information technology, managing supply chains locally and globally, and effectively managing costs and revenues.
- Managers are at the heart of how these complex functions are seamlessly combined to make the world look simple to customers. Our degree in Business Management (MH404) will equip you with the tools necessary to achieve this.
- Our faculty are a blend of international and local industry experts who bring profound insights into the practicality and complexity of Management.
- Management students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture.
- If you are interested in a career as a second level teacher of business, Business (Management) is the subject to choose from the three business subjects available in MH101.
- Management students at Maynooth are offered unparalleled choice and flexibility. This degree offers you insights into all of the major functions of business, as well as the opportunity to undertake specialist options in the subjects you most enjoy so that you can shape your degree based on your own strengths and interests.
Management is about taking ideas and converting them into action: designing, making, and delivering products and services that customers and citizens want or need. Essentially, it is about organising to get things done. Managers are generalists and organisers; they need to know the fundamentals of all major aspects of business, from thinking about the business as a whole and its strategic direction, to organising the workforce, managing the effective use of information technology, managing supply chains locally and globally, and effectively managing costs and revenues. Managers are at the heart of how these complex functions are seamlessly combined to make the world look simple to customers.
MN2MMI
- BUSINESS (MANAGEMENT)
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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- Marketing is all about customers, understanding their needs, how they behave and why they buy, so that businesses can build long term relationships with them. Creating and managing customers are central themes to what we teach and research at the Maynooth University School of Business.
- Marketing is a wide and varied discipline, connecting a firm to its customers in the marketplace. It is fast-paced and dynamic, interlinking with every other area of business to understand how value is created and captured for the company and its customers.
- Marketing is critical to the growth of a business – a key challenge from small local businesses to large global corporations. Using both traditional and digital tools, marketers must understand customer needs in order to create innovative products and service to meet those needs.
Marketing is both profoundly local and global, selling to one individual customer or to a large international market. Our faculty bring a rich and diverse expertise from both local and international markets across a broad range of topic areas, including digital marketing, online retailing, branding, communications and consumer behaviour. Together we offer students deep insights into the practicalities and applications of marketing, from what makes customers tick to how to make the best of market opportunities. Our approach to Marketing provides students with a deep understanding of the marketing function, as well as wider management and business processes so you can deliver value to customers and your organisation. Options are available which allow you to specialise your degree according to your strengths and interests in the topic areas you enjoy most. Marketing students also have the option of taking a four-year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture. Business (Marketing) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. Psychological Studies, Geography, Law, Anthropology, a language amongst others.
Creating a customer is central to Marketing. Effective marketing requires an understanding of the business as a whole and of the managerial value creation and capture process. Marketing is critical for the organic growth of a business – a key challenge for small to medium enterprises in Ireland and worldwide, as well as multinational organisations located in Ireland. It helps organisations to create value and profits by enabling them to better understand the needs of customers in order to provide them with innovative products and services.
MN2KMI
- BUSINESS (MARKETING)
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Criminology is the study of crime, criminal behaviour and the criminal justice system. - At Maynooth, we offer a unique opportunity to study Criminology as part of a broad based Arts degree.
- You can choose Criminology in combination with other Arts subjects (including Law, Psychological Studies etc.) in first year, and then choose to continue with Criminology in second and third year.
- Maynooth University is the only University in the Republic of Ireland offering the opportunity to study Criminology as part of an Arts programme, and one of the few to offer a Law and Criminology degree (if you move from MH101 to MH502 in second year).
- Unique interdisciplinary programme with perspectives from sociology, psychology and economics as well as law.
- Flexibility and choice, including options to transfer into law.
LW2CMI
- CRIMINOLOGY
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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History is the systematic examination of human experience over time. It attempts to explain the origins and evolution of the societies we live in, from as many points of view as possible. - History explores the complex processes of social and economic change, the choice of one set of political or ethical values over another, the context in which new ideas arise, and much more. The written word is one way of gathering information about the past, but new technologies and research methods allow for the study of history to take place through other mediums.
- The Department’s long-standing reputation for excellence and leadership in historical scholarship both in Ireland and internationally is one reason for the popularity of History at Maynooth. We have also kept our discipline vibrant, engaging and of practical value to students. We provide a solid grounding in the practice of history and boast expertise in a wide range of specialist topics such as life in medieval Ireland, the intersection of American and world history, the First World War, and gender and sexual politics.
Semester 1. Students must take one only from the following group: HY218, HY240, HY293 Semester 2. Students must take one only from the following group: HY219, HY241, HY294
HY2MI
- HISTORY
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Beginning with words on a page, English is a world-facing subject: it takes you across historical periods, cultures, locations and genres, from poetry and drama to the novel, film, and creative writing too. As a student of English, you will learn about: - Different literary forms from poetry and drama to the novel and film, as well as creative writing.
- The conditions that shape literature from history and geography to questions of gender, race, and class.
- How literary texts enable us to understand our own complex world.
- Different approaches to and theories of literature.
- How different schools of critical thought or areas have shaped and reshaped the subject of English literary studies.
Engaging in critical debate about the meaning and value of literature will help you to: - Foster your critical and creative abilities.
- Develop awareness of the multi-dimensional nature of human situations.
- Approach problems with an open and enquiring mind.
- Gain analytical skills, finely-honed writing skills and develop critical thinking – skills which appeal greatly to future employers. Maynooth University Department of English boasts notable expertise in a wide range of literature from the early modern to the present day, and from Irish literature to American, African, Arab and global literatures. Our lecturers’ research expertise informs their teaching and provides you as a student with current critical thinking in the broad field of English studies. Our degree reflects the changing, global nature of English language literature while also providing you with a thorough understanding of established literary traditions.
EN2MI
- ENGLISH
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
International development looks at the development challenges and opportunities confronting people and societies living in the Global South (including Africa, Asia and Latin America), while addressing the myriad of global challenges associated with sustainable development for the planet as a whole. As a student of International Development in the Bachelor of Arts degree you will explore issues such as globalisation, climate change, food security, poverty, conflict, disasters and other humanitarian emergencies, human rights, health, education, gender, inequality and empowerment, from an international development perspective. - Gain an understanding of development activism and how development can be planned, organised and managed to meet the needs of all, especially the most marginalised communities around the world.
- We will focus on the roles and effectiveness of international and national development actors (UN, Governments, NGO’s and Civil Society groups) and market actors in meeting development challenges, and in providing a better world for all.
KD2MI
- INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. - Our Mathematics degrees aim to bridge the gap between school Mathematics and current frontiers of knowledge. You will learn to think hard and rigorously about questions and to solve new problems – invaluable skills that can be transferred to any area of life and any job you hold in future.
- A degree in a Mathematical discipline opens the door to jobs in a variety of fields such as finance, trading, insurance, information technology, education, data analysis, scientific research and development.
- The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject.
- The academic staff in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics have a diverse range of research interests in areas including algebra, analysis, data analysis, dynamics, geometry, number theory, statistical modelling and topology.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
MS2MI
- MATHEMATICAL STUDIES
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Anthropology is the comparative study of human society and culture. By closely observing and analyzing different ways of life around the world, from tribal villages to Wall Street offices, anthropologists create new knowledge about human nature and what it means to be human today. - You will learn how to research cultural practices and social institutions such as: religion and ritual, kinship and family, economy and the market, politics and government, language and performance, science and technology, traditional healing and biomedicine, and much more.
- You can also study forensic anthropology, which applies skeletal analysis and archaeological techniques to solve criminal cases.
- You will engage in practical, experiential learning, including ethnographic fieldwork projects.
- Anthropology fosters creativity and imagination by helping us to think beyond our own pre-conceived world views. By cultivating better understanding across cultures, anthropologists also confront forms of prejudice, injustice and inequality.
AN2MI
- ANTHROPOLOGY
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Economics is a social science that helps us to understand the behaviour of decision makers such as consumers, firms, workers, governments, investors, central banks, policy makers. - Economists are not defined by the subject matter that they study but rather by the way they approach a given topic. Economics provides a framework for understanding problems and learning how to solve them.
- There is a misconception about economics. People tend to think that economics is all about money and profits, but economics is much more than that. It is about understanding the past, predicting the future, and making evidence-based policy recommendations.
- Economists aim to find feasible solutions to help improve people's lives. This involves tackling important societal problems such as: how to reduce gender in equality and racial discrimination, how to create international cooperation to protect the environment, how to break the poverty trap in less-developed countries, how to reduce crime.
- Economists use game theory to analyse strategic interaction to answer questions such as: What is the optimal pricing and advertisement strategy for a firm? How should we set political campaign financing rules to improve the quality of our democracy? How should patents be designed to foster innovation but not curtail competition?
- Economists use statistical techniques to understand the market and how people respond to incentives. By determining causal relationships, economists can make evidence-based policy recommendations at the firm and state level.
EC2MI
- ECONOMICS
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Finance is taught as an application of Economics. It examines the role of government and international organisations in the management and regulation of financial markets. Finance is the study of investment risk and reward. You don’t need to have any previous knowledge of Finance, only an interest in how the financial sector and the economy works and a desire to know more. The ability to work in a second language is an advantage for Finance graduates. As an Arts student, you may combine Finance with Chinese, French, German, or Spanish – all are available at beginner/non-beginner level (except Chinese - only beginner level). The Department is made up of an accomplished group of academics with an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching.
FN2MI
- FINANCE
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Music Technology is a unique opportunity to combine Music Technology with Music, Computer Science and a wide range of other disciplines. - Strikes a balance between practice and theory. You gain hands-on experience of the practical skills involved in music technology while learning about essential concepts.
- Wide in scope, including recording and sound engineering, computer music programming, sound design, composition, acoustics and psychoacoustics.
- Studying Music Technology offers an opportunity to develop and combine your creative and technical abilities. Facilities include a recording studio; a live room; a 5.1 mastering studio; Mac laboratories utilising Pro Tools software; field recording resources.
- Our programme is designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical and theoretical work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in the areas that interest you the most in your final year. Final year students oversee significant recording and composition projects, or work towards instrument and software development.
MU2TMI
- MUSIC TECHNOLOGY
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Students of the Modern Irish course study the language (spoken and written) and aspects of literature and culture. - Our students learn about the diversity and rich heritage of the Irish language, and also acquire skills which will be advantageous to them throughout their lives, irrespective of which career they choose. They will accomplish this in a friendly, open Department that has a strong commitment to Irish and to learning.
- Spoken and written Irish are obviously central to our course and students are given every encouragement and support to improve their oral and written skills. To this end, students normally spend a period of residence in the Gaeltacht.
- Our modules allow students to gain a deep appreciation of contemporary Irish literature - poetry, prose and drama. Modules are also offered on earlier periods of Irish literature, including Bardic Poetry, the Fenian Cycle and poetry of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. There also are optional modules on Scottish Gaelic, on Irish personal and place names, on the sean-nós singing tradition, and on Irish-language oral traditions and performing arts. In addition to practical workshops and tutorials on written and spoken Irish, we also offer modules on the sociolinguistics of Irish and on the phonology and dialectology of the modern language.
Many aspects of Irish studies are researched in the Department, both language and literature, old and new, as well as other related areas of study. Among the courses offered are Linguistics, Folklore, Literary Criticism, Scottish Gaelic, Early Modern Irish, Irish Place and Personal Names, the sean-nós singing tradition, and Irish-language/ Gaeltacht performing arts. Irish is studied both as a living language and as a valuable part of Irish and European cultural heritage. All lectures, tutorials and workshops are through the medium of the Irish language, as is all communication with the Department, and while the first-year course places significant emphasis on the written language (i.e. grammar), no prior knowledge of grammar is necessary. There is an Irish language support centre, An Droichead, which provides assistance to students, first year students in particular, who are struggling with the language. This works on a peer-tutoring basis, with second and third year students tutoring groups of no more than five students – allowing students to ask questions, to practice structures, etc Déanann mic léinn na Nua-Ghaeilge staidéar ar an teanga (labhartha agus scríofa) agus ar ghnéithe den litríocht agus den chultúr. - Foghlaimíonn ár mic léinn faoin ilghnéitheacht agus faoin oidhreacht shaibhir atá ag an nGaeilge, chomh maith le scileanna a bheidh úsáideach dóibh le linn a saoil, is cuma cén ghairm a roghnóidh siad. Baineann siad an méid sin amach i Roinn atá cairdiúil agus oscailte agus atá tiomanta don Ghaeilge agus don fhoghlaim.
- Tá ról lárnach ag an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha inár gcúrsa agus tugtar gach spreagadh do mhic léinn a scileanna labhartha agus scríofa a fheabhsú. Chuige sin, caitheann mic léinn tréimhse chónaithe sa Ghaeltacht de ghnáth.
- Tugtar modúil ar an litríocht chomhaimseartha ionas gur féidir le mic léinn eolas grinn a chur ar fhilíocht, ar phrós agus ar dhrámaíocht na Gaeilge. Cuirtear modúil ar fáil fosta ar an
- litríocht a bhaineann le tréimhsí níos luaithe, ina measc sin, filíocht na mBard, an Fhiannaíocht, filíocht an 17ú haois, an 18ú haois agus an 19ú haois. Tá modúil roghnacha ar fáil ar Ghaeilge na hAlban, ar ainmneacha pearsanta agus logainmneacha na hÉireann, agus thraidisiún
- na hamhránaíochta, agus ar thaibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta. Mar aon le ceardlanna praiticiúla agus ranganna teagaisc ar an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha, cuirimid modúl ar shochtheangeolaíocht na Gaeilge agus ar chanúineolaíocht na nuatheanga ar fáil.
- Is iomaí gné de léann na Gaeilge a ndéantar taighde uirthi sa Roinn, idir theanga agus litríocht, idir shean agus nua, chomh maith le réimsí léinn atá gaolmhar don teanga. Orthu sin tá, mar shampla, an Teangeolaíocht, an Béaloideas,
- An Chritic Liteartha, Gaeilge na hAlban, an Nua-Ghaeilge Mhoch, Logainmneacha agus Ainmneacha Pearsanta na Gaeilge, Traidisiún na hAmhránaíochta, Taibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta, agus an Cleachtas Cruthaitheach. Pléitear leis an nGaeilge mar theanga bheo agus mar chuid luachmhar d’oidhreacht chultúrtha na hÉireann agus na hEorpa.
- Trí mheán na Gaeilge a bhíonn na léachtaí, na ranganna teagaisc agus na ceardlanna ar fad, agus déantar gach cumarsáid leis an Roinn trí mheán na Gaeilge. Cé go gcuireann cúrsa na chéad bhliana béim shuntasach ar an teanga scríofa (i.e gramadach), ní theastaíonn réamheolas ar an ngramadach uait.
- Tá ionad tacaíochta Gaeilge, An Droichead, ar fáil a chuireann cabhair ar fáil do mhic léinn, mic léinn na chéad bhliana go háirithe, atá ag streachailt leis an teanga. Piartheagasc atá i gceist, agus mic léinn na dara agus na tríú bliana i mbun grúpaí beaga a stiúradh. Ní bhíonn níos mó ná cúigear mac léinn i ngach grúpa agus bíonn deis ag mic léinn ceisteanna a chur, cleachtadh a dhéanamh ar struchtúir, srl.
NG2MI
- NUA-GHAEILGE
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Computer Science at Maynooth University is the study of the principals and use of computers and software. Students enjoy the huge benefit of studying other Arts subjects with Computer Science in first year with options to take different degree paths afterwards. Advanced topics such as computer vision, theoretical computer studies, robotics, cryptography and artificial intelligence may be studied, depending on the pathway students take. - The Department of Computer Science at Maynooth University was founded in 1987 and is located in the Eolas Building. Our laboratories and equipment provide excellent facilities for practical work and all our courses include a mix of lectures and lab work. Many of our students also spend time working in industry as part of their degree, which enhances their employment opportunities once they graduate.
- We endeavour to provide a supportive and enjoyable atmosphere for learning through our Computer Science Support Centre, extensive assistance during practical work and we are always available outside of lectures to help our students.
CS2MI
- COMPUTER SCIENCE
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Studying Music at Maynooth, Ireland’s largest university music department, offers unparalleled choice and expertise, from performance to computer programming, from ancient traditions to contemporary experience, from high art to heavy metal. - Our programmes are designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical, compositional and academic work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in areas that really interest you the most in your final year.
- Performance, composition, music history (musicology including pop/rock) and the music of other cultures (ethnomusicology) are just a selection of different aspects of music you will study in the Music programme.
- Exciting and varied programme of practical, compositional and academic work.
- Students participate in ensembles such as the Chamber Choir and Traditional Music Ensemble.
- In your third year, you have the option to specialise in performance, composition or musicology. Some of the modules available include ‘Music and Entrepreneurship’, ‘Opera in Context’ and 'Popular Music Studies'.
- For those considering teaching Music at second level, the Teaching Council requirements are met by studying Music in the MH101 degree.
Registration Note:
MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
MU2MI
- MUSIC
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Sociology is a subject that opens your mind, that helps you to connect your own lived experience to the wider social and economic context, and that offers the opportunity to engage in an empowering form of student-led learning. Our graduates often speak of studying Sociology as a “life changing” experience. The Sociology Department is widely acknowledged as a leading national and international centre of teaching and research excellence, as well as an exemplar of public sociology and engagement. We seek to equip you with the necessary resources and skills – intellectual, methodological, communicative and active citizenship – to meet the challenges of our fast-changing contemporary society and to contribute productively to social transformation.
Sociology is the study of human social life, groups and societies. It is a discipline that teaches you to: - develop critical skills and powers of argumentation based on empirical evidence.
- become a creative thinker and to think outside of the box.
- engage in a constructive enterprise, oriented toward the promotion of equality and social justice.
Taking Politics and/or Sociology to degree level is an ideal preparation to teach Politics and Society at second level following a Professional Master of Education (PME).
SO2MI
- SOCIOLOGY
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
If you want to achieve a high level of competency in a modern European language, as well as learn about Spanish and Latin American culture and society more generally, studying Spanish as part of our BA degree is for you. - As a student of Spanish, you will have a twin focus on language and culture. Through language classes and with supporting material such as film, literature and cultural events, you will aim to become a fluent speaker and writer of Spanish. If you’re a beginner, you can take intensive language classes.
- Over the course of your degree programme, you will receive an excellent grounding in all aspects of Spanish language through core modules in Spanish Grammar, Professional Spanish and Translation. In your second and final years you can choose from a broad range of optional modules, such as Linguistics, Spanish Literature and Cinema, Latin American Literature and Cinema, Catalan and Portuguese.
- This is a unique opportunity and a "lifechanging" experience, as any of our past students who have spent a year abroad can attest. You also have the opportunity to work as a Teaching Assistant in Spain (subject to availability), which is a great asset to have on your CV.
Students interested in teaching Spanish should note that the Teaching Council of Ireland require all registered teachers of Spanish to have spent a minimum of two months living in a Spanish-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advise at least a three-month residency. Students who successfully complete a year abroad as part of their programme are conferred with a 4-year BA International.
SPA2MI
- SPANISH
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
A wide range of subjects including Chinese language, culture, society and history are covered in this course. Chinese Studies is offered at two levels, one for absolute beginners and one for those who already have some prior knowledge of the language. - In third year you will have the exciting opportunity to study in one of Maynooth University’s partner universities in China. This will improve your language ability, foster intercultural competence and help you to acquire the skills and confidence that you need in today’s job market. Throughout your year abroad Maynooth University’s International Office and Beijing office staff will be there to support you.
- Learning Chinese connects you to over 1.3 billion speakers of Mandarin Chinese worldwide.
- As Ireland rapidly expands its trade in goods and services with China, there is a growing demand for graduates with strong Chinese language skills and an understanding of Chinese society and culture.
- The introduction of Mandarin Chinese as a curricular subject for the Leaving Certificate examination means that there is an emerging need for teachers of Chinese at post-primary level.
- At Maynooth University you have the opportunity to study Chinese along with a wide variety of other subjects. You can choose subjects you are familiar with or entirely new ones! Learning Chinese provides a window to understanding the world. Learning about the Chinese language, culture and society will help you to acquire new skills and develop unique interests that will be of considerable value to you in your future career. These skills and interests will make you stand out from the crowd and enable you to be more competitive in the global market.
CN2MI
- CHINESE STUDIES
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Students have been studying French at Maynooth since the foundation of the college in 1795. - French is a world language, spoken by 300 million people on several continents and in French territories overseas.
- If you would like to attain a high level of competency in a modern European and world language, as well as learn about French and Francophone cultures past and present, studying French as part of our degree programme is the path for you.
- Over the course of your degree programme, you will receive an excellent grounding in all aspects of French language through core modules in French Grammar, Writing in French, Oral Expression, and Listening Skills. In second year and final year, you may choose from a range of optional modules in French and Francophone culture, such as Politics and Ideas, Literature and Society, Women’s Writing, Linguistics, Translation and Cinema (depending on availability).
What distinguishes French at Maynooth is a strong tradition of teaching the French language, literature and culture, with much teaching taking place through the medium of French (for those taking the non-beginner stream). - Maynooth has a network of exchanges with universities in countries where French is spoken. Studying French opens a world of exciting opportunities.
- As part of this programme, you may also spend a year studying at a French-speaking university or working as a language teacher in France (subject to availability).
- At Maynooth University, students gain a thorough grounding in the language and acquire a familiarity with a world language expressing vibrant cultures and diverse histories. French is offered in a friendly, supportive environment at non-beginner level (Leaving Certificate H4 in French or equivalent recommended) from first year, and also at beginner level (no minimum requirement - but the recommendation is to attend all lectures from the beginning of semester one).
- Students interested in teaching French should note that the Teaching Council of Ireland requires all registered teachers of French to have spent some time living in a French-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advises at least a three-month residency. Students who successfully complete a year abroad as part of their programme are conferred with a 4-year BA International.
FR2MI
- FRENCH
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Greek and Roman Civilization involves study of the history, literature, art, philosophy and material culture of two of the most influential periods in human history. As an interdisciplinary subject, Classics spans an immense range of human experience over some 1700 years, from the late Bronze Age through to the “fall” of the Roman Empire. Greek and Roman civilizations were of foundational importance for medieval, Renaissance and modern Europe, and can claim an almost global impact. - In Maynooth, students are introduced to the complexities and diversity of the ancient Mediterranean cultures, through many perspectives. Themes explored in individual modules include mythology and the gods; war and heroism; colonies, cities, civilization and “the barbarian”; ideologies of empire; people and elites; women and gender; friendship, sexuality, and norms of beauty; ideas of justice, law, happiness, and the holy.
- All material is studied in English translation. No previous knowledge of the subject is required or expected. Options exist for students to take modules in Greek and/or Latin languages as part of the programme in Greek & Roman Civilization
Tradition and influence. Study of Greek and Roman civilizations goes back to the foundation of Maynooth as a college in 1795. All the “greats” have studied Greece and Rome in some form, including (but not limited to) Karl Marx, W.B. Yeats, Seamus Heaney and J.K. Rowling. The Department enjoys an excellent reputation for both teaching and research. Staff are friendly, and relatively small class sizes allow students to get individual attention and feel at home. Interdisciplinary. Few other degrees offer as much, from heroic epic and lyric songs to philosophical systems to imperial politics. An all-round education that complements many other courses, laying the foundation for success in many careers and walks of life.
GC2MI
- GREEK & ROMAN CIVILIZATION
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematical physics, or theoretical physics, is the study of the fundamental laws of nature that govern our existence; from the interactions of quarks and gluons through the properties of metals and the aerodynamics of flight, to the evolution of stars and galaxies. - Many of the technologies we now take for granted have their origins in fundamental physics research, including PET scanners, lasers, Wi-Fi and the world wide web.
- Theoretical physics challenges our deeply held notions of what the world is like, and has led to developments in thinking from philosophy to genetics and neuroscience.
- The study of Mathematical Physics at Maynooth University has a long and distinguished tradition, of over 200 years. Modern theoretical physics and applied mathematics are exciting and dynamic fields, and this excitement is reflected in the research projects which are pursued in the Department.
- As well as being introduced to the major ideas and developments in theoretical physics and applied mathematics, you will be equipped with the tools to meet current and future developments in science, engineering, finance and other technologies of the future.
- Maynooth offers the unique possibility of combining Mathematical Physics with subjects such as Music, Philosophy or Geography.
MP2MI
- MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
By studying Media & Cultural Studies, you’ll get to explore the ways that film, television, social media, print media and radio shape your lived experience. - You’ll have the opportunity to research and analyse media genres like advertising and documentary, media subcultures and fandoms, and media technologies and platforms like video streaming and TikTok.
- You’ll develop your employability and professionalism through your exploration of media and cultural industries and working lives.
- This subject is focused on critical dimensions of media and culture. To develop your skills in digital and audio-visual practice, you should apply to MH109 Media Studies
- Develop understanding of how media shapes our ways of being in the world
- Build knowledge of the key practices and processes of the ever growing and ever changing media and cultural industries
- Learn how to engage effectively and critically with an increasingly mediated world
MD2CMI
- MEDIA & CULTURAL STUDIES
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Anyone with an interest in history, archaeology, languages or literature will be captivated by the topics on offer in this subject: from Cú Chulainn to Clonmacnoise, all aspects of Medieval Celtic Studies are explored. The diverse range of topics encompasses heroic literature and pre-historic archaeology, Otherworld tales and mythology, and gender and sexuality in medieval Celtic societies. The links between Ireland and the wider Celtic world are explored through literature and archaeology. You can study texts through English translations, and gain insights into the society of medieval Ireland: a world of power struggles, cattle raids, love triangles, infidelity, warfare, kingship and much more. Along the way, students discover that certain fundamental human experiences and anxieties were the same in the early Middle Ages as they are in the twenty-first century. There is an option to study modules in both the Old Irish Language and Middle Welsh. Why choose this subject? - A world-leading centre for the study of Medieval Irish and Celtic Studies, the Department of Early Irish engages in teaching and research in the history, culture, language and literature of medieval Ireland and related societies. Our special strengths lie in the study of medieval Irish literature, in its growth and development and in its relationship to contemporary European culture, as well as in the study of the Early Irish language.
- A diverse and friendly Department, we offer a vibrant and stimulating experience for students. On the research front, the Department has in recent years received several prestigious grants, including a European Research Council grant to support research in the area of Early Medieval Irish literature and language, as well as two Irish Research Council Laureate Awards for frontier research on the history of medicine in medieval Ireland. The Department has also been at the forefront of several major collaborative projects in the area of Digital Humanities.
SG2MI
- MEDIEVAL CELTIC STUDIES
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
In the Politics programme you will explore the way politics shapes our lives, the different forms that politics can take, and how politics is organised in different countries. The degree combines the traditional study of political institutions (parties, parliaments, elections, policy-making and more), political ideologies (such as liberalism and socialism) and ideas (such as justice and freedom) with political sociology (examining the relationship between politics and society and how they shape each other). - Politics students do a placement with a focus on active citizenship, which provides “real world” experience of the issues raised in the teaching programme.
- You will explore Irish and international politics, including a focus on Europe, and Latin America. You will also have an opportunity to carry out research into political life, developing analytical, communication and presentation skills.
- We also offer the opportunity to study three Arts subjects to degree level - Philosophy, Politics and Economics. This 2nd and final year pathway is ideal for students who wish to gain a rich, empirically-based understanding of the challenges posed by globalisation and a globalised economy, political volatility and democracy.
- Politics students have the opportunity to spend a year abroad, to go on staff-led field trips and to become actively involved in the Sociology and Politics Society in the MSU (Maynooth Students’ Union).
- The Network on Power, Politics and Society (PPS) and the Maynooth University Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (MUCEES) are both important parts of the MU Politics programme.
PO2MI
- POLITICS
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Statistics deals with the collection, analysis and interpretation of data. You will learn how to use statistical models and visualisation methods to unlock valuable information and hidden patterns in large volumes of data. - A degree in Statistics will provide you with tools to address problems of critical importance to humans such as climate change, developing cancer drugs or managing traffic flows.
- We offer Statistics as a Double Major subject which can be combined with most other academic subjects in the Bachelor of Arts degree. This flexibility means you can combine your interest in aspects of society with knowledge of the statistical tools needed to understand data from those fields.
- Data recording is happening at unprecedented levels on local, national and global scales. The ability to transform data into usable knowledge is a highly sought after and desirable skill in today’s workforce, be it in business, science, health or social sciences. This subject will strongly enhance your employability.
Notes
1. ST2AMI is for students taking Statistics as a minor along with a major Arts subject but not Mathematical Studies.
2. A Pass or Pass by Compensation result in either 1st Year (Arts) Mathematical Studies (MS1F15) or 1st Year (Arts) Mathematics (Pure) (MT1F30) is required for entry to any 2nd Year (Arts) Statistics programme. However, students do not need to have taken 1st Year (Arts) Statistics to enter 2nd Year (Arts) Statistics.
ST2AMI
- STATISTICS
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
ST2MI is for students taking Statistics as a minor along with a Major in Mathematical Studies. BA Statistics Minor students (ST2MI) who take a Major in Mathematical Studies (MS2MJ) must take both ST201 and ST202, either as part of the Major or as part of the Minor.
ST2MI
- STATISTICS
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Elective streams allow you to make more of your university education, and to take better advantage of the world-class lecturers and interesting subject material that Maynooth has to offer. They may help to broaden your perspective (e.g. by taking an interdisciplinary topic), allow you to interact with students from other disciplines, or help you develop transferable skills for the future in a way that complements your main disciplinary studies (e.g. study of a modern language). An elective stream amounts to one-sixth of the total course work for the year.
Registration for electives will be subject to enrolment limitations, and also must be compatible with the timetabling and other requirements of your main subjects. Some combinations of electives and subjects are excluded.
ACCOUNTING IN SOCIETY
On completion of this elective stream, students should be able to have an understanding of the basic tools of accounting, be able to apply those tools to understand issues of current affairs in the business world, and understand the contribution accounting can make to a wide range of social and global issues.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
AC2EL
- ACCOUNTING IN SOCIETY
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
ANTI-RACISM
This stream will provide students with the knowledge and competencies to critically engage with racism as a systemic form of discrimination in a variety of cultural, historical and geopolitical contexts.
AN2EL
- ANTI-RACISM
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING CHINESE
This elective stream will enable students with no prior learning to acquire the basics of Mandarin Chinese.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
CN2BEL
- BEGINNING CHINESE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING FRENCH
FR2BEL
- BEGINNING FRENCH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
BEGINNING GERMAN
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GN2BEL
- BEGINNING GERMAN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CATALAN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
CAT2EL
- CATALAN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 5
Not compulsory:
|
COMMUNITY EDUCATION
This elective stream introduces community education and practice. It outlines its history, principles and ambitions and organizes for students to witness community education in action through field visits.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
AD2CEL
- COMMUNITY EDUCATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING CHINESE
This elective stream enables students who have started to learn Chinese in First Year, but discontinue Chinese as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules CN281 and CN282. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
CN2CEL
- CONTINUING CHINESE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING FRENCH
This elective stream enables students who have studied French in First Year (at beginners or advanced levels), but discontinue French as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
FR2CEL
- CONTINUING FRENCH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING GERMAN
This elective stream enables students who have studied German in First Year (at beginners and advanced levels), but discontinue German as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules GN281 and GN282.
GN2CEL
- CONTINUING GERMAN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING NUA GHAEILGE
This elective stream enables students who have studied Irish in First Year (at beginners and advanced levels), but discontinue Irish as a full subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
NG2CEL
- CONTINUING NUA GHAEILGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CONTINUING SPANISH
This elective stream enables students who have studied Spanish in First Year (at beginners or advanced levels), but discontinue Spanish as a subject, to continue their language acquisition in Second Year. Students will join the existing Second Year modules SPA281 and SPA282. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SPA2CEL
- CONTINUING SPANISH
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES AND DIGITAL PROTOTYPING
Join the maker movement; no prior experience necessary. Find out what people really need and learn to design cool and exciting new products that combine great design and interactive programmable electronics.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GE2EL
- CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES AND DIGITAL PROTOTYPING
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
EDEN ENTREPRENEURSHIP DESIGN AND INNOVATION
This annual competition is open to all students and sets a challenge to conceive a business idea through creative problem solving, research and experimental entrepreneurship. Industry sponsors award several cash prizes. Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
PD2DEL
- EDEN ENTREPRENEURSHIP DESIGN AND INNOVATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
ENGAGING WITH CIVIL SOCIETY
This elective stream complements any discipline with both theoretically grounded and practical ‘know-how’ for working in civil society, and engaging specifically with value-driven NGOs and voluntary groups.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
SP2EL
- ENGAGING WITH CIVIL SOCIETY
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
FILM AND SCREEN STUDIES
This stream introduces students to film and screen studies in semester one, focusing on the technical analysis of moving images, their cultural history and social significance; in semester two, students choose a module through which to explore film within national contexts and genres (Irish, Latin American cinema, or documentary film) or in relation to other art forms, such as music and literature.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
MD2EL
- FILM AND SCREEN STUDIES
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
FOUNDATIONS IN SCIENCE WRITING AND COMMUNICATION
SK2EL
- FOUNDATIONS IN SCIENCE WRITING AND COMMUNICATION
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN SOCIETY AND CULTURE
This interdisciplinary elective stream aims to introduce students to current issues and debates in Gender and Sexuality Studies as they relate to their own lives.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GN2GEL
- GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN SOCIETY AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
Has human activity, driven by consumption, climate and environmental change, pushed earth systems, upon which we collectively depend, beyond irreversible tipping points, and if so, what are the emergent socio-political crises and dilemmas threatening human survival and how can we transition to a just and sustainable future?
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
GY2EL
- GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GOOD AND EVIL
To consider questions raised by the human experience of good and evil, and how it may impact understandings of God, humanity, ethics, and social issues of crime, punishment and reconciliation.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
TH2GEL
- GOOD AND EVIL
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
GREAT BOOKS
This stream will explore the "Great Books" that have inspired, empowered, challenged and consoled millions of people throughout human history by allowing them to better understand themselves and the world they live in.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
EN2BEL
- GREAT BOOKS
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INFLUENTIAL IDEAS IN ECONOMICS
EC2EL
- INFLUENTIAL IDEAS IN ECONOMICS
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INTENSIVE INTRODUCTORY LATIN
LN2BEL
- INTENSIVE INTRODUCTORY LATIN
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INTRODUCTION TO ANCIENT GREEK
GR2BEL
- INTRODUCTION TO ANCIENT GREEK
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN THE DIGITAL AGE
Students will study the principles of valid argument and address some important philosophical issues that arise within the interplay of technology and the human being in the 'Digital Age' today.
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
PH2LEL
- INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN THE DIGITAL AGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
IRISH CULTURAL HERITAGE
Please note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
NG2IEL
- IRISH CULTURAL HERITAGE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
POR2EL
- PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
PRIORITISING PEOPLE AND PLANET
KD2AEL
- PRIORITISING PEOPLE AND PLANET
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
SKILLS FOR SUCCESS:PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
EX2EX-“Prioritise your future career by selecting a module that gives you the opportunity to meet employers, develop a strong sense of self-awareness, an elective that enables you to identify and develop a range of employability skills, as well as to enhance your application and interview technique, ensuring that you are well equipped to secure internships and to successfully enter the graduate labour market”.
This module is offered in both semester 1- EX201 and repeated in semester 2 - EX202.
Students register for one module only. EX201 or EX202.
Students cannot register for both modules
Please Note: Electives are subject to timetable constraints. Some combinations of Electives and Subjects may be excluded.
EX2EX
- SKILLS FOR SUCCESS:PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
|
Credits: 5
Not compulsory:
|
THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE IRISH EQUINE INDUSTRY
MN2EQEL
- THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE IRISH EQUINE INDUSTRY
|
Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
|
WONDROUS PEOPLE AND PLACES: AN INTRODUCTION TO CELTIC LITERATURE
SG2EL
- WONDROUS PEOPLE AND PLACES: AN INTRODUCTION TO CELTIC LITERATURE
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Credits: 10
Not compulsory:
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Year 3
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We explore environment, place, and space. We ask questions such as: How much climate change are we causing and how quickly? What sorts of attachments to home do people form and what happens when these are disrupted by migration? How is Ireland, and its regions, affected by economic globalisation? - Through Geography, you will get to the heart of contemporary issues such as climate and environmental change, geopolitics, the transformation of modern societies and cultures, global health and social inequality, and how cities are evolving.
- Geography education at Maynooth includes field trips, both in Ireland and overseas.
- Students can choose 15 or 30 credits of Geography in first year and progress into a Single Major degree from second year.
- In your third year, you may opt for an industry placement module (subject to availability) to experience what it’s like to work with an organisation outside the University.
- You will learn to think critically, analysing how and why our world changes. Geography paves the way for active citizenship and lifelong learning.
- Our students develop a special way of thinking ‘spatially’, with space and place at the forefront of their analysis, and learn a range of skills which appeal to employers.
- Our students are taught by international experts in the fields of environment, place and space.
Registration notes re. GY399A (semester 1) and GY399B (semester 2) Students who are interested in registering for GY399A or GY399B need to contact the module coordinator to discuss this, and get approval for this, a few months in advance of the start of the respective semester. Students who are approved to register for either module will not initially be able to register for them when online registrations commence in early September. However, their registration details will be sorted out by the Department during the first few weeks of semester 1 for GY399A and semester 2 for GY399B. It is not permitted to register for GY399A and GY399B.
GY3DM
- GEOGRAPHY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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German currently tops the list of the 5 most in-demand foreign languages in Ireland among employers (cpl.com). As the native language to almost 100 million people around the world, German is a critical language for business, science and culture. - Studying German at MU equips you with excellent language, communication, research, intercultural and analytical skills that help you stand out from the crowd.
- We have a wide range of exciting modules taught by international and local experts. Our students have opportunities to focus on linguistics, translation, history, politics, and the literary, visual and business cultures connected to German, alongside the language itself.
- If you’re a beginner, you can fast-track your progress by taking German as a double subject.
Why choose this subject? - Language AND culture: discover how people live, think and interact in German-speaking countries. Our programme is specially designed to allow you to develop advanced competence and fluency in all
- key language areas, while expanding your cultural understanding, intercultural awareness, and your critical thinking and evaluative abilities.
- Small classes taught by experts: our language, linguistics and culture modules are generally taught in small class groups - an environment in which students thrive. Our staff are keen researchers, and this is integrated into our teaching and approach.
- Year Abroad: every student is encouraged to spend a year in a German-speaking country. You can study at a German-speaking university – we have links with over 20 universities in Germany and Austria - or work as a language teacher or be an Erasmus intern (subject to availability).
- Employability: 1,200 positions are currently open to graduates with strong German proficiency and intercultural skills.
Every student will have the opportunity to spend a year in a German-speaking country as an Erasmus student, Language assistant or Erasmus intern (subject to availability). German at MU Erasmus links include: - large cities including Berlin, Munich and Vienna;
- smaller cities such as Graz, Potsdam, Leipzig and Bonn;
- towns like Bielefeld, Marburg and Tübingen.
Interested in teaching German? The Teaching Council of Ireland require all registered teachers of German to have spent a minimum of two months living in a German-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advise at least a three-month residency.
GN3DM
- GERMAN
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Choosing Law is ideal for people who want to experience it in their first year as part of a Bachelor of Arts degree and enjoy flexibility in their second and final year progression options. - Flexibility and choice: students who successfully complete their first year law modules have the option of transferring to one of our specialised Law degrees (MH502 BCL or MH501 LLB). Tailor your degree to your interests while developing a broad skill set which is highly valued by employers
- Law can be taken as a single or double subject in first year allowing students to combine the study of core law subjects with options from up to 31 subject areas.
- At the end of second year, students of the BCL and LLB degrees (having moved from the BA degree) may apply to complete a work placement year in law firm (subject to availability).
- All Law students - BA, BCL and LLB - may apply to complete a year studying abroad at one of our partner institutions.
- Get involved in our numerous student societies: the student Law Society, European Law Students’ Association or Student FLAC (Free Legal Advice Centre) Society.
LW3DM
- LAW
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
MT3DM
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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'Philosophy' is an ancient Greek word that means ‘love of wisdom’. The wisdom philosophy seeks is concerned with the big questions that everyone will eventually encounter in his or her life: What is happiness? What is love? Is there a god? What is the meaning of it all? Philosophy approaches these questions both historically and systematically. Thinking philosophically requires knowledge of what those who have come before us have thought; but it also requires the ability to evaluate these positions critically. Philosophy explores the foundations of all of reality and of all knowledge. To mention a few examples, there is a philosophy of language and a philosophy of music; political philosophy; ethics; a philosophy of science and a philosophy of religion. There is nothing that cannot be questioned philosophically, and there is no interest that cannot be combined with philosophy. Philosophy is not the most practical of subjects. Yet every society needs philosophers—people who do not just live, love, work, raise children, etc., but who seek answers to the question “why”. This is the case particularly in the world today, which is changing so rapidly that one needs a solid grounding in order not to get lost. Why choose this subject? - A philosophy degree is not a qualification for any particular career; rather, one studies philosophy to lead an 'examined life', as Socrates put it. Studying philosophy is an investment in one’s life.
- This having been said, the expertise gained in philosophy is of great value in many different areas. Philosophy graduates are valued for their quick intelligence, ability to reason deeply, clearly and independently, and for their ability to take an overview on the problem or situation confronting them.
- At Maynooth, philosophy can also be studied in conjunction with mathematics and computer science (BSc in Computational Thinking). This degree pathway brings philosophy to bear on some of the cutting-edge issues of contemporary society.
Note PY147 The Philosophy of the Human Person: this is a St Patrick's College module and is not available for general registration
PH3DM
- PHILOSOPHY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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This option will suit students interested in taking a language with Business (International). - International Business is about conducting business in different countries and managing people and organisations in an increasingly globalised world.
- To effectively compete in this changing business landscape, organisations must offer goods and services across nations, regions, and continents outside of their home market and must also manage increasingly diverse workforces as nations, cultures, and markets converge.
- International Business provides the strategies, insights, and skills to respond to these challenges, enabling organisations to manage diverse people and operations and to compete for customers across the world.
- Business (International) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. a language, Anthropology, Geography amongst others. Languages available include Chinese Studies, French, German, Nua-Ghaeilge and Spanish.
- Our International Business degree is ideal for students with a global outlook who wish to work either in local firms competing abroad or in subsidiaries of foreign multinationals, located either here or abroad.
- International Business students at Maynooth are offered a wide variety of choice. We offer modules that will develop both core business management knowledge as well as modules that provide a more specialist understanding of the international aspects of business.
- International Business students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what they learn in university with insights into another culture.
MN3IDM
- BUSINESS (INTERNATIONAL)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Management is about taking ideas and converting them into action: designing, making, and delivering products and services that customers and citizens want or need. Essentially, it is about organising to get things done. - Managers are generalists and organisers; they need to know the fundamentals of all major aspects of business, from thinking about the business as a whole and its strategic direction, to organising the workforce, managing the effective use of information technology, managing supply chains locally and globally, and effectively managing costs and revenues.
- Managers are at the heart of how these complex functions are seamlessly combined to make the world look simple to customers. Our degree in Business Management (MH404) will equip you with the tools necessary to achieve this.
- Our faculty are a blend of international and local industry experts who bring profound insights into the practicality and complexity of Management.
- Management students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture.
- If you are interested in a career as a second level teacher of business, Business (Management) is the subject to choose from the three business subjects available in MH101.
- Management students at Maynooth are offered unparalleled choice and flexibility. This degree offers you insights into all of the major functions of business, as well as the opportunity to undertake specialist options in the subjects you most enjoy so that you can shape your degree based on your own strengths and interests.
The Arts Business programme offers students an understanding of the foundations, functions and core strategic aspects of business. Our Arts Business programme offers you the opportunity to undertake options in the subjects you enjoy so you can specialise your degree based on your own strengths and interests.
Business is about identifying and delivering solutions to the problems and needs of people in a sustainable and profitable way. Management is the method through which firms, government and voluntary groups organise the jobs that need to be done to efficiently and effectively design, produce, market and improve products and services. Marketing is about analysing markets, connecting customers with the capabilities of a business to produce products and services that they need. Business graduates are consistently amongst the most employable of all in the Irish education system.
Taking Business as an Arts subject is an ideal choice if you wish to pursue a subject you are passionate about in the humanities or social sciences and want to be able to understand how you take effective action in your discipline or market your discipline to attract the interest of people in what you do.
MN3MDM
- BUSINESS (MANAGEMENT)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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- Marketing is all about customers, understanding their needs, how they behave and why they buy, so that businesses can build long term relationships with them. Creating and managing customers are central themes to what we teach and research at the Maynooth University School of Business.
- Marketing is a wide and varied discipline, connecting a firm to its customers in the marketplace. It is fast-paced and dynamic, interlinking with every other area of business to understand how value is created and captured for the company and its customers.
- Marketing is critical to the growth of a business – a key challenge from small local businesses to large global corporations. Using both traditional and digital tools, marketers must understand customer needs in order to create innovative products and service to meet those needs.
Marketing is both profoundly local and global, selling to one individual customer or to a large international market. Our faculty bring a rich and diverse expertise from both local and international markets across a broad range of topic areas, including digital marketing, online retailing, branding, communications and consumer behaviour. Together we offer students deep insights into the practicalities and applications of marketing, from what makes customers tick to how to make the best of market opportunities. Our approach to Marketing provides students with a deep understanding of the marketing function, as well as wider management and business processes so you can deliver value to customers and your organisation. Options are available which allow you to specialise your degree according to your strengths and interests in the topic areas you enjoy most. Marketing students also have the option of taking a four-year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture. Business (Marketing) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. Psychological Studies, Geography, Law, Anthropology, a language amongst others.
MN3KDM
- BUSINESS (MARKETING)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Criminology is the study of crime, criminal behaviour and the criminal justice system. - At Maynooth, we offer a unique opportunity to study Criminology as part of a broad based Arts degree.
- You can choose Criminology in combination with other Arts subjects (including Law, Psychological Studies etc.) in first year, and then choose to continue with Criminology in second and third year.
- Maynooth University is the only University in the Republic of Ireland offering the opportunity to study Criminology as part of an Arts programme, and one of the few to offer a Law and Criminology degree (if you move from MH101 to MH502 in second year).
- Unique interdisciplinary programme with perspectives from sociology, psychology and economics as well as law.
- Flexibility and choice, including options to transfer into law.
LW370 is not available at online registration. Please contact the Department of Law for registration details.
LW3CDM
- CRIMINOLOGY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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- The European Studies subject focuses on the study of the history and politics of contemporary Europe and its institutions.
- On this programme you will explore how European institutions function and how they have evolved over the years.
- You will learn about 20th and 21st century history and how conflict and reconciliation has shaped present-day attitudes towards European integration.
- You will learn about the different regions of Europe and the successes or not of their integration into the European Union and its institutions. You will have a chance to think about possible futures of the European project.
- You will have the option of studying German or Spanish at beginner or intermediate level.
Why choose this subject?
- The European Studies programme at Maynooth is unique in that it focuses on the politics and recent history of Europe and its institutions. The programme offers an excellent preparation for a career in Europe or for an advanced degree in European Studies.
- Staff teaching on the European Studies have expertise in European institutions and enlargement, on the history of war and peace in the Balkans and the legacy of the communist period in Eastern Europe.
- The European Studies programme is closely integrated with the Maynooth Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (MCEES) and hold regular events, invites guest speakers.
- As part of your degree, you will have the option to take part in a field trip to Brussels, including a visit to the European Parliament and meeting with Irish MEPs.
ES3DM
- EUROPEAN STUDIES
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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History is the systematic examination of human experience over time. It attempts to explain the origins and evolution of the societies we live in, from as many points of view as possible. - History explores the complex processes of social and economic change, the choice of one set of political or ethical values over another, the context in which new ideas arise, and much more. The written word is one way of gathering information about the past, but new technologies and research methods allow for the study of history to take place through other mediums.
- The Department’s long-standing reputation for excellence and leadership in historical scholarship both in Ireland and internationally is one reason for the popularity of History at Maynooth. We have also kept our discipline vibrant, engaging and of practical value to students. We provide a solid grounding in the practice of history and boast expertise in a wide range of specialist topics such as life in medieval Ireland, the intersection of American and world history, the First World War, and gender and sexual politics.
1. Semester 1. Students must take one only from the following group: HY304, HY320, HY3023 Semester 2. Students must take one only from the following group: HY384, HY3011, HY3018 2. HY301 (Dissertation): students may only take this module if they achieved a minimum of 650 in Year 2 History. Eligible students who choose HY301 must also select one of the special topics in each semester, i.e. one from HY304, HY320, HY3023 (semester one) and one from HY384, HY3011 and HY3018 (semester two).
HY3DM
- HISTORY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Beginning with words on a page, English is a world-facing subject: it takes you across historical periods, cultures, locations and genres, from poetry and drama to the novel, film, and creative writing too. As a student of English, you will learn about: - Different literary forms from poetry and drama to the novel and film, as well as creative writing.
- The conditions that shape literature from history and geography to questions of gender, race, and class.
- How literary texts enable us to understand our own complex world.
- Different approaches to and theories of literature.
- How different schools of critical thought or areas have shaped and reshaped the subject of English literary studies.
Engaging in critical debate about the meaning and value of literature will help you to: - Foster your critical and creative abilities.
- Develop awareness of the multi-dimensional nature of human situations.
- Approach problems with an open and enquiring mind.
- Gain analytical skills, finely-honed writing skills and develop critical thinking – skills which appeal greatly to future employers. Maynooth University Department of English boasts notable expertise in a wide range of literature from the early modern to the present day, and from Irish literature to American, African, Arab and global literatures. Our lecturers’ research expertise informs their teaching and provides you as a student with current critical thinking in the broad field of English studies. Our degree reflects the changing, global nature of English language literature while also providing you with a thorough understanding of established literary traditions.
EN3DM
- ENGLISH
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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International development looks at the development challenges and opportunities confronting people and societies living in the Global South (including Africa, Asia and Latin America), while addressing the myriad of global challenges associated with sustainable development for the planet as a whole. As a student of International Development in the Bachelor of Arts degree you will explore issues such as globalisation, climate change, food security, poverty, conflict, disasters and other humanitarian emergencies, human rights, health, education, gender, inequality and empowerment, from an international development perspective. - Gain an understanding of development activism and how development can be planned, organised and managed to meet the needs of all, especially the most marginalised communities around the world.
- We will focus on the roles and effectiveness of international and national development actors (UN, Governments, NGO’s and Civil Society groups) and market actors in meeting development challenges, and in providing a better world for all.
KD3DM
- INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. - Our Mathematics degrees aim to bridge the gap between school Mathematics and current frontiers of knowledge. You will learn to think hard and rigorously about questions and to solve new problems – invaluable skills that can be transferred to any area of life and any job you hold in future.
- A degree in a Mathematical discipline opens the door to jobs in a variety of fields such as finance, trading, insurance, information technology, education, data analysis, scientific research and development.
- The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject.
- The academic staff in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics have a diverse range of research interests in areas including algebra, analysis, data analysis, dynamics, geometry, number theory, statistical modelling and topology.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
MS3DM
- MATHEMATICAL STUDIES
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
MT3DM
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Music Technology is a unique opportunity to combine Music Technology with Music, Computer Science and a wide range of other disciplines. - Strikes a balance between practice and theory. You gain hands-on experience of the practical skills involved in music technology while learning about essential concepts.
- Wide in scope, including recording and sound engineering, computer music programming, sound design, composition, acoustics and psychoacoustics.
- Studying Music Technology offers an opportunity to develop and combine your creative and technical abilities. Facilities include a recording studio; a live room; a 5.1 mastering studio; Mac laboratories utilising Pro Tools software; field recording resources.
- Our programme is designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical and theoretical work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in the areas that interest you the most in your final year. Final year students oversee significant recording and composition projects, or work towards instrument and software development.
Note:
Students already enrolled in MH102 (Music Technology) will complete their studies under that programme.
MU3TDM
- MUSIC TECHNOLOGY
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Credits: 30
Compulsory:
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Anthropology is the comparative study of human society and culture. By closely observing and analyzing different ways of life around the world, from tribal villages to Wall Street offices, anthropologists create new knowledge about human nature and what it means to be human today. - You will learn how to research cultural practices and social institutions such as: religion and ritual, kinship and family, economy and the market, politics and government, language and performance, science and technology, traditional healing and biomedicine, and much more.
- You can also study forensic anthropology, which applies skeletal analysis and archaeological techniques to solve criminal cases.
- You will engage in practical, experiential learning, including ethnographic fieldwork projects.
- Anthropology fosters creativity and imagination by helping us to think beyond our own pre-conceived world views. By cultivating better understanding across cultures, anthropologists also confront forms of prejudice, injustice and inequality.
Note: AN351, and AN353 not available at online registration. Contact the Department for further details.
AN3DM
- ANTHROPOLOGY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Economics is a social science that helps us to understand the behaviour of decision makers such as consumers, firms, workers, governments, investors, central banks, policy makers. - Economists are not defined by the subject matter that they study but rather by the way they approach a given topic. Economics provides a framework for understanding problems and learning how to solve them.
- There is a misconception about economics. People tend to think that economics is all about money and profits, but economics is much more than that. It is about understanding the past, predicting the future, and making evidence-based policy recommendations.
- Economists aim to find feasible solutions to help improve people's lives. This involves tackling important societal problems such as: how to reduce gender in equality and racial discrimination, how to create international cooperation to protect the environment, how to break the poverty trap in less-developed countries, how to reduce crime.
- Economists use game theory to analyse strategic interaction to answer questions such as: What is the optimal pricing and advertisement strategy for a firm? How should we set political campaign financing rules to improve the quality of our democracy? How should patents be designed to foster innovation but not curtail competition?
- Economists use statistical techniques to understand the market and how people respond to incentives. By determining causal relationships, economists can make evidence-based policy recommendations at the firm and state level.
Note
Students must not take EC327 if they have completed it in 2nd year.
EC3DM
- ECONOMICS
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Finance is taught as an application of Economics. It examines the role of government and international organisations in the management and regulation of financial markets. Finance is the study of investment risk and reward. You don’t need to have any previous knowledge of Finance, only an interest in how the financial sector and the economy works and a desire to know more. The ability to work in a second language is an advantage for Finance graduates. As an Arts student, you may combine Finance with Chinese, French, German, or Spanish – all are available at beginner/non-beginner level (except Chinese - only beginner level). The Department is made up of an accomplished group of academics with an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching.
FN3DM
- FINANCE
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Latin at Maynooth goes all the way back to the foundation of the first college here in 1795, and is still central to the Arts and Humanities. Latin (language) is available at beginner and non-beginner levels and may be combined with one or both of Greek or Greek and Roman Civilization as part of the Single Major BA degree in Classics, either from the start of first year or in second year.
- If you would like to immerse yourself in the ancient languages, you can study Latin as a subject in its own right, all the way up to degree level and in this programme you will not only study the Latin language, but will also be encouraged to read widely in the literature and culture of ancient Rome.
- In first year the emphasis is on language acquisition, which means that in second and third year you will be able to read, in the original language, classical texts by literary giants such as Cicero, Ovid and Virgil.
- In this programme you will not only study the Latin language, but will also be encouraged to read widely in the literature and culture of ancient Rome. The focus throughout the course is therefore not only on the language but on acquiring critical skills and a broader knowledge of the ancient Roman world, its literature, schools of thought and ways of life. This course is intended for beginners, and no previous knowledge of the subject is required.
LN3DM
- LATIN
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
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Students of the Modern Irish course study the language (spoken and written) and aspects of literature and culture. - Our students learn about the diversity and rich heritage of the Irish language, and also acquire skills which will be advantageous to them throughout their lives, irrespective of which career they choose. They will accomplish this in a friendly, open Department that has a strong commitment to Irish and to learning.
- Spoken and written Irish are obviously central to our course and students are given every encouragement and support to improve their oral and written skills. To this end, students normally spend a period of residence in the Gaeltacht.
- Our modules allow students to gain a deep appreciation of contemporary Irish literature - poetry, prose and drama. Modules are also offered on earlier periods of Irish literature, including Bardic Poetry, the Fenian Cycle and poetry of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. There also are optional modules on Scottish Gaelic, on Irish personal and place names, on the sean-nós singing tradition, and on Irish-language oral traditions and performing arts. In addition to practical workshops and tutorials on written and spoken Irish, we also offer modules on the sociolinguistics of Irish and on the phonology and dialectology of the modern language.
Many aspects of Irish studies are researched in the Department, both language and literature, old and new, as well as other related areas of study. Among the courses offered are Linguistics, Folklore, Literary Criticism, Scottish Gaelic, Early Modern Irish, Irish Place and Personal Names, the sean-nós singing tradition, and Irish-language/ Gaeltacht performing arts. Irish is studied both as a living language and as a valuable part of Irish and European cultural heritage. All lectures, tutorials and workshops are through the medium of the Irish language, as is all communication with the Department, and while the first-year course places significant emphasis on the written language (i.e. grammar), no prior knowledge of grammar is necessary. There is an Irish language support centre, An Droichead, which provides assistance to students, first year students in particular, who are struggling with the language. This works on a peer-tutoring basis, with second and third year students tutoring groups of no more than five students – allowing students to ask questions, to practice structures, etc Déanann mic léinn na Nua-Ghaeilge staidéar ar an teanga (labhartha agus scríofa) agus ar ghnéithe den litríocht agus den chultúr. - Foghlaimíonn ár mic léinn faoin ilghnéitheacht agus faoin oidhreacht shaibhir atá ag an nGaeilge, chomh maith le scileanna a bheidh úsáideach dóibh le linn a saoil, is cuma cén ghairm a roghnóidh siad. Baineann siad an méid sin amach i Roinn atá cairdiúil agus oscailte agus atá tiomanta don Ghaeilge agus don fhoghlaim.
- Tá ról lárnach ag an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha inár gcúrsa agus tugtar gach spreagadh do mhic léinn a scileanna labhartha agus scríofa a fheabhsú. Chuige sin, caitheann mic léinn tréimhse chónaithe sa Ghaeltacht de ghnáth.
- Tugtar modúil ar an litríocht chomhaimseartha ionas gur féidir le mic léinn eolas grinn a chur ar fhilíocht, ar phrós agus ar dhrámaíocht na Gaeilge. Cuirtear modúil ar fáil fosta ar an
- litríocht a bhaineann le tréimhsí níos luaithe, ina measc sin, filíocht na mBard, an Fhiannaíocht, filíocht an 17ú haois, an 18ú haois agus an 19ú haois. Tá modúil roghnacha ar fáil ar Ghaeilge na hAlban, ar ainmneacha pearsanta agus logainmneacha na hÉireann, agus thraidisiún
- na hamhránaíochta, agus ar thaibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta. Mar aon le ceardlanna praiticiúla agus ranganna teagaisc ar an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha, cuirimid modúl ar shochtheangeolaíocht na Gaeilge agus ar chanúineolaíocht na nuatheanga ar fáil.
- Is iomaí gné de léann na Gaeilge a ndéantar taighde uirthi sa Roinn, idir theanga agus litríocht, idir shean agus nua, chomh maith le réimsí léinn atá gaolmhar don teanga. Orthu sin tá, mar shampla, an Teangeolaíocht, an Béaloideas,
- An Chritic Liteartha, Gaeilge na hAlban, an Nua-Ghaeilge Mhoch, Logainmneacha agus Ainmneacha Pearsanta na Gaeilge, Traidisiún na hAmhránaíochta, Taibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta, agus an Cleachtas Cruthaitheach. Pléitear leis an nGaeilge mar theanga bheo agus mar chuid luachmhar d’oidhreacht chultúrtha na hÉireann agus na hEorpa.
- Trí mheán na Gaeilge a bhíonn na léachtaí, na ranganna teagaisc agus na ceardlanna ar fad, agus déantar gach cumarsáid leis an Roinn trí mheán na Gaeilge. Cé go gcuireann cúrsa na chéad bhliana béim shuntasach ar an teanga scríofa (i.e gramadach), ní theastaíonn réamheolas ar an ngramadach uait.
- Tá ionad tacaíochta Gaeilge, An Droichead, ar fáil a chuireann cabhair ar fáil do mhic léinn, mic léinn na chéad bhliana go háirithe, atá ag streachailt leis an teanga. Piartheagasc atá i gceist, agus mic léinn na dara agus na tríú bliana i mbun grúpaí beaga a stiúradh. Ní bhíonn níos mó ná cúigear mac léinn i ngach grúpa agus bíonn deis ag mic léinn ceisteanna a chur, cleachtadh a dhéanamh ar struchtúir, srl.
NG3DM
- NUA-GHAEILGE
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Computer Science at Maynooth University is the study of the principals and use of computers and software. Students enjoy the huge benefit of studying other Arts subjects with Computer Science in first year with options to take different degree paths afterwards. Advanced topics such as computer vision, theoretical computer studies, robotics, cryptography and artificial intelligence may be studied, depending on the pathway students take. - The Department of Computer Science at Maynooth University was founded in 1987 and is located in the Eolas Building. Our laboratories and equipment provide excellent facilities for practical work and all our courses include a mix of lectures and lab work. Many of our students also spend time working in industry as part of their degree, which enhances their employment opportunities once they graduate.
- We endeavour to provide a supportive and enjoyable atmosphere for learning through our Computer Science Support Centre, extensive assistance during practical work and we are always available outside of lectures to help our students.
Note for registration
Students are reminded that they should try to select an even balance of modules and credits across the two semesters.
CS3DM
- COMPUTER SCIENCE
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Studying Music at Maynooth, Ireland’s largest university music department, offers unparalleled choice and expertise, from performance to computer programming, from ancient traditions to contemporary experience, from high art to heavy metal. - Our programmes are designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical, compositional and academic work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in areas that really interest you the most in your final year.
- Performance, composition, music history (musicology including pop/rock) and the music of other cultures (ethnomusicology) are just a selection of different aspects of music you will study in the Music programme.
- Exciting and varied programme of practical, compositional and academic work.
- Students participate in ensembles such as the Chamber Choir and Traditional Music Ensemble.
- In your third year, you have the option to specialise in performance, composition or musicology. Some of the modules available include ‘Music and Entrepreneurship’, ‘Opera in Context’ and 'Popular Music Studies'.
- For those considering teaching Music at second level, the Teaching Council requirements are met by studying Music in the MH101 degree.
Notes
1. MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
2. Students may only take one of MU359 and MU360; it is not permitted to take both modules.
MU3ATDM
- MUSIC
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Notes
1. MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
2. Students may only take one of MU359 and MU360; it is not permitted to take both modules.
MU3CDM
- MUSIC (COMPOSITION)
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Notes
1. MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
2. Students may only take one of MU359 and MU360; it is not permitted to take both modules.
MU3MDM
- MUSIC (MUSICOLOGY)
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Notes
1. MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
2. Students may only take one of MU359 and MU360; it is not permitted to take both modules.
MU3PDM
- MUSIC PERFORMANCE
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Sociology is a subject that opens your mind, that helps you to connect your own lived experience to the wider social and economic context, and that offers the opportunity to engage in an empowering form of student-led learning. Our graduates often speak of studying Sociology as a “life changing” experience. The Sociology Department is widely acknowledged as a leading national and international centre of teaching and research excellence, as well as an exemplar of public sociology and engagement. We seek to equip you with the necessary resources and skills – intellectual, methodological, communicative and active citizenship – to meet the challenges of our fast-changing contemporary society and to contribute productively to social transformation.
Sociology is the study of human social life, groups and societies. It is a discipline that teaches you to: - develop critical skills and powers of argumentation based on empirical evidence.
- become a creative thinker and to think outside of the box.
- engage in a constructive enterprise, oriented toward the promotion of equality and social justice.
Taking Politics and/or Sociology to degree level is an ideal preparation to teach Politics and Society at second level following a Professional Master of Education (PME).
SO3DM
- SOCIOLOGY
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
This subject is for students taking Sociology and Politics.
SO3PDM
- SOCIOLOGY (WITH POLITICS)
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Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
If you want to achieve a high level of competency in a modern European language, as well as learn about Spanish and Latin American culture and society more generally, studying Spanish as part of our BA degree is for you. - As a student of Spanish, you will have a twin focus on language and culture. Through language classes and with supporting material such as film, literature and cultural events, you will aim to become a fluent speaker and writer of Spanish. If you’re a beginner, you can take intensive language classes.
- Over the course of your degree programme, you will receive an excellent grounding in all aspects of Spanish language through core modules in Spanish Grammar, Professional Spanish and Translation. In your second and final years you can choose from a broad range of optional modules, such as Linguistics, Spanish Literature and Cinema, Latin American Literature and Cinema, Catalan and Portuguese.
- This is a unique opportunity and a "lifechanging" experience, as any of our past students who have spent a year abroad can attest. You also have the opportunity to work as a Teaching Assistant in Spain (subject to availability), which is a great asset to have on your CV.
Students interested in teaching Spanish should note that the Teaching Council of Ireland require all registered teachers of Spanish to have spent a minimum of two months living in a Spanish-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advise at least a three-month residency. Students who successfully complete a year abroad as part of their programme are conferred with a 4-year BA International.
SPA3DM
- SPANISH
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
You will study Accounting (the language of finance and business) along with up to three other Arts subjects in first year. The unique flexibility of the MU Arts programme provides you with the option of transferring in to one of our designated accounting programmes at the end of first year. - By choosing to study accounting, you are opening up the possibility of becoming a professional accountant which offers a rewarding career with international mobility and high earning potential.
- You will engage with expert faculty, who foster an engaging, friendly, supportive and dynamic learning environment.
- Understanding the language of Accounting will be advantageous to you if you work in a business or set up your own business.
- By choosing to study accounting, you could also pursue a career in teaching.
- The extensive range of subjects available in the BA programme allows you to combine the study of accounting with other subjects that suit your interests. No prior knowledge of accounting is required, as we teach it from first principles.
- Become a highly sought-after graduate possessing the technical accounting and transferable skills required of future business leaders which allows students to pursue rewarding career opportunities.
- Depending on your 1st year results, you may have the opportunity to move from MH101 into one of our specialised degree programmes in accounting, thereby opening up further study and work experience opportunities.
AC3DM
- ACCOUNTING
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
A wide range of subjects including Chinese language, culture, society and history are covered in this course. Chinese Studies is offered at two levels, one for absolute beginners and one for those who already have some prior knowledge of the language. - In third year you will have the exciting opportunity to study in one of Maynooth University’s partner universities in China. This will improve your language ability, foster intercultural competence and help you to acquire the skills and confidence that you need in today’s job market. Throughout your year abroad Maynooth University’s International Office and Beijing office staff will be there to support you.
- Learning Chinese connects you to over 1.3 billion speakers of Mandarin Chinese worldwide.
- As Ireland rapidly expands its trade in goods and services with China, there is a growing demand for graduates with strong Chinese language skills and an understanding of Chinese society and culture.
- The introduction of Mandarin Chinese as a curricular subject for the Leaving Certificate examination means that there is an emerging need for teachers of Chinese at post-primary level.
- At Maynooth University you have the opportunity to study Chinese along with a wide variety of other subjects. You can choose subjects you are familiar with or entirely new ones! Learning Chinese provides a window to understanding the world. Learning about the Chinese language, culture and society will help you to acquire new skills and develop unique interests that will be of considerable value to you in your future career. These skills and interests will make you stand out from the crowd and enable you to be more competitive in the global market.
CN3DM
- CHINESE STUDIES
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
- The European Studies subject focuses on the study of the history and politics of contemporary Europe and its institutions.
- On this programme you will explore how European institutions function and how they have evolved over the years.
- You will learn about 20th and 21st century history and how conflict and reconciliation has shaped present-day attitudes towards European integration.
- You will learn about the different regions of Europe and the successes or not of their integration into the European Union and its institutions. You will have a chance to think about possible futures of the European project.
- You will have the option of studying German or Spanish at beginner or intermediate level.
Why choose this subject?
- The European Studies programme at Maynooth is unique in that it focuses on the politics and recent history of Europe and its institutions. The programme offers an excellent preparation for a career in Europe or for an advanced degree in European Studies.
- Staff teaching on the European Studies have expertise in European institutions and enlargement, on the history of war and peace in the Balkans and the legacy of the communist period in Eastern Europe.
- The European Studies programme is closely integrated with the Maynooth Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (MCEES) and hold regular events, invites guest speakers.
- As part of your degree, you will have the option to take part in a field trip to Brussels, including a visit to the European Parliament and meeting with Irish MEPs.
ES3DM
- EUROPEAN STUDIES
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Students have been studying French at Maynooth since the foundation of the college in 1795. - French is a world language, spoken by 300 million people on several continents and in French territories overseas.
- If you would like to attain a high level of competency in a modern European and world language, as well as learn about French and Francophone cultures past and present, studying French as part of our degree programme is the path for you.
- Over the course of your degree programme, you will receive an excellent grounding in all aspects of French language through core modules in French Grammar, Writing in French, Oral Expression, and Listening Skills. In second year and final year, you may choose from a range of optional modules in French and Francophone culture, such as Politics and Ideas, Literature and Society, Women’s Writing, Linguistics, Translation and Cinema (depending on availability).
What distinguishes French at Maynooth is a strong tradition of teaching the French language, literature and culture, with much teaching taking place through the medium of French (for those taking the non-beginner stream). - Maynooth has a network of exchanges with universities in countries where French is spoken. Studying French opens a world of exciting opportunities.
- As part of this programme, you may also spend a year studying at a French-speaking university or working as a language teacher in France (subject to availability).
- At Maynooth University, students gain a thorough grounding in the language and acquire a familiarity with a world language expressing vibrant cultures and diverse histories. French is offered in a friendly, supportive environment at non-beginner level (Leaving Certificate H4 in French or equivalent recommended) from first year, and also at beginner level (no minimum requirement - but the recommendation is to attend all lectures from the beginning of semester one).
- Students interested in teaching French should note that the Teaching Council of Ireland requires all registered teachers of French to have spent some time living in a French-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advises at least a three-month residency. Students who successfully complete a year abroad as part of their programme are conferred with a 4-year BA International.
Note: FR313A will not be available at online registration. Interested students should contact the department for details.
FR3DM
- FRENCH
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Greek and Roman Civilization involves study of the history, literature, art, philosophy and material culture of two of the most influential periods in human history. As an interdisciplinary subject, Classics spans an immense range of human experience over some 1700 years, from the late Bronze Age through to the “fall” of the Roman Empire. Greek and Roman civilizations were of foundational importance for medieval, Renaissance and modern Europe, and can claim an almost global impact. - In Maynooth, students are introduced to the complexities and diversity of the ancient Mediterranean cultures, through many perspectives. Themes explored in individual modules include mythology and the gods; war and heroism; colonies, cities, civilization and “the barbarian”; ideologies of empire; people and elites; women and gender; friendship, sexuality, and norms of beauty; ideas of justice, law, happiness, and the holy.
- All material is studied in English translation. No previous knowledge of the subject is required or expected. Options exist for students to take modules in Greek and/or Latin languages as part of the programme in Greek & Roman Civilization
Tradition and influence. Study of Greek and Roman civilizations goes back to the foundation of Maynooth as a college in 1795. All the “greats” have studied Greece and Rome in some form, including (but not limited to) Karl Marx, W.B. Yeats, Seamus Heaney and J.K. Rowling. The Department enjoys an excellent reputation for both teaching and research. Staff are friendly, and relatively small class sizes allow students to get individual attention and feel at home. Interdisciplinary. Few other degrees offer as much, from heroic epic and lyric songs to philosophical systems to imperial politics. An all-round education that complements many other courses, laying the foundation for success in many careers and walks of life.
GC3DM
- GREEK & ROMAN CIVILIZATION
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematical physics, or theoretical physics, is the study of the fundamental laws of nature that govern our existence; from the interactions of quarks and gluons through the properties of metals and the aerodynamics of flight, to the evolution of stars and galaxies. - Many of the technologies we now take for granted have their origins in fundamental physics research, including PET scanners, lasers, Wi-Fi and the world wide web.
- Theoretical physics challenges our deeply held notions of what the world is like, and has led to developments in thinking from philosophy to genetics and neuroscience.
- The study of Mathematical Physics at Maynooth University has a long and distinguished tradition, of over 200 years. Modern theoretical physics and applied mathematics are exciting and dynamic fields, and this excitement is reflected in the research projects which are pursued in the Department.
- As well as being introduced to the major ideas and developments in theoretical physics and applied mathematics, you will be equipped with the tools to meet current and future developments in science, engineering, finance and other technologies of the future.
- Maynooth offers the unique possibility of combining Mathematical Physics with subjects such as Music, Philosophy or Geography.
Note: Students must consult with the course director before choosing their optional modules.
MP3ADM
- MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
By studying Media & Cultural Studies, you’ll get to explore the ways that film, television, social media, print media and radio shape your lived experience. - You’ll have the opportunity to research and analyse media genres like advertising and documentary, media subcultures and fandoms, and media technologies and platforms like video streaming and TikTok.
- You’ll develop your employability and professionalism through your exploration of media and cultural industries and working lives.
- This subject is focused on critical dimensions of media and culture. To develop your skills in digital and audio-visual practice, you should apply to MH109 Media Studies
- Develop understanding of how media shapes our ways of being in the world
- Build knowledge of the key practices and processes of the ever growing and ever changing media and cultural industries
- Learn how to engage effectively and critically with an increasingly mediated world
MD315 and MD316 can only be taken together and not as individual modules.
MD3CDM
- MEDIA & CULTURAL STUDIES
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Anyone with an interest in history, archaeology, languages or literature will be captivated by the topics on offer in this subject: from Cú Chulainn to Clonmacnoise, all aspects of Medieval Celtic Studies are explored. The diverse range of topics encompasses heroic literature and pre-historic archaeology, Otherworld tales and mythology, and gender and sexuality in medieval Celtic societies. The links between Ireland and the wider Celtic world are explored through literature and archaeology. You can study texts through English translations, and gain insights into the society of medieval Ireland: a world of power struggles, cattle raids, love triangles, infidelity, warfare, kingship and much more. Along the way, students discover that certain fundamental human experiences and anxieties were the same in the early Middle Ages as they are in the twenty-first century. There is an option to study modules in both the Old Irish Language and Middle Welsh. Why choose this subject? - A world-leading centre for the study of Medieval Irish and Celtic Studies, the Department of Early Irish engages in teaching and research in the history, culture, language and literature of medieval Ireland and related societies. Our special strengths lie in the study of medieval Irish literature, in its growth and development and in its relationship to contemporary European culture, as well as in the study of the Early Irish language.
- A diverse and friendly Department, we offer a vibrant and stimulating experience for students. On the research front, the Department has in recent years received several prestigious grants, including a European Research Council grant to support research in the area of Early Medieval Irish literature and language, as well as two Irish Research Council Laureate Awards for frontier research on the history of medicine in medieval Ireland. The Department has also been at the forefront of several major collaborative projects in the area of Digital Humanities.
Note re. SG223 (History 3 - The archaeology of Early Medieval Ireland): students should not register for this module in Year 3 if they previously completed it in Year 2.
SG3DM
- MEDIEVAL CELTIC STUDIES
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
In the Politics programme you will explore the way politics shapes our lives, the different forms that politics can take, and how politics is organised in different countries. The degree combines the traditional study of political institutions (parties, parliaments, elections, policy-making and more), political ideologies (such as liberalism and socialism) and ideas (such as justice and freedom) with political sociology (examining the relationship between politics and society and how they shape each other). - Politics students do a placement with a focus on active citizenship, which provides “real world” experience of the issues raised in the teaching programme.
- You will explore Irish and international politics, including a focus on Europe, and Latin America. You will also have an opportunity to carry out research into political life, developing analytical, communication and presentation skills.
- We also offer the opportunity to study three Arts subjects to degree level - Philosophy, Politics and Economics. This 2nd and final year pathway is ideal for students who wish to gain a rich, empirically-based understanding of the challenges posed by globalisation and a globalised economy, political volatility and democracy.
- Politics students have the opportunity to spend a year abroad, to go on staff-led field trips and to become actively involved in the Sociology and Politics Society in the MSU (Maynooth Students’ Union).
- The Network on Power, Politics and Society (PPS) and the Maynooth University Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (MUCEES) are both important parts of the MU Politics programme.
PO3DM
- POLITICS
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Psychological Studies in MH101 is a flexible degree option, ideal if you would like to learn about human behaviour in combination with another subject in the BA Arts Double Major pathway. - Unlike MH106 and MH209, Psychological Studies in MH101 will not lead to a professionally accredited degree, however Psychological Studies graduates may be eligible to apply for consideration to entry to a one-year postgraduate programme to achieve a professionally-accredited qualification in psychology (on a competitive basis - limited numbers).
- Flexibility that allows you to study key aspects of Psychology alongside other subjects of interest. For example, you may wish to combine Psychological Studies with subjects like Criminology, Business, Sociology or Geography.
- Teaching will be delivered by leading researchers in Psychology involved in the cutting-edge of the discipline.
- You will develop key transferable skills and learn to think psychologically about the world around you.
PS3DM
- PSYCHOLOGICAL STUDIES
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
Statistics deals with the collection, analysis and interpretation of data. You will learn how to use statistical models and visualisation methods to unlock valuable information and hidden patterns in large volumes of data. - A degree in Statistics will provide you with tools to address problems of critical importance to humans such as climate change, developing cancer drugs or managing traffic flows.
- We offer Statistics as a Double Major subject which can be combined with most other academic subjects in the Bachelor of Arts degree. This flexibility means you can combine your interest in aspects of society with knowledge of the statistical tools needed to understand data from those fields.
- Data recording is happening at unprecedented levels on local, national and global scales. The ability to transform data into usable knowledge is a highly sought after and desirable skill in today’s workforce, be it in business, science, health or social sciences. This subject will strongly enhance your employability.
Note: ST3DM students must take MT471S unless they have taken it previously.
ST3DM
- STATISTICS
|
Credits: 30
Not compulsory:
|
We explore environment, place, and space. We ask questions such as: How much climate change are we causing and how quickly? What sorts of attachments to home do people form and what happens when these are disrupted by migration? How is Ireland, and its regions, affected by economic globalisation? - Through Geography, you will get to the heart of contemporary issues such as climate and environmental change, geopolitics, the transformation of modern societies and cultures, global health and social inequality, and how cities are evolving.
- Geography education at Maynooth includes field trips, both in Ireland and overseas.
- Students can choose 15 or 30 credits of Geography in first year and progress into a Single Major degree from second year.
- In your third year, you may opt for an industry placement module (subject to availability) to experience what it’s like to work with an organisation outside the University.
- You will learn to think critically, analysing how and why our world changes. Geography paves the way for active citizenship and lifelong learning.
- Our students develop a special way of thinking ‘spatially’, with space and place at the forefront of their analysis, and learn a range of skills which appeal to employers.
- Our students are taught by international experts in the fields of environment, place and space.
Registration notes re. GY399A (semester 1) and GY399B (semester 2) Students who are interested in registering for GY399A or GY399B need to contact the module coordinator to discuss this, and get approval for this, a few months in advance of the start of the respective semester. Students who are approved to register for either module will not initially be able to register for them when online registrations commence in early September. However, their registration details will be sorted out by the Department during the first few weeks of semester 1 for GY399A and semester 2 for GY399B. It is not permitted to register for GY399A and GY399B.
GY3MJ
- GEOGRAPHY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
MT3MJ
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
'Philosophy' is an ancient Greek word that means ‘love of wisdom’. The wisdom philosophy seeks is concerned with the big questions that everyone will eventually encounter in his or her life: What is happiness? What is love? Is there a god? What is the meaning of it all? Philosophy approaches these questions both historically and systematically. Thinking philosophically requires knowledge of what those who have come before us have thought; but it also requires the ability to evaluate these positions critically. Philosophy explores the foundations of all of reality and of all knowledge. To mention a few examples, there is a philosophy of language and a philosophy of music; political philosophy; ethics; a philosophy of science and a philosophy of religion. There is nothing that cannot be questioned philosophically, and there is no interest that cannot be combined with philosophy. Philosophy is not the most practical of subjects. Yet every society needs philosophers—people who do not just live, love, work, raise children, etc., but who seek answers to the question “why”. This is the case particularly in the world today, which is changing so rapidly that one needs a solid grounding in order not to get lost. Why choose this subject? - A philosophy degree is not a qualification for any particular career; rather, one studies philosophy to lead an 'examined life', as Socrates put it. Studying philosophy is an investment in one’s life.
- This having been said, the expertise gained in philosophy is of great value in many different areas. Philosophy graduates are valued for their quick intelligence, ability to reason deeply, clearly and independently, and for their ability to take an overview on the problem or situation confronting them.
- At Maynooth, philosophy can also be studied in conjunction with mathematics and computer science (BSc in Computational Thinking). This degree pathway brings philosophy to bear on some of the cutting-edge issues of contemporary society.
PH3MJ
- PHILOSOPHY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
This option will suit students interested in taking a language with Business (International). - International Business is about conducting business in different countries and managing people and organisations in an increasingly globalised world.
- To effectively compete in this changing business landscape, organisations must offer goods and services across nations, regions, and continents outside of their home market and must also manage increasingly diverse workforces as nations, cultures, and markets converge.
- International Business provides the strategies, insights, and skills to respond to these challenges, enabling organisations to manage diverse people and operations and to compete for customers across the world.
- Business (International) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. a language, Anthropology, Geography amongst others. Languages available include Chinese Studies, French, German, Nua-Ghaeilge and Spanish.
- Our International Business degree is ideal for students with a global outlook who wish to work either in local firms competing abroad or in subsidiaries of foreign multinationals, located either here or abroad.
- International Business students at Maynooth are offered a wide variety of choice. We offer modules that will develop both core business management knowledge as well as modules that provide a more specialist understanding of the international aspects of business.
- International Business students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what they learn in university with insights into another culture.
MN3IMJ
- BUSINESS (INTERNATIONAL)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Management is about taking ideas and converting them into action: designing, making, and delivering products and services that customers and citizens want or need. Essentially, it is about organising to get things done. - Managers are generalists and organisers; they need to know the fundamentals of all major aspects of business, from thinking about the business as a whole and its strategic direction, to organising the workforce, managing the effective use of information technology, managing supply chains locally and globally, and effectively managing costs and revenues.
- Managers are at the heart of how these complex functions are seamlessly combined to make the world look simple to customers. Our degree in Business Management (MH404) will equip you with the tools necessary to achieve this.
- Our faculty are a blend of international and local industry experts who bring profound insights into the practicality and complexity of Management.
- Management students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture.
- If you are interested in a career as a second level teacher of business, Business (Management) is the subject to choose from the three business subjects available in MH101.
- Management students at Maynooth are offered unparalleled choice and flexibility. This degree offers you insights into all of the major functions of business, as well as the opportunity to undertake specialist options in the subjects you most enjoy so that you can shape your degree based on your own strengths and interests.
The Arts Business programme offers students an understanding of the foundations, functions and core strategic aspects of business. Our Arts Business programme offers you the opportunity to undertake options in the subjects you enjoy so you can specialise your degree based on your own strengths and interests.
Business is about identifying and delivering solutions to the problems and needs of people in a sustainable and profitable way. Management is the method through which firms, government and voluntary groups organise the jobs that need to be done to efficiently and effectively design, produce, market and improve products and services. Marketing is about analysing markets, connecting customers with the capabilities of a business to produce products and services that they need. Business graduates are consistently amongst the most employable of all in the Irish education system.
Taking Business as an Arts subject is an ideal choice if you wish to pursue a subject you are passionate about in the humanities or social sciences and want to be able to understand how you take effective action in your discipline or market your discipline to attract the interest of people in what you do.
MN3MMJ
- BUSINESS (MANAGEMENT)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
- Marketing is all about customers, understanding their needs, how they behave and why they buy, so that businesses can build long term relationships with them. Creating and managing customers are central themes to what we teach and research at the Maynooth University School of Business.
- Marketing is a wide and varied discipline, connecting a firm to its customers in the marketplace. It is fast-paced and dynamic, interlinking with every other area of business to understand how value is created and captured for the company and its customers.
- Marketing is critical to the growth of a business – a key challenge from small local businesses to large global corporations. Using both traditional and digital tools, marketers must understand customer needs in order to create innovative products and service to meet those needs.
Marketing is both profoundly local and global, selling to one individual customer or to a large international market. Our faculty bring a rich and diverse expertise from both local and international markets across a broad range of topic areas, including digital marketing, online retailing, branding, communications and consumer behaviour. Together we offer students deep insights into the practicalities and applications of marketing, from what makes customers tick to how to make the best of market opportunities. Our approach to Marketing provides students with a deep understanding of the marketing function, as well as wider management and business processes so you can deliver value to customers and your organisation. Options are available which allow you to specialise your degree according to your strengths and interests in the topic areas you enjoy most. Marketing students also have the option of taking a four-year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture. Business (Marketing) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. Psychological Studies, Geography, Law, Anthropology, a language amongst others.
Business is about identifying and delivering solutions to the problems and needs of people in a sustainable and profitable way. Management is the method through which firms, government and voluntary groups organise the jobs that need to be done to efficiently and effectively design, produce, market and improve products and services. Marketing is about analysing markets, connecting customers with the capabilities of a business to produce products and services that they need. Business graduates are consistently amongst the most employable of all in the Irish education system.
Taking Business as an Arts subject is an ideal choice if you wish to pursue a subject you are passionate about in the humanities or social sciences and want to be able to understand how you take effective action in your discipline or market your discipline to attract the interest of people in what you do.
If you are considering possibly pursuing a career as a second level teacher (after the required postgraduate degree in teaching), you MUST choose Business (Management) as a Double Major or Major subject. The Business (International Business) and the Business (Marketing) in Arts pathways will NOT guarantee the credits in Business disciplines required by the Teaching Council of Ireland (see the Teaching Council website for details).
MN3KMJ
- BUSINESS (MARKETING)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Criminology is the study of crime, criminal behaviour and the criminal justice system. - At Maynooth, we offer a unique opportunity to study Criminology as part of a broad based Arts degree.
- You can choose Criminology in combination with other Arts subjects (including Law, Psychological Studies etc.) in first year, and then choose to continue with Criminology in second and third year.
- Maynooth University is the only University in the Republic of Ireland offering the opportunity to study Criminology as part of an Arts programme, and one of the few to offer a Law and Criminology degree (if you move from MH101 to MH502 in second year).
- Unique interdisciplinary programme with perspectives from sociology, psychology and economics as well as law.
- Flexibility and choice, including options to transfer into law.
LW370 is not available at online registration. Please contact the School of Law and Criminology for registration details.
LW3CMJ
- CRIMINOLOGY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
History is the systematic examination of human experience over time. It attempts to explain the origins and evolution of the societies we live in, from as many points of view as possible. - History explores the complex processes of social and economic change, the choice of one set of political or ethical values over another, the context in which new ideas arise, and much more. The written word is one way of gathering information about the past, but new technologies and research methods allow for the study of history to take place through other mediums.
- The Department’s long-standing reputation for excellence and leadership in historical scholarship both in Ireland and internationally is one reason for the popularity of History at Maynooth. We have also kept our discipline vibrant, engaging and of practical value to students. We provide a solid grounding in the practice of history and boast expertise in a wide range of specialist topics such as life in medieval Ireland, the intersection of American and world history, the First World War, and gender and sexual politics.
1. Semester 1. Students must take one only from the following group: HY304, HY320, HY3023 Semester 2. Students must take one only from the following group: HY384, HY3011, HY3018 2. HY301 (Dissertation): students may only take this module if they achieved a minimum of 650 in Year 2 History. Eligible students who choose HY301 must also select one of the special topics in each semester, i.e. one from HY304, HY320, HY3023 (semester one) and one from HY384, HY3011 and HY3018 (semester two).
HY3MJ
- HISTORY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Beginning with words on a page, English is a world-facing subject: it takes you across historical periods, cultures, locations and genres, from poetry and drama to the novel, film, and creative writing too. As a student of English, you will learn about: - Different literary forms from poetry and drama to the novel and film, as well as creative writing.
- The conditions that shape literature from history and geography to questions of gender, race, and class.
- How literary texts enable us to understand our own complex world.
- Different approaches to and theories of literature.
- How different schools of critical thought or areas have shaped and reshaped the subject of English literary studies.
Engaging in critical debate about the meaning and value of literature will help you to: - Foster your critical and creative abilities.
- Develop awareness of the multi-dimensional nature of human situations.
- Approach problems with an open and enquiring mind.
- Gain analytical skills, finely-honed writing skills and develop critical thinking – skills which appeal greatly to future employers. Maynooth University Department of English boasts notable expertise in a wide range of literature from the early modern to the present day, and from Irish literature to American, African, Arab and global literatures. Our lecturers’ research expertise informs their teaching and provides you as a student with current critical thinking in the broad field of English studies. Our degree reflects the changing, global nature of English language literature while also providing you with a thorough understanding of established literary traditions.
EN3MJ
- ENGLISH
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
International development looks at the development challenges and opportunities confronting people and societies living in the Global South (including Africa, Asia and Latin America), while addressing the myriad of global challenges associated with sustainable development for the planet as a whole. As a student of International Development in the Bachelor of Arts degree you will explore issues such as globalisation, climate change, food security, poverty, conflict, disasters and other humanitarian emergencies, human rights, health, education, gender, inequality and empowerment, from an international development perspective. - Gain an understanding of development activism and how development can be planned, organised and managed to meet the needs of all, especially the most marginalised communities around the world.
- We will focus on the roles and effectiveness of international and national development actors (UN, Governments, NGO’s and Civil Society groups) and market actors in meeting development challenges, and in providing a better world for all.
KD3MJ
- INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. - Our Mathematics degrees aim to bridge the gap between school Mathematics and current frontiers of knowledge. You will learn to think hard and rigorously about questions and to solve new problems – invaluable skills that can be transferred to any area of life and any job you hold in future.
- A degree in a Mathematical discipline opens the door to jobs in a variety of fields such as finance, trading, insurance, information technology, education, data analysis, scientific research and development.
- The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject.
- The academic staff in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics have a diverse range of research interests in areas including algebra, analysis, data analysis, dynamics, geometry, number theory, statistical modelling and topology.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
MS3MJ
- MATHEMATICAL STUDIES
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
MT3MJ
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Anthropology is the comparative study of human society and culture. By closely observing and analyzing different ways of life around the world, from tribal villages to Wall Street offices, anthropologists create new knowledge about human nature and what it means to be human today. - You will learn how to research cultural practices and social institutions such as: religion and ritual, kinship and family, economy and the market, politics and government, language and performance, science and technology, traditional healing and biomedicine, and much more.
- You can also study forensic anthropology, which applies skeletal analysis and archaeological techniques to solve criminal cases.
- You will engage in practical, experiential learning, including ethnographic fieldwork projects.
- Anthropology fosters creativity and imagination by helping us to think beyond our own pre-conceived world views. By cultivating better understanding across cultures, anthropologists also confront forms of prejudice, injustice and inequality.
Note: AN351, and AN353 not available at online registration. Contact the Department for further details.
AN3MJ
- ANTHROPOLOGY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Economics is a social science that helps us to understand the behaviour of decision makers such as consumers, firms, workers, governments, investors, central banks, policy makers. - Economists are not defined by the subject matter that they study but rather by the way they approach a given topic. Economics provides a framework for understanding problems and learning how to solve them.
- There is a misconception about economics. People tend to think that economics is all about money and profits, but economics is much more than that. It is about understanding the past, predicting the future, and making evidence-based policy recommendations.
- Economists aim to find feasible solutions to help improve people's lives. This involves tackling important societal problems such as: how to reduce gender in equality and racial discrimination, how to create international cooperation to protect the environment, how to break the poverty trap in less-developed countries, how to reduce crime.
- Economists use game theory to analyse strategic interaction to answer questions such as: What is the optimal pricing and advertisement strategy for a firm? How should we set political campaign financing rules to improve the quality of our democracy? How should patents be designed to foster innovation but not curtail competition?
- Economists use statistical techniques to understand the market and how people respond to incentives. By determining causal relationships, economists can make evidence-based policy recommendations at the firm and state level.
EC3MJ
- ECONOMICS
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Finance is taught as an application of Economics. It examines the role of government and international organisations in the management and regulation of financial markets. Finance is the study of investment risk and reward. You don’t need to have any previous knowledge of Finance, only an interest in how the financial sector and the economy works and a desire to know more. The ability to work in a second language is an advantage for Finance graduates. As an Arts student, you may combine Finance with Chinese, French, German, or Spanish – all are available at beginner/non-beginner level (except Chinese - only beginner level). The Department is made up of an accomplished group of academics with an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching.
FN3AMJ
- FINANCE
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Students of the Modern Irish course study the language (spoken and written) and aspects of literature and culture. - Our students learn about the diversity and rich heritage of the Irish language, and also acquire skills which will be advantageous to them throughout their lives, irrespective of which career they choose. They will accomplish this in a friendly, open Department that has a strong commitment to Irish and to learning.
- Spoken and written Irish are obviously central to our course and students are given every encouragement and support to improve their oral and written skills. To this end, students normally spend a period of residence in the Gaeltacht.
- Our modules allow students to gain a deep appreciation of contemporary Irish literature - poetry, prose and drama. Modules are also offered on earlier periods of Irish literature, including Bardic Poetry, the Fenian Cycle and poetry of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. There also are optional modules on Scottish Gaelic, on Irish personal and place names, on the sean-nós singing tradition, and on Irish-language oral traditions and performing arts. In addition to practical workshops and tutorials on written and spoken Irish, we also offer modules on the sociolinguistics of Irish and on the phonology and dialectology of the modern language.
Many aspects of Irish studies are researched in the Department, both language and literature, old and new, as well as other related areas of study. Among the courses offered are Linguistics, Folklore, Literary Criticism, Scottish Gaelic, Early Modern Irish, Irish Place and Personal Names, the sean-nós singing tradition, and Irish-language/ Gaeltacht performing arts. Irish is studied both as a living language and as a valuable part of Irish and European cultural heritage. All lectures, tutorials and workshops are through the medium of the Irish language, as is all communication with the Department, and while the first-year course places significant emphasis on the written language (i.e. grammar), no prior knowledge of grammar is necessary. There is an Irish language support centre, An Droichead, which provides assistance to students, first year students in particular, who are struggling with the language. This works on a peer-tutoring basis, with second and third year students tutoring groups of no more than five students – allowing students to ask questions, to practice structures, etc Déanann mic léinn na Nua-Ghaeilge staidéar ar an teanga (labhartha agus scríofa) agus ar ghnéithe den litríocht agus den chultúr. - Foghlaimíonn ár mic léinn faoin ilghnéitheacht agus faoin oidhreacht shaibhir atá ag an nGaeilge, chomh maith le scileanna a bheidh úsáideach dóibh le linn a saoil, is cuma cén ghairm a roghnóidh siad. Baineann siad an méid sin amach i Roinn atá cairdiúil agus oscailte agus atá tiomanta don Ghaeilge agus don fhoghlaim.
- Tá ról lárnach ag an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha inár gcúrsa agus tugtar gach spreagadh do mhic léinn a scileanna labhartha agus scríofa a fheabhsú. Chuige sin, caitheann mic léinn tréimhse chónaithe sa Ghaeltacht de ghnáth.
- Tugtar modúil ar an litríocht chomhaimseartha ionas gur féidir le mic léinn eolas grinn a chur ar fhilíocht, ar phrós agus ar dhrámaíocht na Gaeilge. Cuirtear modúil ar fáil fosta ar an
- litríocht a bhaineann le tréimhsí níos luaithe, ina measc sin, filíocht na mBard, an Fhiannaíocht, filíocht an 17ú haois, an 18ú haois agus an 19ú haois. Tá modúil roghnacha ar fáil ar Ghaeilge na hAlban, ar ainmneacha pearsanta agus logainmneacha na hÉireann, agus thraidisiún
- na hamhránaíochta, agus ar thaibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta. Mar aon le ceardlanna praiticiúla agus ranganna teagaisc ar an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha, cuirimid modúl ar shochtheangeolaíocht na Gaeilge agus ar chanúineolaíocht na nuatheanga ar fáil.
- Is iomaí gné de léann na Gaeilge a ndéantar taighde uirthi sa Roinn, idir theanga agus litríocht, idir shean agus nua, chomh maith le réimsí léinn atá gaolmhar don teanga. Orthu sin tá, mar shampla, an Teangeolaíocht, an Béaloideas,
- An Chritic Liteartha, Gaeilge na hAlban, an Nua-Ghaeilge Mhoch, Logainmneacha agus Ainmneacha Pearsanta na Gaeilge, Traidisiún na hAmhránaíochta, Taibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta, agus an Cleachtas Cruthaitheach. Pléitear leis an nGaeilge mar theanga bheo agus mar chuid luachmhar d’oidhreacht chultúrtha na hÉireann agus na hEorpa.
- Trí mheán na Gaeilge a bhíonn na léachtaí, na ranganna teagaisc agus na ceardlanna ar fad, agus déantar gach cumarsáid leis an Roinn trí mheán na Gaeilge. Cé go gcuireann cúrsa na chéad bhliana béim shuntasach ar an teanga scríofa (i.e gramadach), ní theastaíonn réamheolas ar an ngramadach uait.
- Tá ionad tacaíochta Gaeilge, An Droichead, ar fáil a chuireann cabhair ar fáil do mhic léinn, mic léinn na chéad bhliana go háirithe, atá ag streachailt leis an teanga. Piartheagasc atá i gceist, agus mic léinn na dara agus na tríú bliana i mbun grúpaí beaga a stiúradh. Ní bhíonn níos mó ná cúigear mac léinn i ngach grúpa agus bíonn deis ag mic léinn ceisteanna a chur, cleachtadh a dhéanamh ar struchtúir, srl.
Note:
- Students may take NG335 OR NG335X but not both.
NG3MJ
- NUA-GHAEILGE
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Computer Science at Maynooth University is the study of the principals and use of computers and software. Students enjoy the huge benefit of studying other Arts subjects with Computer Science in first year with options to take different degree paths afterwards. Advanced topics such as computer vision, theoretical computer studies, robotics, cryptography and artificial intelligence may be studied, depending on the pathway students take. - The Department of Computer Science at Maynooth University was founded in 1987 and is located in the Eolas Building. Our laboratories and equipment provide excellent facilities for practical work and all our courses include a mix of lectures and lab work. Many of our students also spend time working in industry as part of their degree, which enhances their employment opportunities once they graduate.
- We endeavour to provide a supportive and enjoyable atmosphere for learning through our Computer Science Support Centre, extensive assistance during practical work and we are always available outside of lectures to help our students.
Note for registration
Students are reminded that they should try to select an even balance of modules and credits across the two semesters.
CS3MJ
- COMPUTER SCIENCE
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Studying Music at Maynooth, Ireland’s largest university music department, offers unparalleled choice and expertise, from performance to computer programming, from ancient traditions to contemporary experience, from high art to heavy metal. - Our programmes are designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical, compositional and academic work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in areas that really interest you the most in your final year.
- Performance, composition, music history (musicology including pop/rock) and the music of other cultures (ethnomusicology) are just a selection of different aspects of music you will study in the Music programme.
- Exciting and varied programme of practical, compositional and academic work.
- Students participate in ensembles such as the Chamber Choir and Traditional Music Ensemble.
- In your third year, you have the option to specialise in performance, composition or musicology. Some of the modules available include ‘Music and Entrepreneurship’, ‘Opera in Context’ and 'Popular Music Studies'.
- For those considering teaching Music at second level, the Teaching Council requirements are met by studying Music in the MH101 degree.
Note
MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
MU3TMJ
- MUSIC
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Notes
1. MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
2. Students may only take one of MU359 and MU360; it is not permitted to take both modules.
MU3CMJ
- MUSIC (COMPOSITION)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Note
MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
MU3MMJ
- MUSIC (MUSICOLOGY)
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Note
MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
MU3PMJ
- MUSIC PERFORMANCE
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Sociology is a subject that opens your mind, that helps you to connect your own lived experience to the wider social and economic context, and that offers the opportunity to engage in an empowering form of student-led learning. Our graduates often speak of studying Sociology as a “life changing” experience. The Sociology Department is widely acknowledged as a leading national and international centre of teaching and research excellence, as well as an exemplar of public sociology and engagement. We seek to equip you with the necessary resources and skills – intellectual, methodological, communicative and active citizenship – to meet the challenges of our fast-changing contemporary society and to contribute productively to social transformation.
Sociology is the study of human social life, groups and societies. It is a discipline that teaches you to: - develop critical skills and powers of argumentation based on empirical evidence.
- become a creative thinker and to think outside of the box.
- engage in a constructive enterprise, oriented toward the promotion of equality and social justice.
Taking Politics and/or Sociology to degree level is an ideal preparation to teach Politics and Society at second level following a Professional Master of Education (PME).
SO3MJ
- SOCIOLOGY
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematical physics, or theoretical physics, is the study of the fundamental laws of nature that govern our existence; from the interactions of quarks and gluons through the properties of metals and the aerodynamics of flight, to the evolution of stars and galaxies. - Many of the technologies we now take for granted have their origins in fundamental physics research, including PET scanners, lasers, Wi-Fi and the world wide web.
- Theoretical physics challenges our deeply held notions of what the world is like, and has led to developments in thinking from philosophy to genetics and neuroscience.
- The study of Mathematical Physics at Maynooth University has a long and distinguished tradition, of over 200 years. Modern theoretical physics and applied mathematics are exciting and dynamic fields, and this excitement is reflected in the research projects which are pursued in the Department.
- As well as being introduced to the major ideas and developments in theoretical physics and applied mathematics, you will be equipped with the tools to meet current and future developments in science, engineering, finance and other technologies of the future.
- Maynooth offers the unique possibility of combining Mathematical Physics with subjects such as Music, Philosophy or Geography.
MP3MJ
- MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
Anyone with an interest in history, archaeology, languages or literature will be captivated by the topics on offer in this subject: from Cú Chulainn to Clonmacnoise, all aspects of Medieval Celtic Studies are explored. The diverse range of topics encompasses heroic literature and pre-historic archaeology, Otherworld tales and mythology, and gender and sexuality in medieval Celtic societies. The links between Ireland and the wider Celtic world are explored through literature and archaeology. You can study texts through English translations, and gain insights into the society of medieval Ireland: a world of power struggles, cattle raids, love triangles, infidelity, warfare, kingship and much more. Along the way, students discover that certain fundamental human experiences and anxieties were the same in the early Middle Ages as they are in the twenty-first century. There is an option to study modules in both the Old Irish Language and Middle Welsh. Why choose this subject? - A world-leading centre for the study of Medieval Irish and Celtic Studies, the Department of Early Irish engages in teaching and research in the history, culture, language and literature of medieval Ireland and related societies. Our special strengths lie in the study of medieval Irish literature, in its growth and development and in its relationship to contemporary European culture, as well as in the study of the Early Irish language.
- A diverse and friendly Department, we offer a vibrant and stimulating experience for students. On the research front, the Department has in recent years received several prestigious grants, including a European Research Council grant to support research in the area of Early Medieval Irish literature and language, as well as two Irish Research Council Laureate Awards for frontier research on the history of medicine in medieval Ireland. The Department has also been at the forefront of several major collaborative projects in the area of Digital Humanities.
SG3MJ
- MEDIEVAL CELTIC STUDIES
|
Credits: 40
Not compulsory:
|
We explore environment, place, and space. We ask questions such as: How much climate change are we causing and how quickly? What sorts of attachments to home do people form and what happens when these are disrupted by migration? How is Ireland, and its regions, affected by economic globalisation? - Through Geography, you will get to the heart of contemporary issues such as climate and environmental change, geopolitics, the transformation of modern societies and cultures, global health and social inequality, and how cities are evolving.
- Geography education at Maynooth includes field trips, both in Ireland and overseas.
- Students can choose 15 or 30 credits of Geography in first year and progress into a Single Major degree from second year.
- In your third year, you may opt for an industry placement module (subject to availability) to experience what it’s like to work with an organisation outside the University.
- You will learn to think critically, analysing how and why our world changes. Geography paves the way for active citizenship and lifelong learning.
- Our students develop a special way of thinking ‘spatially’, with space and place at the forefront of their analysis, and learn a range of skills which appeal to employers.
- Our students are taught by international experts in the fields of environment, place and space.
Registration notes re. GY399A (semester 1) and GY399B (semester 2) Students who are interested in registering for GY399A or GY399B need to contact the module coordinator to discuss this, and get approval for this, a few months in advance of the start of the respective semester. Students who are approved to register for either module will not initially be able to register for them when online registrations commence in early September. However, their registration details will be sorted out by the Department during the first few weeks of semester 1 for GY399A and semester 2 for GY399B. It is not permitted to register for GY399A and GY399B.
GY3SM
- GEOGRAPHY
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
The entry threshold for MT3SM is 45%.
MT3SM
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
History is the systematic examination of human experience over time. It attempts to explain the origins and evolution of the societies we live in, from as many points of view as possible. - History explores the complex processes of social and economic change, the choice of one set of political or ethical values over another, the context in which new ideas arise, and much more. The written word is one way of gathering information about the past, but new technologies and research methods allow for the study of history to take place through other mediums.
- The Department’s long-standing reputation for excellence and leadership in historical scholarship both in Ireland and internationally is one reason for the popularity of History at Maynooth. We have also kept our discipline vibrant, engaging and of practical value to students. We provide a solid grounding in the practice of history and boast expertise in a wide range of specialist topics such as life in medieval Ireland, the intersection of American and world history, the First World War, and gender and sexual politics.
Semester 1. Students must take one only from the following group: HY304, HY320, HY3023 Semester 2. Students must take one only from the following group: HY384, HY3011, HY3018
HY3SM
- HISTORY
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Beginning with words on a page, English is a world-facing subject: it takes you across historical periods, cultures, locations and genres, from poetry and drama to the novel, film, and creative writing too. As a student of English, you will learn about: - Different literary forms from poetry and drama to the novel and film, as well as creative writing.
- The conditions that shape literature from history and geography to questions of gender, race, and class.
- How literary texts enable us to understand our own complex world.
- Different approaches to and theories of literature.
- How different schools of critical thought or areas have shaped and reshaped the subject of English literary studies.
Engaging in critical debate about the meaning and value of literature will help you to: - Foster your critical and creative abilities.
- Develop awareness of the multi-dimensional nature of human situations.
- Approach problems with an open and enquiring mind.
- Gain analytical skills, finely-honed writing skills and develop critical thinking – skills which appeal greatly to future employers. Maynooth University Department of English boasts notable expertise in a wide range of literature from the early modern to the present day, and from Irish literature to American, African, Arab and global literatures. Our lecturers’ research expertise informs their teaching and provides you as a student with current critical thinking in the broad field of English studies. Our degree reflects the changing, global nature of English language literature while also providing you with a thorough understanding of established literary traditions.
EN3SM
- ENGLISH
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. - Our Mathematics degrees aim to bridge the gap between school Mathematics and current frontiers of knowledge. You will learn to think hard and rigorously about questions and to solve new problems – invaluable skills that can be transferred to any area of life and any job you hold in future.
- A degree in a Mathematical discipline opens the door to jobs in a variety of fields such as finance, trading, insurance, information technology, education, data analysis, scientific research and development.
- The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject.
- The academic staff in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics have a diverse range of research interests in areas including algebra, analysis, data analysis, dynamics, geometry, number theory, statistical modelling and topology.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
MS3SM
- MATHEMATICAL STUDIES
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes, which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning, to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject. - Students concentrate on Mathematics (Pure) - learning how to think hard and rigorously about Mathematical questions;
- In the final two years, central areas of Mathematics such as Complex Analysis, Topology and Group Theory are studied in depth;
- Select from a range of courses in rapidly growing areas such as: Differential Geometry, Numerical Analysis, Probability, Statistics and Graph Theory;
- Develop the ability to invent, criticise and perfect new Mathematics for yourself and to solve new problems;
- Take Mathematics topics related to key developments in technology, software, economics and other applications.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
The entry threshold for MT3SM is 45%.
MT3SM
- MATHEMATICS (PURE)
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Anthropology is the comparative study of human society and culture. By closely observing and analyzing different ways of life around the world, from tribal villages to Wall Street offices, anthropologists create new knowledge about human nature and what it means to be human today. - You will learn how to research cultural practices and social institutions such as: religion and ritual, kinship and family, economy and the market, politics and government, language and performance, science and technology, traditional healing and biomedicine, and much more.
- You can also study forensic anthropology, which applies skeletal analysis and archaeological techniques to solve criminal cases.
- You will engage in practical, experiential learning, including ethnographic fieldwork projects.
- Anthropology fosters creativity and imagination by helping us to think beyond our own pre-conceived world views. By cultivating better understanding across cultures, anthropologists also confront forms of prejudice, injustice and inequality.
Note: AN351, and AN353 not available at online registration. Contact the Department for further details.
AN3SM
- ANTHROPOLOGY
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Economics is a social science that helps us to understand the behaviour of decision makers such as consumers, firms, workers, governments, investors, central banks, policy makers. - Economists are not defined by the subject matter that they study but rather by the way they approach a given topic. Economics provides a framework for understanding problems and learning how to solve them.
- There is a misconception about economics. People tend to think that economics is all about money and profits, but economics is much more than that. It is about understanding the past, predicting the future, and making evidence-based policy recommendations.
- Economists aim to find feasible solutions to help improve people's lives. This involves tackling important societal problems such as: how to reduce gender in equality and racial discrimination, how to create international cooperation to protect the environment, how to break the poverty trap in less-developed countries, how to reduce crime.
- Economists use game theory to analyse strategic interaction to answer questions such as: What is the optimal pricing and advertisement strategy for a firm? How should we set political campaign financing rules to improve the quality of our democracy? How should patents be designed to foster innovation but not curtail competition?
- Economists use statistical techniques to understand the market and how people respond to incentives. By determining causal relationships, economists can make evidence-based policy recommendations at the firm and state level.
EC3SM
- ECONOMICS
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Finance is taught as an application of Economics. It examines the role of government and international organisations in the management and regulation of financial markets. Finance is the study of investment risk and reward. You don’t need to have any previous knowledge of Finance, only an interest in how the financial sector and the economy works and a desire to know more. The ability to work in a second language is an advantage for Finance graduates. As an Arts student, you may combine Finance with Chinese, French, German, or Spanish – all are available at beginner/non-beginner level (except Chinese - only beginner level). The Department is made up of an accomplished group of academics with an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching.
FN3ASM
- FINANCE
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematical physics, or theoretical physics, is the study of the fundamental laws of nature that govern our existence; from the interactions of quarks and gluons through the properties of metals and the aerodynamics of flight, to the evolution of stars and galaxies. - Many of the technologies we now take for granted have their origins in fundamental physics research, including PET scanners, lasers, Wi-Fi and the world wide web.
- Theoretical physics challenges our deeply held notions of what the world is like, and has led to developments in thinking from philosophy to genetics and neuroscience.
- The study of Mathematical Physics at Maynooth University has a long and distinguished tradition, of over 200 years. Modern theoretical physics and applied mathematics are exciting and dynamic fields, and this excitement is reflected in the research projects which are pursued in the Department.
- As well as being introduced to the major ideas and developments in theoretical physics and applied mathematics, you will be equipped with the tools to meet current and future developments in science, engineering, finance and other technologies of the future.
- Maynooth offers the unique possibility of combining Mathematical Physics with subjects such as Music, Philosophy or Geography.
MP3SM
- MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
CL3SM
- CLASSICS
|
Credits: 60
Not compulsory:
|
We explore environment, place, and space. We ask questions such as: How much climate change are we causing and how quickly? What sorts of attachments to home do people form and what happens when these are disrupted by migration? How is Ireland, and its regions, affected by economic globalisation? - Through Geography, you will get to the heart of contemporary issues such as climate and environmental change, geopolitics, the transformation of modern societies and cultures, global health and social inequality, and how cities are evolving.
- Geography education at Maynooth includes field trips, both in Ireland and overseas.
- Students can choose 15 or 30 credits of Geography in first year and progress into a Single Major degree from second year.
- In your third year, you may opt for an industry placement module (subject to availability) to experience what it’s like to work with an organisation outside the University.
- You will learn to think critically, analysing how and why our world changes. Geography paves the way for active citizenship and lifelong learning.
- Our students develop a special way of thinking ‘spatially’, with space and place at the forefront of their analysis, and learn a range of skills which appeal to employers.
- Our students are taught by international experts in the fields of environment, place and space.
GY3MI
- GEOGRAPHY
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
German currently tops the list of the 5 most in-demand foreign languages in Ireland among employers (cpl.com). As the native language to almost 100 million people around the world, German is a critical language for business, science and culture. - Studying German at MU equips you with excellent language, communication, research, intercultural and analytical skills that help you stand out from the crowd.
- We have a wide range of exciting modules taught by international and local experts. Our students have opportunities to focus on linguistics, translation, history, politics, and the literary, visual and business cultures connected to German, alongside the language itself.
- If you’re a beginner, you can fast-track your progress by taking German as a double subject.
Why choose this subject? - Language AND culture: discover how people live, think and interact in German-speaking countries. Our programme is specially designed to allow you to develop advanced competence and fluency in all
- key language areas, while expanding your cultural understanding, intercultural awareness, and your critical thinking and evaluative abilities.
- Small classes taught by experts: our language, linguistics and culture modules are generally taught in small class groups - an environment in which students thrive. Our staff are keen researchers, and this is integrated into our teaching and approach.
- Year Abroad: every student is encouraged to spend a year in a German-speaking country. You can study at a German-speaking university – we have links with over 20 universities in Germany and Austria - or work as a language teacher or be an Erasmus intern (subject to availability).
- Employability: 1,200 positions are currently open to graduates with strong German proficiency and intercultural skills.
Every student will have the opportunity to spend a year in a German-speaking country as an Erasmus student, Language assistant or Erasmus intern (subject to availability). German at MU Erasmus links include: - large cities including Berlin, Munich and Vienna;
- smaller cities such as Graz, Potsdam, Leipzig and Bonn;
- towns like Bielefeld, Marburg and Tübingen.
Interested in teaching German? The Teaching Council of Ireland require all registered teachers of German to have spent a minimum of two months living in a German-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advise at least a three-month residency.
GN3MI
- GERMAN
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Choosing Law is ideal for people who want to experience it in their first year as part of a Bachelor of Arts degree and enjoy flexibility in their second and final year progression options. - Flexibility and choice: students who successfully complete their first year law modules have the option of transferring to one of our specialised Law degrees (MH502 BCL or MH501 LLB). Tailor your degree to your interests while developing a broad skill set which is highly valued by employers
- Law can be taken as a single or double subject in first year allowing students to combine the study of core law subjects with options from up to 31 subject areas.
- At the end of second year, students of the BCL and LLB degrees (having moved from the BA degree) may apply to complete a work placement year in law firm (subject to availability).
- All Law students - BA, BCL and LLB - may apply to complete a year studying abroad at one of our partner institutions.
- Get involved in our numerous student societies: the student Law Society, European Law Students’ Association or Student FLAC (Free Legal Advice Centre) Society.
LW3MI
- LAW
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
'Philosophy' is an ancient Greek word that means ‘love of wisdom’. The wisdom philosophy seeks is concerned with the big questions that everyone will eventually encounter in his or her life: What is happiness? What is love? Is there a god? What is the meaning of it all? Philosophy approaches these questions both historically and systematically. Thinking philosophically requires knowledge of what those who have come before us have thought; but it also requires the ability to evaluate these positions critically. Philosophy explores the foundations of all of reality and of all knowledge. To mention a few examples, there is a philosophy of language and a philosophy of music; political philosophy; ethics; a philosophy of science and a philosophy of religion. There is nothing that cannot be questioned philosophically, and there is no interest that cannot be combined with philosophy. Philosophy is not the most practical of subjects. Yet every society needs philosophers—people who do not just live, love, work, raise children, etc., but who seek answers to the question “why”. This is the case particularly in the world today, which is changing so rapidly that one needs a solid grounding in order not to get lost. Why choose this subject? - A philosophy degree is not a qualification for any particular career; rather, one studies philosophy to lead an 'examined life', as Socrates put it. Studying philosophy is an investment in one’s life.
- This having been said, the expertise gained in philosophy is of great value in many different areas. Philosophy graduates are valued for their quick intelligence, ability to reason deeply, clearly and independently, and for their ability to take an overview on the problem or situation confronting them.
- At Maynooth, philosophy can also be studied in conjunction with mathematics and computer science (BSc in Computational Thinking). This degree pathway brings philosophy to bear on some of the cutting-edge issues of contemporary society.
PH3MI
- PHILOSOPHY
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
This option will suit students interested in taking a language with Business (International). - International Business is about conducting business in different countries and managing people and organisations in an increasingly globalised world.
- To effectively compete in this changing business landscape, organisations must offer goods and services across nations, regions, and continents outside of their home market and must also manage increasingly diverse workforces as nations, cultures, and markets converge.
- International Business provides the strategies, insights, and skills to respond to these challenges, enabling organisations to manage diverse people and operations and to compete for customers across the world.
- Business (International) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. a language, Anthropology, Geography amongst others. Languages available include Chinese Studies, French, German, Nua-Ghaeilge and Spanish.
- Our International Business degree is ideal for students with a global outlook who wish to work either in local firms competing abroad or in subsidiaries of foreign multinationals, located either here or abroad.
- International Business students at Maynooth are offered a wide variety of choice. We offer modules that will develop both core business management knowledge as well as modules that provide a more specialist understanding of the international aspects of business.
- International Business students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what they learn in university with insights into another culture.
MN3IMI
- BUSINESS (INTERNATIONAL)
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Management is about taking ideas and converting them into action: designing, making, and delivering products and services that customers and citizens want or need. Essentially, it is about organising to get things done. - Managers are generalists and organisers; they need to know the fundamentals of all major aspects of business, from thinking about the business as a whole and its strategic direction, to organising the workforce, managing the effective use of information technology, managing supply chains locally and globally, and effectively managing costs and revenues.
- Managers are at the heart of how these complex functions are seamlessly combined to make the world look simple to customers. Our degree in Business Management (MH404) will equip you with the tools necessary to achieve this.
- Our faculty are a blend of international and local industry experts who bring profound insights into the practicality and complexity of Management.
- Management students also have the option of taking a four year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture.
- If you are interested in a career as a second level teacher of business, Business (Management) is the subject to choose from the three business subjects available in MH101.
- Management students at Maynooth are offered unparalleled choice and flexibility. This degree offers you insights into all of the major functions of business, as well as the opportunity to undertake specialist options in the subjects you most enjoy so that you can shape your degree based on your own strengths and interests.
MN3MMI
- BUSINESS (MANAGEMENT)
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
- Marketing is all about customers, understanding their needs, how they behave and why they buy, so that businesses can build long term relationships with them. Creating and managing customers are central themes to what we teach and research at the Maynooth University School of Business.
- Marketing is a wide and varied discipline, connecting a firm to its customers in the marketplace. It is fast-paced and dynamic, interlinking with every other area of business to understand how value is created and captured for the company and its customers.
- Marketing is critical to the growth of a business – a key challenge from small local businesses to large global corporations. Using both traditional and digital tools, marketers must understand customer needs in order to create innovative products and service to meet those needs.
Marketing is both profoundly local and global, selling to one individual customer or to a large international market. Our faculty bring a rich and diverse expertise from both local and international markets across a broad range of topic areas, including digital marketing, online retailing, branding, communications and consumer behaviour. Together we offer students deep insights into the practicalities and applications of marketing, from what makes customers tick to how to make the best of market opportunities. Our approach to Marketing provides students with a deep understanding of the marketing function, as well as wider management and business processes so you can deliver value to customers and your organisation. Options are available which allow you to specialise your degree according to your strengths and interests in the topic areas you enjoy most. Marketing students also have the option of taking a four-year degree with a study year abroad, thus combining what you learn in university with insights into another culture. Business (Marketing) can be taken with any subject not in Group 2 e.g. Psychological Studies, Geography, Law, Anthropology, a language amongst others.
MN3KMI
- BUSINESS (MARKETING)
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Criminology is the study of crime, criminal behaviour and the criminal justice system. - At Maynooth, we offer a unique opportunity to study Criminology as part of a broad based Arts degree.
- You can choose Criminology in combination with other Arts subjects (including Law, Psychological Studies etc.) in first year, and then choose to continue with Criminology in second and third year.
- Maynooth University is the only University in the Republic of Ireland offering the opportunity to study Criminology as part of an Arts programme, and one of the few to offer a Law and Criminology degree (if you move from MH101 to MH502 in second year).
- Unique interdisciplinary programme with perspectives from sociology, psychology and economics as well as law.
- Flexibility and choice, including options to transfer into law.
LW3CMI
- CRIMINOLOGY
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
- The European Studies subject focuses on the study of the history and politics of contemporary Europe and its institutions.
- On this programme you will explore how European institutions function and how they have evolved over the years.
- You will learn about 20th and 21st century history and how conflict and reconciliation has shaped present-day attitudes towards European integration.
- You will learn about the different regions of Europe and the successes or not of their integration into the European Union and its institutions. You will have a chance to think about possible futures of the European project.
- You will have the option of studying German or Spanish at beginner or intermediate level.
Why choose this subject?
- The European Studies programme at Maynooth is unique in that it focuses on the politics and recent history of Europe and its institutions. The programme offers an excellent preparation for a career in Europe or for an advanced degree in European Studies.
- Staff teaching on the European Studies have expertise in European institutions and enlargement, on the history of war and peace in the Balkans and the legacy of the communist period in Eastern Europe.
- The European Studies programme is closely integrated with the Maynooth Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (MCEES) and hold regular events, invites guest speakers.
- As part of your degree, you will have the option to take part in a field trip to Brussels, including a visit to the European Parliament and meeting with Irish MEPs.
ES3MI
- EUROPEAN STUDIES
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
History is the systematic examination of human experience over time. It attempts to explain the origins and evolution of the societies we live in, from as many points of view as possible. - History explores the complex processes of social and economic change, the choice of one set of political or ethical values over another, the context in which new ideas arise, and much more. The written word is one way of gathering information about the past, but new technologies and research methods allow for the study of history to take place through other mediums.
- The Department’s long-standing reputation for excellence and leadership in historical scholarship both in Ireland and internationally is one reason for the popularity of History at Maynooth. We have also kept our discipline vibrant, engaging and of practical value to students. We provide a solid grounding in the practice of history and boast expertise in a wide range of specialist topics such as life in medieval Ireland, the intersection of American and world history, the First World War, and gender and sexual politics.
Semester 1. Students must take one only from the following group: HY304, HY320, HY3023 Semester 2. Students must take one only from the following group: HY384, HY3011, HY3018
HY3MI
- HISTORY
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Beginning with words on a page, English is a world-facing subject: it takes you across historical periods, cultures, locations and genres, from poetry and drama to the novel, film, and creative writing too. As a student of English, you will learn about: - Different literary forms from poetry and drama to the novel and film, as well as creative writing.
- The conditions that shape literature from history and geography to questions of gender, race, and class.
- How literary texts enable us to understand our own complex world.
- Different approaches to and theories of literature.
- How different schools of critical thought or areas have shaped and reshaped the subject of English literary studies.
Engaging in critical debate about the meaning and value of literature will help you to: - Foster your critical and creative abilities.
- Develop awareness of the multi-dimensional nature of human situations.
- Approach problems with an open and enquiring mind.
- Gain analytical skills, finely-honed writing skills and develop critical thinking – skills which appeal greatly to future employers. Maynooth University Department of English boasts notable expertise in a wide range of literature from the early modern to the present day, and from Irish literature to American, African, Arab and global literatures. Our lecturers’ research expertise informs their teaching and provides you as a student with current critical thinking in the broad field of English studies. Our degree reflects the changing, global nature of English language literature while also providing you with a thorough understanding of established literary traditions.
EN3MI
- ENGLISH
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
International development looks at the development challenges and opportunities confronting people and societies living in the Global South (including Africa, Asia and Latin America), while addressing the myriad of global challenges associated with sustainable development for the planet as a whole. As a student of International Development in the Bachelor of Arts degree you will explore issues such as globalisation, climate change, food security, poverty, conflict, disasters and other humanitarian emergencies, human rights, health, education, gender, inequality and empowerment, from an international development perspective. - Gain an understanding of development activism and how development can be planned, organised and managed to meet the needs of all, especially the most marginalised communities around the world.
- We will focus on the roles and effectiveness of international and national development actors (UN, Governments, NGO’s and Civil Society groups) and market actors in meeting development challenges, and in providing a better world for all.
KD3MI
- INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Mathematics is the logical and abstract study of pattern. It involves an interplay between the concrete and the abstract: the ever-changing world around us is one of the key inspirations for the invention and investigation of abstract mathematics, and the discoveries of abstract mathematics have important and unexpected applications in the world around us. - Our Mathematics degrees aim to bridge the gap between school Mathematics and current frontiers of knowledge. You will learn to think hard and rigorously about questions and to solve new problems – invaluable skills that can be transferred to any area of life and any job you hold in future.
- A degree in a Mathematical discipline opens the door to jobs in a variety of fields such as finance, trading, insurance, information technology, education, data analysis, scientific research and development.
- The Department offers multiple programmes to suit a range of Mathematical backgrounds, from the intensive Pure Mathematics programmes which are aimed at students with a strong interest in abstract mathematics and a flair for analytical reasoning to the more applied programmes which appeal to students who enjoy the more concrete areas of the subject.
- The academic staff in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics have a diverse range of research interests in areas including algebra, analysis, data analysis, dynamics, geometry, number theory, statistical modelling and topology.
- See CAREER OPTIONS tab for more details about the range of Mathematics options at MU.
MS3MI
- MATHEMATICAL STUDIES
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Anthropology is the comparative study of human society and culture. By closely observing and analyzing different ways of life around the world, from tribal villages to Wall Street offices, anthropologists create new knowledge about human nature and what it means to be human today. - You will learn how to research cultural practices and social institutions such as: religion and ritual, kinship and family, economy and the market, politics and government, language and performance, science and technology, traditional healing and biomedicine, and much more.
- You can also study forensic anthropology, which applies skeletal analysis and archaeological techniques to solve criminal cases.
- You will engage in practical, experiential learning, including ethnographic fieldwork projects.
- Anthropology fosters creativity and imagination by helping us to think beyond our own pre-conceived world views. By cultivating better understanding across cultures, anthropologists also confront forms of prejudice, injustice and inequality.
Note: AN351, and AN353 not available at online registration. Contact the Department for further details.
AN3MI
- ANTHROPOLOGY
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Economics is a social science that helps us to understand the behaviour of decision makers such as consumers, firms, workers, governments, investors, central banks, policy makers. - Economists are not defined by the subject matter that they study but rather by the way they approach a given topic. Economics provides a framework for understanding problems and learning how to solve them.
- There is a misconception about economics. People tend to think that economics is all about money and profits, but economics is much more than that. It is about understanding the past, predicting the future, and making evidence-based policy recommendations.
- Economists aim to find feasible solutions to help improve people's lives. This involves tackling important societal problems such as: how to reduce gender in equality and racial discrimination, how to create international cooperation to protect the environment, how to break the poverty trap in less-developed countries, how to reduce crime.
- Economists use game theory to analyse strategic interaction to answer questions such as: What is the optimal pricing and advertisement strategy for a firm? How should we set political campaign financing rules to improve the quality of our democracy? How should patents be designed to foster innovation but not curtail competition?
- Economists use statistical techniques to understand the market and how people respond to incentives. By determining causal relationships, economists can make evidence-based policy recommendations at the firm and state level.
EC3MI
- ECONOMICS
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Finance is taught as an application of Economics. It examines the role of government and international organisations in the management and regulation of financial markets. Finance is the study of investment risk and reward. You don’t need to have any previous knowledge of Finance, only an interest in how the financial sector and the economy works and a desire to know more. The ability to work in a second language is an advantage for Finance graduates. As an Arts student, you may combine Finance with Chinese, French, German, or Spanish – all are available at beginner/non-beginner level (except Chinese - only beginner level). The Department is made up of an accomplished group of academics with an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching.
Students must take at least one Finance module (FN) in semester 1.
FN3MI
- FINANCE
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Music Technology is a unique opportunity to combine Music Technology with Music, Computer Science and a wide range of other disciplines. - Strikes a balance between practice and theory. You gain hands-on experience of the practical skills involved in music technology while learning about essential concepts.
- Wide in scope, including recording and sound engineering, computer music programming, sound design, composition, acoustics and psychoacoustics.
- Studying Music Technology offers an opportunity to develop and combine your creative and technical abilities. Facilities include a recording studio; a live room; a 5.1 mastering studio; Mac laboratories utilising Pro Tools software; field recording resources.
- Our programme is designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical and theoretical work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in the areas that interest you the most in your final year. Final year students oversee significant recording and composition projects, or work towards instrument and software development.
MU3TMI
- MUSIC TECHNOLOGY
|
Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
|
Students of the Modern Irish course study the language (spoken and written) and aspects of literature and culture. - Our students learn about the diversity and rich heritage of the Irish language, and also acquire skills which will be advantageous to them throughout their lives, irrespective of which career they choose. They will accomplish this in a friendly, open Department that has a strong commitment to Irish and to learning.
- Spoken and written Irish are obviously central to our course and students are given every encouragement and support to improve their oral and written skills. To this end, students normally spend a period of residence in the Gaeltacht.
- Our modules allow students to gain a deep appreciation of contemporary Irish literature - poetry, prose and drama. Modules are also offered on earlier periods of Irish literature, including Bardic Poetry, the Fenian Cycle and poetry of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. There also are optional modules on Scottish Gaelic, on Irish personal and place names, on the sean-nós singing tradition, and on Irish-language oral traditions and performing arts. In addition to practical workshops and tutorials on written and spoken Irish, we also offer modules on the sociolinguistics of Irish and on the phonology and dialectology of the modern language.
Many aspects of Irish studies are researched in the Department, both language and literature, old and new, as well as other related areas of study. Among the courses offered are Linguistics, Folklore, Literary Criticism, Scottish Gaelic, Early Modern Irish, Irish Place and Personal Names, the sean-nós singing tradition, and Irish-language/ Gaeltacht performing arts. Irish is studied both as a living language and as a valuable part of Irish and European cultural heritage. All lectures, tutorials and workshops are through the medium of the Irish language, as is all communication with the Department, and while the first-year course places significant emphasis on the written language (i.e. grammar), no prior knowledge of grammar is necessary. There is an Irish language support centre, An Droichead, which provides assistance to students, first year students in particular, who are struggling with the language. This works on a peer-tutoring basis, with second and third year students tutoring groups of no more than five students – allowing students to ask questions, to practice structures, etc Déanann mic léinn na Nua-Ghaeilge staidéar ar an teanga (labhartha agus scríofa) agus ar ghnéithe den litríocht agus den chultúr. - Foghlaimíonn ár mic léinn faoin ilghnéitheacht agus faoin oidhreacht shaibhir atá ag an nGaeilge, chomh maith le scileanna a bheidh úsáideach dóibh le linn a saoil, is cuma cén ghairm a roghnóidh siad. Baineann siad an méid sin amach i Roinn atá cairdiúil agus oscailte agus atá tiomanta don Ghaeilge agus don fhoghlaim.
- Tá ról lárnach ag an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha inár gcúrsa agus tugtar gach spreagadh do mhic léinn a scileanna labhartha agus scríofa a fheabhsú. Chuige sin, caitheann mic léinn tréimhse chónaithe sa Ghaeltacht de ghnáth.
- Tugtar modúil ar an litríocht chomhaimseartha ionas gur féidir le mic léinn eolas grinn a chur ar fhilíocht, ar phrós agus ar dhrámaíocht na Gaeilge. Cuirtear modúil ar fáil fosta ar an
- litríocht a bhaineann le tréimhsí níos luaithe, ina measc sin, filíocht na mBard, an Fhiannaíocht, filíocht an 17ú haois, an 18ú haois agus an 19ú haois. Tá modúil roghnacha ar fáil ar Ghaeilge na hAlban, ar ainmneacha pearsanta agus logainmneacha na hÉireann, agus thraidisiún
- na hamhránaíochta, agus ar thaibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta. Mar aon le ceardlanna praiticiúla agus ranganna teagaisc ar an nGaeilge scríofa agus labhartha, cuirimid modúl ar shochtheangeolaíocht na Gaeilge agus ar chanúineolaíocht na nuatheanga ar fáil.
- Is iomaí gné de léann na Gaeilge a ndéantar taighde uirthi sa Roinn, idir theanga agus litríocht, idir shean agus nua, chomh maith le réimsí léinn atá gaolmhar don teanga. Orthu sin tá, mar shampla, an Teangeolaíocht, an Béaloideas,
- An Chritic Liteartha, Gaeilge na hAlban, an Nua-Ghaeilge Mhoch, Logainmneacha agus Ainmneacha Pearsanta na Gaeilge, Traidisiún na hAmhránaíochta, Taibhealaíona na Gaeilge agus na Gaeltachta, agus an Cleachtas Cruthaitheach. Pléitear leis an nGaeilge mar theanga bheo agus mar chuid luachmhar d’oidhreacht chultúrtha na hÉireann agus na hEorpa.
- Trí mheán na Gaeilge a bhíonn na léachtaí, na ranganna teagaisc agus na ceardlanna ar fad, agus déantar gach cumarsáid leis an Roinn trí mheán na Gaeilge. Cé go gcuireann cúrsa na chéad bhliana béim shuntasach ar an teanga scríofa (i.e gramadach), ní theastaíonn réamheolas ar an ngramadach uait.
- Tá ionad tacaíochta Gaeilge, An Droichead, ar fáil a chuireann cabhair ar fáil do mhic léinn, mic léinn na chéad bhliana go háirithe, atá ag streachailt leis an teanga. Piartheagasc atá i gceist, agus mic léinn na dara agus na tríú bliana i mbun grúpaí beaga a stiúradh. Ní bhíonn níos mó ná cúigear mac léinn i ngach grúpa agus bíonn deis ag mic léinn ceisteanna a chur, cleachtadh a dhéanamh ar struchtúir, srl.
NG3MI
- NUA-GHAEILGE
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Computer Science at Maynooth University is the study of the principals and use of computers and software. Students enjoy the huge benefit of studying other Arts subjects with Computer Science in first year with options to take different degree paths afterwards. Advanced topics such as computer vision, theoretical computer studies, robotics, cryptography and artificial intelligence may be studied, depending on the pathway students take. - The Department of Computer Science at Maynooth University was founded in 1987 and is located in the Eolas Building. Our laboratories and equipment provide excellent facilities for practical work and all our courses include a mix of lectures and lab work. Many of our students also spend time working in industry as part of their degree, which enhances their employment opportunities once they graduate.
- We endeavour to provide a supportive and enjoyable atmosphere for learning through our Computer Science Support Centre, extensive assistance during practical work and we are always available outside of lectures to help our students.
CS3MI
- COMPUTER SCIENCE
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Studying Music at Maynooth, Ireland’s largest university music department, offers unparalleled choice and expertise, from performance to computer programming, from ancient traditions to contemporary experience, from high art to heavy metal. - Our programmes are designed to ensure a broad and firm grounding in practical, compositional and academic work, with expanded opportunities to specialise in areas that really interest you the most in your final year.
- Performance, composition, music history (musicology including pop/rock) and the music of other cultures (ethnomusicology) are just a selection of different aspects of music you will study in the Music programme.
- Exciting and varied programme of practical, compositional and academic work.
- Students participate in ensembles such as the Chamber Choir and Traditional Music Ensemble.
- In your third year, you have the option to specialise in performance, composition or musicology. Some of the modules available include ‘Music and Entrepreneurship’, ‘Opera in Context’ and 'Popular Music Studies'.
- For those considering teaching Music at second level, the Teaching Council requirements are met by studying Music in the MH101 degree.
Note
MU348 will not be available for online registration in September. Interested students should contact John.OKeeffe@spcm.ie to arrange a time for audition. If successful, students will be able to amend their initial module selection to include MU348.
MU3MI
- MUSIC
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Sociology is a subject that opens your mind, that helps you to connect your own lived experience to the wider social and economic context, and that offers the opportunity to engage in an empowering form of student-led learning. Our graduates often speak of studying Sociology as a “life changing” experience. The Sociology Department is widely acknowledged as a leading national and international centre of teaching and research excellence, as well as an exemplar of public sociology and engagement. We seek to equip you with the necessary resources and skills – intellectual, methodological, communicative and active citizenship – to meet the challenges of our fast-changing contemporary society and to contribute productively to social transformation.
Sociology is the study of human social life, groups and societies. It is a discipline that teaches you to: - develop critical skills and powers of argumentation based on empirical evidence.
- become a creative thinker and to think outside of the box.
- engage in a constructive enterprise, oriented toward the promotion of equality and social justice.
Taking Politics and/or Sociology to degree level is an ideal preparation to teach Politics and Society at second level following a Professional Master of Education (PME).
SO3MI
- SOCIOLOGY
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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If you want to achieve a high level of competency in a modern European language, as well as learn about Spanish and Latin American culture and society more generally, studying Spanish as part of our BA degree is for you. - As a student of Spanish, you will have a twin focus on language and culture. Through language classes and with supporting material such as film, literature and cultural events, you will aim to become a fluent speaker and writer of Spanish. If you’re a beginner, you can take intensive language classes.
- Over the course of your degree programme, you will receive an excellent grounding in all aspects of Spanish language through core modules in Spanish Grammar, Professional Spanish and Translation. In your second and final years you can choose from a broad range of optional modules, such as Linguistics, Spanish Literature and Cinema, Latin American Literature and Cinema, Catalan and Portuguese.
- This is a unique opportunity and a "lifechanging" experience, as any of our past students who have spent a year abroad can attest. You also have the opportunity to work as a Teaching Assistant in Spain (subject to availability), which is a great asset to have on your CV.
Students interested in teaching Spanish should note that the Teaching Council of Ireland require all registered teachers of Spanish to have spent a minimum of two months living in a Spanish-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advise at least a three-month residency. Students who successfully complete a year abroad as part of their programme are conferred with a 4-year BA International.
SPA3MI
- SPANISH
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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A wide range of subjects including Chinese language, culture, society and history are covered in this course. Chinese Studies is offered at two levels, one for absolute beginners and one for those who already have some prior knowledge of the language. - In third year you will have the exciting opportunity to study in one of Maynooth University’s partner universities in China. This will improve your language ability, foster intercultural competence and help you to acquire the skills and confidence that you need in today’s job market. Throughout your year abroad Maynooth University’s International Office and Beijing office staff will be there to support you.
- Learning Chinese connects you to over 1.3 billion speakers of Mandarin Chinese worldwide.
- As Ireland rapidly expands its trade in goods and services with China, there is a growing demand for graduates with strong Chinese language skills and an understanding of Chinese society and culture.
- The introduction of Mandarin Chinese as a curricular subject for the Leaving Certificate examination means that there is an emerging need for teachers of Chinese at post-primary level.
- At Maynooth University you have the opportunity to study Chinese along with a wide variety of other subjects. You can choose subjects you are familiar with or entirely new ones! Learning Chinese provides a window to understanding the world. Learning about the Chinese language, culture and society will help you to acquire new skills and develop unique interests that will be of considerable value to you in your future career. These skills and interests will make you stand out from the crowd and enable you to be more competitive in the global market.
CN3MI
- CHINESE STUDIES
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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- The European Studies subject focuses on the study of the history and politics of contemporary Europe and its institutions.
- On this programme you will explore how European institutions function and how they have evolved over the years.
- You will learn about 20th and 21st century history and how conflict and reconciliation has shaped present-day attitudes towards European integration.
- You will learn about the different regions of Europe and the successes or not of their integration into the European Union and its institutions. You will have a chance to think about possible futures of the European project.
- You will have the option of studying German or Spanish at beginner or intermediate level.
Why choose this subject?
- The European Studies programme at Maynooth is unique in that it focuses on the politics and recent history of Europe and its institutions. The programme offers an excellent preparation for a career in Europe or for an advanced degree in European Studies.
- Staff teaching on the European Studies have expertise in European institutions and enlargement, on the history of war and peace in the Balkans and the legacy of the communist period in Eastern Europe.
- The European Studies programme is closely integrated with the Maynooth Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (MCEES) and hold regular events, invites guest speakers.
- As part of your degree, you will have the option to take part in a field trip to Brussels, including a visit to the European Parliament and meeting with Irish MEPs.
ES3MI
- EUROPEAN STUDIES
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Students have been studying French at Maynooth since the foundation of the college in 1795. - French is a world language, spoken by 300 million people on several continents and in French territories overseas.
- If you would like to attain a high level of competency in a modern European and world language, as well as learn about French and Francophone cultures past and present, studying French as part of our degree programme is the path for you.
- Over the course of your degree programme, you will receive an excellent grounding in all aspects of French language through core modules in French Grammar, Writing in French, Oral Expression, and Listening Skills. In second year and final year, you may choose from a range of optional modules in French and Francophone culture, such as Politics and Ideas, Literature and Society, Women’s Writing, Linguistics, Translation and Cinema (depending on availability).
What distinguishes French at Maynooth is a strong tradition of teaching the French language, literature and culture, with much teaching taking place through the medium of French (for those taking the non-beginner stream). - Maynooth has a network of exchanges with universities in countries where French is spoken. Studying French opens a world of exciting opportunities.
- As part of this programme, you may also spend a year studying at a French-speaking university or working as a language teacher in France (subject to availability).
- At Maynooth University, students gain a thorough grounding in the language and acquire a familiarity with a world language expressing vibrant cultures and diverse histories. French is offered in a friendly, supportive environment at non-beginner level (Leaving Certificate H4 in French or equivalent recommended) from first year, and also at beginner level (no minimum requirement - but the recommendation is to attend all lectures from the beginning of semester one).
- Students interested in teaching French should note that the Teaching Council of Ireland requires all registered teachers of French to have spent some time living in a French-speaking country. The Maynooth University School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures advises at least a three-month residency. Students who successfully complete a year abroad as part of their programme are conferred with a 4-year BA International.
Note: FR313A will not be available at online registration. Interested students should contact the department for details.
FR3MI
- FRENCH
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Greek and Roman Civilization involves study of the history, literature, art, philosophy and material culture of two of the most influential periods in human history. As an interdisciplinary subject, Classics spans an immense range of human experience over some 1700 years, from the late Bronze Age through to the “fall” of the Roman Empire. Greek and Roman civilizations were of foundational importance for medieval, Renaissance and modern Europe, and can claim an almost global impact. - In Maynooth, students are introduced to the complexities and diversity of the ancient Mediterranean cultures, through many perspectives. Themes explored in individual modules include mythology and the gods; war and heroism; colonies, cities, civilization and “the barbarian”; ideologies of empire; people and elites; women and gender; friendship, sexuality, and norms of beauty; ideas of justice, law, happiness, and the holy.
- All material is studied in English translation. No previous knowledge of the subject is required or expected. Options exist for students to take modules in Greek and/or Latin languages as part of the programme in Greek & Roman Civilization
Tradition and influence. Study of Greek and Roman civilizations goes back to the foundation of Maynooth as a college in 1795. All the “greats” have studied Greece and Rome in some form, including (but not limited to) Karl Marx, W.B. Yeats, Seamus Heaney and J.K. Rowling. The Department enjoys an excellent reputation for both teaching and research. Staff are friendly, and relatively small class sizes allow students to get individual attention and feel at home. Interdisciplinary. Few other degrees offer as much, from heroic epic and lyric songs to philosophical systems to imperial politics. An all-round education that complements many other courses, laying the foundation for success in many careers and walks of life.
GC3MI
- GREEK & ROMAN CIVILISATION
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Mathematical physics, or theoretical physics, is the study of the fundamental laws of nature that govern our existence; from the interactions of quarks and gluons through the properties of metals and the aerodynamics of flight, to the evolution of stars and galaxies. - Many of the technologies we now take for granted have their origins in fundamental physics research, including PET scanners, lasers, Wi-Fi and the world wide web.
- Theoretical physics challenges our deeply held notions of what the world is like, and has led to developments in thinking from philosophy to genetics and neuroscience.
- The study of Mathematical Physics at Maynooth University has a long and distinguished tradition, of over 200 years. Modern theoretical physics and applied mathematics are exciting and dynamic fields, and this excitement is reflected in the research projects which are pursued in the Department.
- As well as being introduced to the major ideas and developments in theoretical physics and applied mathematics, you will be equipped with the tools to meet current and future developments in science, engineering, finance and other technologies of the future.
- Maynooth offers the unique possibility of combining Mathematical Physics with subjects such as Music, Philosophy or Geography.
MP3MI
- MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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By studying Media & Cultural Studies, you’ll get to explore the ways that film, television, social media, print media and radio shape your lived experience. - You’ll have the opportunity to research and analyse media genres like advertising and documentary, media subcultures and fandoms, and media technologies and platforms like video streaming and TikTok.
- You’ll develop your employability and professionalism through your exploration of media and cultural industries and working lives.
- This subject is focused on critical dimensions of media and culture. To develop your skills in digital and audio-visual practice, you should apply to MH109 Media Studies
- Develop understanding of how media shapes our ways of being in the world
- Build knowledge of the key practices and processes of the ever growing and ever changing media and cultural industries
- Learn how to engage effectively and critically with an increasingly mediated world
MD3CMI
- MEDIA & CULTURAL STUDIES
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Anyone with an interest in history, archaeology, languages or literature will be captivated by the topics on offer in this subject: from Cú Chulainn to Clonmacnoise, all aspects of Medieval Celtic Studies are explored. The diverse range of topics encompasses heroic literature and pre-historic archaeology, Otherworld tales and mythology, and gender and sexuality in medieval Celtic societies. The links between Ireland and the wider Celtic world are explored through literature and archaeology. You can study texts through English translations, and gain insights into the society of medieval Ireland: a world of power struggles, cattle raids, love triangles, infidelity, warfare, kingship and much more. Along the way, students discover that certain fundamental human experiences and anxieties were the same in the early Middle Ages as they are in the twenty-first century. There is an option to study modules in both the Old Irish Language and Middle Welsh. Why choose this subject? - A world-leading centre for the study of Medieval Irish and Celtic Studies, the Department of Early Irish engages in teaching and research in the history, culture, language and literature of medieval Ireland and related societies. Our special strengths lie in the study of medieval Irish literature, in its growth and development and in its relationship to contemporary European culture, as well as in the study of the Early Irish language.
- A diverse and friendly Department, we offer a vibrant and stimulating experience for students. On the research front, the Department has in recent years received several prestigious grants, including a European Research Council grant to support research in the area of Early Medieval Irish literature and language, as well as two Irish Research Council Laureate Awards for frontier research on the history of medicine in medieval Ireland. The Department has also been at the forefront of several major collaborative projects in the area of Digital Humanities.
Note re. SG223 (History 3 - The archaeology of Early Medieval Ireland): students should not register for this module in Year 3 if they previously completed it in Year 2.
SG3MI
- MEDIEVAL CELTIC STUDIES
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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In the Politics programme you will explore the way politics shapes our lives, the different forms that politics can take, and how politics is organised in different countries. The degree combines the traditional study of political institutions (parties, parliaments, elections, policy-making and more), political ideologies (such as liberalism and socialism) and ideas (such as justice and freedom) with political sociology (examining the relationship between politics and society and how they shape each other). - Politics students do a placement with a focus on active citizenship, which provides “real world” experience of the issues raised in the teaching programme.
- You will explore Irish and international politics, including a focus on Europe, and Latin America. You will also have an opportunity to carry out research into political life, developing analytical, communication and presentation skills.
- We also offer the opportunity to study three Arts subjects to degree level - Philosophy, Politics and Economics. This 2nd and final year pathway is ideal for students who wish to gain a rich, empirically-based understanding of the challenges posed by globalisation and a globalised economy, political volatility and democracy.
- Politics students have the opportunity to spend a year abroad, to go on staff-led field trips and to become actively involved in the Sociology and Politics Society in the MSU (Maynooth Students’ Union).
- The Network on Power, Politics and Society (PPS) and the Maynooth University Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (MUCEES) are both important parts of the MU Politics programme.
PO3MI
- POLITICS
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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Statistics deals with the collection, analysis and interpretation of data. You will learn how to use statistical models and visualisation methods to unlock valuable information and hidden patterns in large volumes of data. - A degree in Statistics will provide you with tools to address problems of critical importance to humans such as climate change, developing cancer drugs or managing traffic flows.
- We offer Statistics as a Double Major subject which can be combined with most other academic subjects in the Bachelor of Arts degree. This flexibility means you can combine your interest in aspects of society with knowledge of the statistical tools needed to understand data from those fields.
- Data recording is happening at unprecedented levels on local, national and global scales. The ability to transform data into usable knowledge is a highly sought after and desirable skill in today’s workforce, be it in business, science, health or social sciences. This subject will strongly enhance your employability.
ST3MI
- STATISTICS
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Credits: 20
Not compulsory:
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