Strong demand for courses at Maynooth - CAO figures

DEMAND FOR courses at NUI Maynooth is up by 13 per cent, according to the latest CAO figures.

DEMAND FOR courses at NUI Maynooth is up by 13 per cent, according to the latest CAO figures.

But the Dublin Institute of Technology has seen a 6 per cent decline in demand for some of its courses. Many of these are in the building and related areas.

Other colleges that showed a strong increase in first-preference applications included UL (up 10 per cent) and UCD up over 4 per cent.

A total of 7,073 students out of 56,315 made UCD their first college choice. The UCD figures reflect a strong performance in science, where first preferences were up almost 30 per cent.

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Demand for courses at DCU is down by just over 1 per cent, although the college did register an 11 per cent increase in applications last year.

There is now intense competition between third-level colleges for students numbers. With fewer students chasing more and more colleges places, the pressure is on colleges to fill places.

In the run-up to the CAO deadline on February 1st, most colleges invested heavily in marketing campaigns in various media outlets to "sell" their courses to students.

Overall, there has been a 2 per cent increase in the number of students applying for third level this year but there is still considerable spare capacity within the system.

Last night, NUI Maynooth - the big winner in this year's CAO figures - said new degrees in law and arts, business and law, and science education proved highly popular, while existing degree programmes in arts, music, social science and product design witnessed a similar growth trend.

Commenting on the figures, John McGinnity, assistant registrar, said: "We are delighted with this major increase in applications. Coming on the back of the strong growth achieved last year, this is a recognition of the world-class academic staff and courses at NUI Maynooth which are attracting great interest."

The CAO figures show a decline of about 2,000 in the numbers applying for ordinary-level courses and a corresponding increase of 2,000 in the numbers applying for higher-level courses. This reflects the move by many institutes of technology to reassign courses as higher level.

But it also means that the pool of ordinary-level degrees available to students is continuing to shrink.

Seán Flynn

Seán Flynn

The late Seán Flynn was education editor of The Irish Times