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Use search box below to look for information on the Mary Immaculate College website. There are some helpful links to common search queries above it. Keep an eye out for the 'Ask a Question' function on certain pages and sections where you can pose specific queries to MIC staff (and see previous questions and answers underneath the question box).
The MIC Admissions Office manages student applications and ensures their progression through to offer of places, and enrolment on the College’s undergraduate and taught postgraduate programmes of study.
Learn more about how all MIC staff have access to a range of services and benefits as part of our Advance HE Membership package.
Africa Day is observed annually on May 25 in Africa and around the world to commemorate the formation of the African Union and the unity of the continent.
Congratulations to MIC academic Dr Ailbhe McDaid who was recently awarded over half a million euro by Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) and the Irish Research Council (IRC). Dr McDaid, who is an Assistant Professor in MIC’s Department of English Language and Literature, was awarded the prestigious funding under the SFI-IRC Pathways Fellowship which supports excellent early career researchers from all disciplines towards becoming research leaders of the future.
Young Hurler of the Year, All-Ireland winner and Mary Immaculate College (MIC) student Adam Hogan was awarded Student Outstanding Achievement of the Year Award at the annual MIC College Awards this week.
Although Adam could not attend Tuesday’s ceremony due to other commitments, the Third Year Bachelor of Arts student from Feakle in Co. Clare received his award in person from Professor Dermot Nestor, President of MIC, prior to the event.
Learn how MIC seeks to foster lasting links with our alumni, who “individually and collectively embody our College’s mission”.
American Conference for Irish Studies (ACIS) will take place at Mary Immaculate College 17 - 21 June 2024. The theme of the conference is 'Embracing Change, Navigating Uncertainty: Ireland and New Beginnings'. We hope to examine how academic disciplines in Irish Studies are looking to embrace the changes and how they are navigating paths towards new beginnings. This is true of our relationship with Europe; our relationship with the UK; new modes of writing, film and performance; the use of social media as a public forum as well as a new performative space; the flourishing in women’s writing especially in poetry and the novel; new beginnings in historicising all aspects of the Irish past; new beginnings in voicing what was hitherto unvoiced in Irish political social, cultural and religious life; new beginnings in reinventing the Irish language and culture; the overall embrace of a 21st century sense of Irishness, and what it means to be Irish.