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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 Open Day is an excellent opportunity for students to learn more about undergraduate and postgraduate study at our campuses in Limerick and Thurles.
With the new academic year now in full swing Mary Immaculate College (MIC) is delighted to open the doors of its Limerick campus and invite prospective students to explore all that MIC has to offer. The MIC Limerick Open Days will take place on Thursday 19 October from 9am-2pm and on Friday 20 October from 9am-1pm.
Mary Immaculate College (MIC) has set out exciting and ambitious plans for the College’s development over the next twenty years in its new Masterplan 2042. The plan, which is the first developed by MIC since the incorporation of St Patrick’s College in Thurles in 2016, is a vision and strategy framework that outlines the medium to long-term development plans and builds upon the academic, cultural, social and recreational vision of the College.
The complex relationship between Generative AI and Academic Integrity within the Higher Education (HE) sector is to be explored over the next two days at a Limerick event hosted in partnership by Mary Immaculate College (MIC), University of Limerick (UL) and Technological University of the Shannon (TUS), and in association with the National Academic Integrity Network.
The Navigating the New Frontier: Generative AI and Academic Integrity conference began in the Clayton Hotel on 14 October and opening the event, Professor Niamh Hourigan, Acting President of MIC, highlighted the need for urgency in understanding how AI will shape the higher education field
As part of Science Week--taking place across Ireland 10-17 November—the Tipperary Festival of Science returns for its eighth year celebrating science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM)
Led by Mary Immaculate College (MIC) and held in collaboration with the Technological University of the Shannon (TUS) Thurles and Tipperary County Council Library Services, the festival attracts thousands of people each year interested in STEM. Events are held in venues across Tipperary as well as online to explore and celebrate STEM and the application of the scientific method.
The Physical Education Teacher Education (PETE) team at Mary Immaculate College (MIC) have been celebrated as being “national leaders” in their area and standing as a “model for best practice to others” by the President of MIC, as he celebrated their attainment of the Disciplinary Excellence in Learning, Teaching and Assessment (DELTA) Award.
Mary Immaculate College (MIC) Professor Aisling Leavy is one of three lead researchers who will coordinate Ireland’s first longitudinal study of teachers, Teachers’ Professional Journeys: The First Decade, commissioned by the Department of Education and the Teaching Council of Ireland.
Head of the Department of STEM Education at MIC, Professor Leavy, represents MIC in a consortium with the University of Limerick and the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI), which will carry out this major piece of research, due to be completed in 2030.
Mary Immaculate College has both staff and student portals to house relevant internal information.
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