I went to an all-girls secondary school. We didn’t have access to engineering subjects, but I always knew that I wanted to go to TUS as they offered an electrical engineering course.
I’m now in my fourth and final year of a course that is very practically oriented, with hands-on learning and, crucially, smaller class sizes.
Those smaller class sizes at the technological universities are a bonus: there are never more than 60 in any one class. Our lecturers are very accommodating, and they knew us all whereas, in a larger university with hundreds in a lecture theatre, they wouldn’t.
For the last four years, we have learned about renewable energy, wind farms, solar farms and biomass, as well as automation engineering, coding and visuals.
Mark O'Connell: The mystery is not why we Irish have responded to Israel’s barbarism. It’s why others have not
Afghan student nurses crushed as Taliban blocks last hope of jobs
Emer McLysaght: The seven deadly things you should never buy a child at Christmas
‘No place to hide’: Trapped on the US-Mexico border, immigrants fear deportation
I did a placement in my third year with H&MV, an electrical company in Limerick. This placement helped me to understand the space between theory and work and has been invaluable. Now, my final-year project is focused on using industry-relevant softwares to design solar farms and their electrical connection, which will help Ireland to reach our sustainability goals and energy targets, and I’m working with H&MV for it.
H&MV are actually sponsoring my final year in college, and I am using their software to carry out the project – and they have offered me a job for next year, after I finish this course and spend my summer on a J1.
I am looking forward to getting more experience in this area where there is a lot of growth and opportunities.
I am from Tipperary, and it’s only a 40-minute drive from the Limerick campus. It was LIT when I started, but when it became part of a technological university, it gave me the benefit of a university degree, which is perhaps a little more recognisable internationally than an institute of technology qualification.
- Sign up for push alerts and have the best news, analysis and comment delivered directly to your phone
- Find The Irish Times on WhatsApp and stay up to date
- Listen to our Inside Politics podcast for the best political chat and analysis