| Course Name |
History |
| Course Provider |
Trinity College Dublin |
| Course Code |
TR003 |
| Course Type |
Higher Education CAO |
| Qualifications |
| Award Name | NFQ Classification | Awarding Body | NFQ Level |
| Degree - Honours Bachelor (Level 8 NFQ)
More info...
|
Major |
University of Dublin |
Level 8 NFQ |
|
| Apply To |
CAO |
| Attendance Options |
Full time, Daytime |
| Location (Districts) |
Dublin City Centre |
| Qualification Letters |
BA (Hons) |
| Duration |
4 years |
| Leaving Certificate Entry Requirements |
Expand+Special Entry Requirements
TR003: Single honour History
Note: History (TR003) is one of three courses that are part of the feasibility study in admissions, and 10 places will be filled under this new route. For further details see page 246 under...
Hide-Special Entry Requirements
TR003: Single honour History
Note: History (TR003) is one of three courses that are part of the feasibility study in admissions, and 10 places will be filled under this new route. For further details see page 246 undergraduate prospectus.
Specific Subjects Required
None
Admission Requirements 2018
To qualify for admission to an honours degree course at the University you must:
1 meet the minimum entry requirements (see below).
2 satisfy course specific requirements (where applicable), see above.
3 where there is competition for places, have good enough examination results to be included among those to whom offers are made.
Minimum entry points for recent years are available at: www.tcd.ie/study/eu/undergraduate/admission-requirements
Also see ‘Other Requirements’ below.
Note: An Irish language Admission Requirements Summary brochure is available from: www.tcd.ie/study/eu/undergraduate
Minimum Entry Requirements: Irish Leaving Certificate
To be considered for admission to a degree course at the University you must:
Present six subjects, three of which must be at grade 5 or above on higher Leaving Certificate papers or at least grade 5 in the University matriculation examination.
The six subjects above must include:
A pass in English.
A pass in mathematics (or foundation-level mathematics (see note 2)) and a pass in a language other than English
OR
A pass in Latin and a pass in a subject other than a language.
Notes:
1 A pass means grade O6/H7 or above in the Leaving Certificate and grade 7 or above in the University matriculation examination.
2 Mathematics at foundation-level is acceptable for minimum entry requirements only, for all courses except nursing or midwifery courses. Irish at foundation-level is not acceptable for minimum entry requirements, course requirements or for scoring purposes.
3 Students may combine grades achieved in different sittings of their Leaving Certificate/Matriculation examinations for the purpose of satisfying minimum entry and/or course requirements, but not for the purposes of scoring. This is not permitted for Medicine.
4 Combinations of Leaving Certificate subjects not permitted:
Physics/chemistry may not be presented with physics or chemistry.
Biology and agricultural science may not be presented as two of the six subjects required for minimum entry requirements, and they may not be presented together to satisfy course specific requirements. However, both may be used for scoring purposes.
Art and music may not be offered as two of the three higher Leaving Certificate grades for minimum entry requirements, but both may be used for scoring purposes.
Bonus Points for Higher Level Mathematics
All students presenting H6 or above in higher level mathematics will have 25 points added to their score for mathematics. The bonus points will only be relevant where mathematics is scored as one of a student’s six best subjects for points purposes.
An applicant’s six best results from one sitting of the Leaving Certificate will be counted for scoring purposes. Applicants may combine results from the Leaving Certificate and the Trinity matriculation examination of the same year for scoring purposes.
University Matriculation Examination
A matriculation examination, graded in equivalent terms to grades used in higher Leaving Certificate examination papers, is held in Trinity every year, usually in April. The subjects of the matriculation examination are Biblical Studies and Geology. You may take one or both of the subjects available, but you should note that the range of university matriculation examination subjects available is not sufficient for the fulfilment of all minimum entry requirements.
The closing date for application for the examination is 1 March. Application forms and a syllabus can be obtained from the Academic Registry, Watts Building, Trinity College Dublin, the University of Dublin, Dublin 2, Tel: +353 1 896 4500, Email: academic.registry@tcd.ie
Other Requirements
English Language Requirement
All applicants must present an English language qualification. Accepted/permitted qualifications are:
1 Irish Leaving Certificate: a grade 6 or better in ordinary level English.
2 GCSE: a grade C or better in English Language.
3 US High School: a grade C in English taken in final year.
4 TOEFL
Paper-based 570 (with a TWE score of 4.5)
Computer-based 233 (with a score of 4.5 in essay)
Internet-based 90 (with a written score of 21)
5 Cambridge Proficiency Grade C
6 Cambridge Advanced Grade A
7 IELTS (academic version) 6.5 (no individual band below 6)
For Dental courses: IELTS (academic version) 7 (no individual band below 7)
For Clinical Speech and Language Studies: IELTS (academic version) 7 (no individual band below 7)
8 Pearson Test of English (Academic) – PTE Academic: a minimum score of 63 (with no Communication Skills section score below 59)
9 International Baccalaureate: English A1, A2 or B: 5 at Higher Level (4 at Standard Level if presenting IB through English).
Note: Examination results are only valid for two years.
Age Requirement
Applicants seeking admission in 2018 must have a date of birth before 15 January 2002.
Garda Vetting
Students on courses with clinical or other professional placements may be required to undergo Garda vetting procedures prior to commencing placements. If, as a result of the outcome of the Garda vetting procedures, a student is deemed unsuitable to attend clinical or other professional placement, he/she may be required to withdraw from his/her course. Students who have resided outside Ireland for a period of 6 months or more will be required to provide police clearance documentation from the country (including different states) or countries in which they resided.
Students who accept an offer will be informed of the procedures to be followed to complete the vetting process (as part of the student orientation information).
Fitness To Practice
Professional courses demand that certain core competencies are met by students in order to graduate and practice professionally after qualification. Trinity has special responsibility to ensure that all students admitted to all professional programmes will be eligible for registration by the relevant professional body upon graduation. It is important to us that our students are able to fulfil the rigorous demands of professional courses and are fit to practice.
Precautions Against Infectious Diseases
Offers of admission to the following courses are made subject to certain vaccination requirements and/or certain negative test results.
Clinical Speech and Language Studies
Dental Science, Dental Hygiene, Dental Nursing, and Dental Technology
Medicine
Nursing and Midwifery
Occupational Therapy
Pharmacy
Physiotherapy
Radiation Therapy
Social Studies (Social work)
Full details are available at: www.tcd.ie/study/eu/undergraduate/ admission-requirements/infectious-diseases
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| Leaving Certificate Vocational Programme LCVP |
Leaving Certificate Vocational Programme Link Modules
These modules are accepted for scoring purposes only and are awarded the following points: Distinction 66, Merit 46, Pass 28. |
| Mature Applicants |
Expand+All undergraduate courses in Trinity are open to mature applicants. Mature student applicants are not required to satisfy the normal minimum entry requirements and are not required to meet competitive academic entry levels (e.g. Leaving Certificate p...
Hide-All undergraduate courses in Trinity are open to mature applicants. Mature student applicants are not required to satisfy the normal minimum entry requirements and are not required to meet competitive academic entry levels (e.g. Leaving Certificate points), but are considered in the first instance on the basis of how relevant their life, work and educational experiences are to the course(s) that they wish to pursue. In addition, all applicants should demonstrate an interest in and knowledge of their course choice(s).
In order to apply to Trinity as a mature applicant you must:
be an EU applicant (see page 240 undergraduate prospectus)
be at least 23 years of age on 1 January 2018
submit a CAO application form to the Central Applications Office (CAO) by 1 February 2018
submit a Trinity Mature Student Supplementary Online Application Form (required for all CAO courses with the exception of nursing and midwifery) by 1 February 2018.
Late applications will not be considered from mature students.
CAO applications may be made online at: www.cao.ie
The Trinity Mature Student Supplementary Application Form should be submitted online. A full list of available courses can be accessed on: www.tcd.ie/courses. Please select the appropriate course choice from the list and apply by selecting the Mature Student Supplementary Application Form option. See: www.tcd.ie/ maturestudents/apply for full details on making an application.
Please note that a valid CAO number is required prior to submitting a Trinity Mature Student Supplementary Online Application Form. Only three course options will be considered.
Applicants to all courses may be required to attend an interview. Interviews are usually held between April and May.
Certain courses may also require applicants to meet other assessment criteria. For information on additional assessments for specific courses please refer to the Mature Student Guidelines booklet available from the Academic Registry, Watts Building, Trinity College Dublin, the University of Dublin, Dublin 2, tel: +353 1 896 4500, email: academic.registry@tcd.ie. The Mature Student Guidelines booklet is also available to download at: www.tcd.ie/ maturestudents/apply
Trinity will inform mature applicants of the outcome of their application before the end of May to allow successful applicants the maximum time possible to prepare for the start of the academic year 2018. Official offers to successful applicants are made through the CAO in early July. To secure your place you must return a formal acceptance notice to the CAO by the specified reply date.
An information seminar to prepare all successful mature applicants for starting in Trinity will take place in July 2018. An orientation programme for all successful mature applicants will take place in September 2018.
For further information on studying in Trinity as a mature student please contact the mature student officer, tel: +353 1 896 1386, email: mature.student.officer@tcd.ie or visit: www.tcd.ie/ maturestudents
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| Alternative Entry |
Please Refer to: http://www.tcd.ie/study/eu/undergraduate/ |
| Higher Education Access Route HEAR |
Web Page - Click Here |
| Disability Access Route to Education DARE |
Web Page - Click Here |
| Number of Places |
Places in 2015: 38 |
| Link to Course Fee |
Web Page - Click Here |
| CAO Application Dates and Fees |
Expand+Early online application (discounted): Fee €30 Closing Date: 20th January 2018 at 5:15pm
Normal online application: Fee €45 Closing Date: 1st February 2018 at 5:15pm
Late online application - restrictions apply: Fee: €60 Closing Date: 1st May 2...
Hide-Early online application (discounted): Fee €30 Closing Date: 20th January 2018 at 5:15pm
Normal online application: Fee €45 Closing Date: 1st February 2018 at 5:15pm
Late online application - restrictions apply: Fee: €60 Closing Date: 1st May 2018 at 5:15 pm
Change of Mind - restrictions apply: Fee: Nil Closing Date: 1st July 2018 5:15 pm
Exceptional online late application - see page 14 of the 2018 CAO Handbook: Fee €60 Closing Date: 22nd July 2018 at 5:15pm
You should avoid submitting an application close to a closing date. No extensions to closing dates will be allowed and all fees are non-refundable.
LATE APPLICATIONS
Late Applications are those which are received after 5:15pm on 1st February 2018 and will be accepted up to 5:15pm on 1st May 2018, subject to the restricitions listed on page 3 of the 2018 CAO Handbook. The online facility for late applications opens on the 5th March 2018 at 12:00 noon - a fee of €60 applies.
Exceptional Late Applications (Exception to the Timetable)
The exceptional closing date of 22nd of July at 5:15pm applies only to applicants who are currently undergraduate students in any year in any one of the participating HEIs (subject to the exclusions listed below). In order to avail of the Exceptional Late Application facility you must have entered the HEI through the CAO system.
If you did not enter your current course through the CAO system, you must first contact the Admissions Office of the HEI to which you wish to apply and they will inform you if you may submit an application direct to the institution.
Exclusions:
You may submit a late application only for entry to courses other than your existing course. If you wish to repeat the year in the same course you must arrange this within your HEI.
Mary Immaculate College Limerick, Trinity College Dublin, University of Limerick, Maynooth University and Galway Mayo Institute of Technology have special procedures in place in the case of current or previous students who wish to apply for entry to another course in the same HEI. Such applicants must contact their Admissions Office to determine the application procedure. However, if you are a student in another HEI and you wish to apply to any of these five HEIs, you should apply through CAO.
Refer to page 15 of the 2018 CAO Handbook on how to make an Exceptional Late Application.
Restricted-category Applicants
Mature applicants – most HEIs will require mature applicants, who wish to be assessed on mature grounds, to have applied to CAO by 1st February 2018 at 5:15pm. (This restriction does not apply if the applicant wishes to be considered on the basis of school leaving qualifications only.) For more information about applying to CAO on the basis of mature years go to www.cao.ie/mature.
Applying for the HEAR and/or DARE schemes – to be considered for the HEAR and/or DARE schemes applicants must have registered on the CAO system by 1st February 2018 at 5:15pm and must have completed the HEAR/DARE application form by 1st March 2018 at 5:15pm – supporting documents must be sent to CAO offices before 1st April 2018 at 5:15pm.
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| Course Content |
Expand+What is History?
History is about people. Studying History means studying lives lived, and ideas thought and expressed in times and places often very different from our own. History embraces everything from the rise and fall of empires or the birth...
Hide-What is History?
History is about people. Studying History means studying lives lived, and ideas thought and expressed in times and places often very different from our own. History embraces everything from the rise and fall of empires or the birth of new ideologies to the contrasting everyday lives of people in a whole range of settings, across time and across the globe. Studying History means developing critical skills, learning to express your ideas and arguments clearly, and becoming self-directed in your studies.
Is this the right course for you?
History is a subject for the intellectually curious. It offers an enormous diversity of subjects to explore, questions to ponder and problems to resolve. The History courses in Trinity allow you to study a remarkable range of types of history – whether cultural or political history, social history or the history of ideas – from the medieval centuries to the very recent past. We offer survey courses allowing you to grasp the broad patterns in history, specialist modules where you can study subjects of particular interest to you in small classes, and opportunities for your own independent research.
Why study History at Trinity?
The History department in Trinity offers a remarkably broad range of subject options for its size. The four-year programme allows students to lay firm foundations in the first two years, with wide-ranging modules on medieval and modern history, Irish, European, American and global, as well as on historical methods and approaches. The final two years of the programme then allow students the chance to study several specialist modules in-depth and to undertake independent research on a subject of their own choice. This is a breadth and depth of study unique in Ireland and with few rivals internationally.
Trinity is one of the world’s top 50 universities for the study of History (QS World University Rankings by Subject 2015). Our staff have published extensively in the fields of Irish, British, European and American history. We take special pride in the small-group teaching which characterises the final two years of study in particular, and for being a department which places student learning at the centre of its values.
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| Subjects Taught |
Expand+What will you study?
The History programme combines the strength of a broad-based programme in the first two years, introducing all students to the sheer diversity of historical studies, with the freedom to explore areas of particular interest to i...
Hide-What will you study?
The History programme combines the strength of a broad-based programme in the first two years, introducing all students to the sheer diversity of historical studies, with the freedom to explore areas of particular interest to individual students in the final two years. The first and second years provide a range of modules covering medieval and modern periods, including Irish, European, and American history, as well as some modules exploring the skills and methods which historians use, and the kinds of debates in which historians engage. Teaching is not only in lectures but in small group tutorials. All students will have an opportunity to undertake a group project in their second year, undertaking research as a team. The third and fourth years offer a wide range of choice in more specialist modules, all taught by staff with expertise in that field. There is the opportunity to concentrate on those parts of history which interest you most, and above all in the final year dissertation, an independent research project which very many students find the most rewarding part of their whole degree programme.
FIRST AND SECOND (FRESHMAN) YEARS
Single honours students take modules in medieval and early modern Irish and European history in their first year, as well as modules Doing History and Interpreting History which introduce the methods and approaches historians use in their studies. In the second year, students take modules in Modern Irish and Modern European History, in U.S. History and in Global History. They will also take modules which look at how history has been interpreted and presented, not just by professional historians but in the wider culture and take part in a year-long small group project allowing all students to work on a research project, TSM (joint honour) students also take the Doing History module in first year and take part in the group project in second year, and select from the period-specific modules to make up the History component of their studies.
THIRD AND FOURTH (SOPHISTER) YEARS
We offer a range of subjects within two different categories:
List I modules – these are specialist modules which involve intensive research and writing based on primary sources.
List II modules – these are broader thematic and analytical modules. Some will have a particular focus on historiography – on how different historians have tried to understand a period or problem.
In any given year there will be around fourteen List I and eighteen List 2 modules to choose from. They include a huge range of types of history – including political, social, cultural or intellectual history – as well as ranging in time from the Viking era to the post-1945 world, and including Irish, European, American and Asian history modules.
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| Modules Link |
Web Page - Click Here |
| Assessment Method |
Assessment is primarily essay and exam-based. Assessment of the final year dissertation accounts for one third of the final year mark. |
| Comment |
Expand+TR003: Single honour History
TR001 – History (TSM):
History must be combined with one other TSM subject. An honours degree is awarded in both subjects. For subjects that combine with History see page 28of the College UG Prospectus 2016.
Not...
Hide-TR003: Single honour History
TR001 – History (TSM):
History must be combined with one other TSM subject. An honours degree is awarded in both subjects. For subjects that combine with History see page 28of the College UG Prospectus 2016.
Note: History (TR003) is one of three courses that are part of the feasibility study in admissions, and 10 places will be filled under this new route. For further details see page 215.
Study abroad
The Department of History has Erasmus exchange agreements with a wide range of European universities including the University of St. Andrews (Scotland), the Sorbonne (Paris), the University of Vienna and Charles University in Prague. The Department also has an exchange agreement with the University of Tokyo, and students of History can also arrange for a year abroad in other countries, notably the U.S.A., Australia and Canada, where some recent examples would include the University of California, the University of Sydney or McGill University (Montreal).
RELATED COURSES
TR001: TSM,
TR012: History and Political Science,
TR028: Ancient and Medieval History and Culture,
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| Careers or Further Progression |
Expand+Careers
Over many decades History graduates (single honour and TSM) have pursued successful careers in a wide range of areas. These include: accountancy, advertising, banking, broadcasting, cultural, arts and heritage administration, human resources...
Hide-Careers
Over many decades History graduates (single honour and TSM) have pursued successful careers in a wide range of areas. These include: accountancy, advertising, banking, broadcasting, cultural, arts and heritage administration, human resources, journalism, law, public administration, public relations, management, marketing, publishing and teaching. Our graduates work for such organisations as IBEC, the Irish Times, Bank of Ireland, Goldman Sachs, the Law Society of Ireland, Oxfam, the American Chamber of Commerce, RTÉ, Google and Accenture. The diversity of careers reflects the wide array of skills amassed by students undertaking a degree in History at Trinity.
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| Further Enquiries |
www.tcd.ie/history
Tel: 01 896 1791 / 1020 |
| International Students |
Web Page - Click Here |
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| Points History |
| Year |
Points |
|
| 2017 |
488 |
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| 2016 |
500 |
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| 2015 |
485 |
* (Not all on this points score were offered places) |
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