University College Dublin Reviews
11 Reviews Found
3 Semesters overall of 3-4 months each. Second semester is live project with companies and startups across Ireland. Third semester is about Charity project - working with real NGO raising real money.
18 lacs
It is the best in class, starting with the campus architecture which is suitable for students as it consists of all the amenities, the professors are passionate about their jobs and are proficient in the subjects that they teach Talking about the peer group, the student coming here are the best of the best filtered from multiple applicants.
21 lakhs INR
The course curriculum is quite interesting. As it is a research-oriented course, the course has been designed around how to do good research. There is no industrial exposure given to us yet, but our course coordinators have designed the curriculum based on the latest industry standards and how to go about with it.
My tuition fee was 21,520 euros. I had received a scholarship from my university of 7,500 euros, which brought my payable tuition fee to 14,020 euros.
Most engineering graduate programs are designed (and partially offered) by industry experts. Almost all the faculties have independent research labs where you will have the chance to get hands-on in real-time.
NA as it funded PhD program
Overall the Biotechnology course structure was good. It was basic but we had application classes and good facilities. They also take you to NIBERT for industrial experience. You get a choice of internship or Project in 3rd semester. Has very good internship opportunities which can absorb you for full time employment.
€24,200/a
The study pressure is a lot here. Here we have a lot of assignments, lot of projects, researches etc. It?s not the university to chill out. We have to study a lot here.
After searching for various colleges, I found this university to be beneficial for me and its one of the top university so I decided to take admission at this university
One year Master's course. Divided into three trimesters. The first trimester covers your fundamental subjects: Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, Econometrics, etc. The second trimester is Elective subject based. 4 electives are to be chosen. Special mention: Aviation economics, energy economics, behavioral economics, bayesian econometrics, EU competition, and Industrial Policy are electives worth mentioning. All second-trimester module learnings are very closely related to industry requirements. Assessments, projects, and exams cover a large part of situation-based or case-based analysis. The third trimester is optional to choose between a dissertation thesis or an internship. Internships often are converted to full-time roles.
Fees are separate for EU and Non-EU applicants. Non-EU applicants almost pay twice the amount as that EU applicants. Fees for M.Sc. Applied Economics for Non-EU applicants: Euro 19,900.
Yeah, the Course Curriculum and academics are way better here. The courses are relevant and abreast with the latest knowledge. There are many events being organized by industries and Universities related to talks, jobs, and internship opportunities.
My Ph.D. year is a 4-year program where the annual fee is 14000 Euros. But in my case, this is all covered as part of the scholarship.
The course is structured really well. It covers the science and business aspects. But unfortunately, due to the pandemic, I am not able to completely enjoy
Because it has the course that I exactly want. No other university in Ireland has this.
My coursework was very dynamic in nature. We had the option of selecting from a varied number of academic modules with a great exposure of practical experience.
Euro 19,200
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