The College Tribune
September 14th 2010
The Siren meets the Saw Doctors
The Difference is we’re independent
Issue 1 Volume 24
Features Freshers Guide Pages 8-13
The Siren p6-7
Confusion reigns as UCD leaves students homeless l Embassy forced to seek accommodation for UCD students Amy Walsh Students arriving back to UCD were met with confusion over accommodation arrangements this week. Misinformation triggered large queues on the day that students were due to move into their campus accommodation. Consequently, many students were left to seek alternative accommodation, some through international embassies. Furthermore, some students missed accommodation places while others unfairly gained residence. The online accommodation booking system and the UCD Accommodation Office failed to enforce UCD accommodations first come, first serve service. Students were scheduled to get their UCD student cards on Monday 6th September, while they were also due to enter their respective residencies. A select amount of on-campus residencies require a student card to enter the rooms. It was unclear to students which residencies needed student cards for access. Consequently, long queues formed as students sought cards. Facilities were not in place to deal with the amount of students who queued causing back log. Many students did not receive cards and thus did not receive accommodation. Students who had banked on receiving residency on the same day they arrived to UCD were left to seek alternative accommodation. The large queues and failing system meant that seven interna-
tional students who arrived at 5.30pm on Monday evening missed collecting their student cards. “They were pretty much left homeless upon arrival. Thankfully, we were in touch with officials from the Malaysian Embassy who managed to put them up for a night at Malaysia Hall,” stated Deenish Muniandy, a Malaysian orientation guide. “Students are asked to bring a current student card when presenting for check in to their residence. Unfortunately, this year many students presented for accommodation without current student cards. Arrangements were in place for those students to present themselves at points of student card issue to receive their student cards before check in. This caused an inconvenience for these students, especially on Monday which was the busiest day,” commented Richard Brierley, Manager of Residential Services. Further problems had arisen on Wednesday the 16th of June as continuing students initially tried to book accommodation. A second year continuing student told the College Tribune about his experience. “On Tuesday afternoon I rang the UCD Residence office and was told that Residence booking would go live on the SIS at 9.30am the following morning with almost 300 spaces to be made available to continuing students.”
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l
No student card, no moving in
Black Monday begins in earnest
Queues outside the bar at midday as UCD gears up for another eventful first day of term Photo by Lorraine Foy
UCD downgraded in world rankings Ciara Murphy UCD has lost it’s position in the top 100 Universities in the world according to the QS World University Rankings. UCD fell from 89th to 114th whilst Trinity College Dublin dropped from 43rd to 52nd. The fall in rank reverses trends which have seen UCD climb the ladder since it stood at 221st five years ago. The prestigious QS rankings are regarded as the most reliable guide to university performance with more than 2,000 universities surveyed. Criteria include staffstudent ratios, employer review, academ-
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l UCD drops 25 places in World University Rankings l Brady: “Irish universities are cash starved” ic peer review, citations per faculty and international student ratio. UCD’s loss of rank was published as a report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) was released. The OECD report highlights depleted levels of investment by the government in the Irish education system. According to the report, Ireland spent less on education as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) than the other 29 countries reviewed. Ireland spent only 1.2% of the GDP on higher education, less than the OECD av-
erage of 1.5%. Moreover, the report was compiled using data from 2007 and does not reflect the recent spending cuts to the education sector. Dr. Hugh Brady, UCD president, said that the downward movement of UCD in the QS rankings was not surprising. “While Irish universities are cash starved, other countries are investing solidly in their third and fourth-level sectors,” he commented.
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