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The Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology ( GMIT; Irish: Institúid Teicneolaíochta na Gaillimhe-Maigh Eo) was an institute of technology, located in Galway, Ireland. In April 2022, it was formally dissolved, and its functions were transferred to Atlantic Technological University (ATU). [1] Now a constituent institute of ATU, it has facilities ...
Atlantic Technological University (also known as Atlantic TU or ATU; Irish: Ollscoil Teicneolaíochta an Atlantaigh; OTA) [1] is a technological university in the west and north-west of Ireland. It was formally established on 1 April 2022 as a merger of three existing institutes of technology (ITs) – Galway-Mayo IT, IT Sligo, and Letterkenny ...
Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology (BA) Occupation. Writer. Mark Boyle (born 8 May 1979), also known as The Moneyless Man, is an Irish writer best known for living without money from November 2008, [1] and for living without modern technology since 2016. [2] Boyle writes regularly for the British newspaper The Guardian, and has written about ...
This is a category for alumni of Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology in Ireland, and its predecessor Galway Regional Technical College. Pages in category "Alumni of Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology"
Bernard O'Hara (born c. 1945) is an Irish historian . O'Hara, a native of County Mayo, Ireland, is a historian and a former registrar of the Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology (GMIT). One of the original members of staff when the GMIT opened in September 1972, O'Hara started his academic career as a lecturer in business studies, later serving ...
He lectured in Irish Studies at Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology and authored several books on Irish folk songs. Life. O'Rourke was born in Ratheniska, County Laois. He was married and had three children, with whom he lived in Magherabaun, Feakle. O'Rourke taught Irish Studies or Irish Heritage at Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology.
The institute is located on Kill Avenue, about two kilometres west of Dún Laoghaire, close to Bakers Corner and Deansgrange. It is served by several bus routes. The former Dún Laoghaire College of Art and Design (now part of the Faculty of Film, Art and Creative Technologies at IADT) moved to the campus in the early 1980s.
The National Film School of Ireland is part of the Dún Laoghaire Institute of Art, Design and Technology, in its Faculty of Film, Art and Creative Technologies. Launched in 2003, it acts as a "centre of excellence" for film, animation, broadcasting and digital media. [1] The School offers the only BA Honours in Film and Television Production ...