
Does my daughter need a postgrad to get a decent job in engineering?
My
Leaving Cert
daughter has a keen interest in engineering but I'm unsure whether a bachelor's degree will be enough to secure her a good job. We live in Kerry and I'm worried about having to fund a postgraduate qualification and accommodation. Can you advise?
Your daughter is at a crucial juncture and it's great that both of you are thinking ahead. Traditionally, students completed an undergraduate (bachelor) degree entirely within a third-level educational setting with little to no exposure to the workplace before entering the workforce.
In today's competitive job market, particularly in science and engineering disciplines, many undergraduate and postgraduate degree programmes are co-designed by universities with industry partners, ensuring students gain the essential industry skills and personal attributes employers look for in graduates.
Your daughter could start by choosing an undergraduate degree with an integrated work placement. This provides students with practical experience, enhances their employability and understanding of their respective fields.
READ MORE
While work placements were first developed by institutes of technology/technological universities, they are now very much embraced by all the traditional universities.
As it happens,
MTU
's Kerry campus is offering a new bachelor of engineering (hons) in mechanical and manufacturing engineering.
You may see it referred to as the 'Reedl' (rethinking engineering education in Ireland) engineering degree. Students spend the first two years on campus and the final two years on a paid work placement at a host industry partner.
Student engineers studying on this degree get to learn in teams and on real-world engineering project challenges, which helps ensure they are well rounded engineers of the future for Ireland's manufacturing sector.
Not far away from you, Johnson & Johnson awards three scholarships annually to MTU Cork students studying biomedical engineering, mechanical engineering and pharmaceutical biotechnology. In addition to annual funding, these scholarship students can engage in internships and work placements, gaining access to invaluable learning opportunities while building a support network of mentors and contacts.
The higher education system in Ireland is designed with pathways and supports, especially once your daughter gets to postgraduate level. You won't necessarily be carrying the financial weight all alone. Many universities in Ireland offer fully funded postgraduate research scholarships, particularly in science and engineering fields that are supported by national and international funding agencies.
These scholarships can often cover full tuition fees, a generous student stipend and project costs. Your daughter can find information on funded PhD programmes in Ireland through a variety of official websites, including individual university websites and national funding agencies such as
researchireland.ie
The website
findaPhD.com
is also a great portal for finding PhD positions globally, filtering by country, discipline and funding status.
I encourage your daughter to explore postgraduate options during her undergraduate years, speak with faculty and consider how a postgraduate research degree could shape her future career.
Do you have a career or education query? Email askbrian@irishtimes.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Champions League team of the season: PSG players dominate selection
Goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma (Paris Saint-Germain) He does have his weaknesses, such as the occasional panic under the crossed ball, but this was the season the Italian reclaimed his title as the world's best goalkeeper. PSG's path to glory saw him outshine Ederson, Alisson, and Emi Martínez before besting Yann Sommer in the final. Donnarumma made a series of saves only he can make, throwing that huge, rangy frame to its full expanse while playing behind a backline built to attack rather than concentrate on defence. Defenders Achraf Hakimi (PSG) If this is the age of full-back being the most multipurpose player in football, then Hakimi is best in class. The Moroccan matched defensive rigour with attacking instincts that saw him score four goals and supply five assists in PSG's run, including the opening strike of the final. His signing in 2021 was probably the first building block of the team that reigned supreme in 2025. READ MORE Willian Pacho (PSG) Marquinhos is the long-serving veteran of the champions, but his partner, Pacho, signed from Eintracht Frankfurt last year for €45m, has completed the Parisians' backline. He became the first Ecuadorean to lift the trophy after his dominant display in Munich blunted Inter's Lautaro Martínez and Marcus Thuram. Playing all 17 matches and logging more minutes than any other player with 1,542, Pacho also won the ball back far more than any player: 124 times. Alessandro Bastoni (Inter) Munich was a living nightmare for Inter defenders. They also conceded six across the two legs in their semi-final classic with Barcelona. But to focus on those matches is to forget the supremacy the Inter defence enjoyed in the extended group stage, where they conceded just a single goal in eight matches. Until the semis and final, Bastoni, an Italian defender of the classic style, had marshalled a three-man defence performing far better in Europe than in Serie A, but still ended a campaign of which he can be proud in tears. Nuno Mendes (PSG) Mirroring Hakimi's command of his flank in attack and defence, Mendes was tasked in the final with stopping the runs of Inter's Denzel Dumfries, one of the competition's most effective players this season. The Dutchman ended up chasing Mendes's shadow. That followed a season where the Portuguese player, just 22 years old, scored four Champions League goals and ravaged opponents, both attackers and defenders, with his athleticism. Mohamed Salah has rarely been kept so quiet. Midfielders João Neves (PSG) PSG's title-winning team did not come cheap but they have invested well, with a summer deal worth €70m landing Neves, one of the most wanted young midfielders in Europe. Small but combative, Neves now stars in the best midfield in Europe in combination with Vitinha and Fabián Ruiz. He had been a slow burn through his first season. When PSG were playing to stay alive in the group stage, Neves was the match-winner against Manchester City, Seven tackles, all successful, seven shots, including a goal, he began to embody a team fighting like wild dogs to win the ball back. Declan Rice (Arsenal) English clubs had a chastening Champions League season, mostly because of PSG, and Arsenal were the semi-final victims. Despite Mikel Arteta's protestations, the Gunners were well beaten but this was the club's best run in the competition in more than a decade. At the fulcrum was Rice, who is maturing into a midfielder who can run a game, as he did most obviously against Real Madrid – a two-legged performance Gunners fans will happily fall back on as something to cherish after their team's exit. Rice usually saved his marauding best for Europe. Pedri (Barcelona) If the modern PSG are a hyper-realised, updated version of Pep Guardiola's Barcelona team, the club he long left behind proved to be this season's entertainers. Hansi Flick is football's great gambler, his team a high-line, high wire act. In the middle of the morass is Pedri, a midfielder of balance, creativity and now experience. Thankfully, he is recovered from the injury problems that his 75-game 2020 caused and fills the mould Andrés Iniesta once did, never looking like losing the ball, forever dangerous to the opposition. Forwards Ousmane Dembélé (PSG) A mark of Luis Enrique's quality as a coach is that he made a productive, consistent player out of one of the game's great enigmas. PSG played mostly without a centre-forward but it was Dembélé who led the line, cutting in from flanks, operating as a false No 9, interchanging with his fellow wingers, his movement creating space and angles to work with. Khvicha Kvaratskhelia (PSG) There may be little coincidence that once the Georgian was bought from Naples in January, PSG's status as a giant struggling to make the knockout stages was shedded as they instead became the most decisive champions in European Cup history. The best attacking player in Serie A, a maverick talent that resembles both a throwback and the future proved a revelation in destroying defences. The English teams in particular struggled with him, and when he was going though on goal in Munich, he was able to show off his party-trick finish, at the near post. Lamine Yamal (Barcelona) The best team did not have the best player, and that's how it's supposed to work. When Barcelona were torching opposition defences, winning games from impossible positions, it seemed as if Lamine Yamal would win the Champions League at 17. He will just have to do it at 18. European defences had no answer to his speed and quality of finishing. Those slaloming runs and thunderbolt finishes against Benfica and Inter could be seen as preludes to greatness if he were not already great. Substitutes Emi Martínez came up big in Aston Villa's hugely enjoyable run to the last eight. Denzel Dumfries had five goal involvements in the Inter v Barcelona semi-final. Raphinha and Serhou Guirassy were joint-top for goals, with the Brazilian outstanding for Barcelona, the Guinean a ray of light for a faded Dortmund team. Désiré Doué, scoring two goals in the final, completed PSG's thrilling attacking trio. - Guardian


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Dior appoints Irishman Jonathan Anderson as sole creative director
Jonathan Anderson has been announced as the first creative director for men's, women's and couture collections at Dior , bringing to an end speculation about the luxury brand's future. The 40-year-old rugby player's son, from County Derry in Northern Ireland , will be the first designer to hold complete creative control of the fashion house since Christian Dior. Delphine Arnault, the chair and chief executive of Dior, described Anderson as 'the most talented designer of his generation'. He has long been compared with Karl Lagerfeld by fashion insiders. Anderson said: 'It is a great honour to join the house of Dior as creative director of women's and men's collections. I have always been inspired by the rich history of this house, its depth, and empathy. READ MORE 'I look forward to working alongside its famous ateliers to craft the next chapter of this incredible story. I would like to express my sincere thanks to Delphine Arnault and Bernard Arnault [the chief executive of LVMH] for their trust and loyalty over the years.' The significance of this moment is reflected in an unprecedented move for the famous house, skipping the haute couture shows for the first time in its 78-year history in July. It had already been confirmed in April that Anderson was to become the artistic director of men's wear, and he will present his first collection this month. He is due to debut his primary womenswear collection later this year. In a statement on Instagram, Dior said: 'For the first time at Christian Dior couture, since Monsieur Dior, a creative director will work on all the women's, men's, and haute couture collections, further strengthening its global creative vision.' Anderson's arrival has been the subject of front row gossip for a year. Maria Grazia Chiuri, the outgoing creative director of Dior womenswear, was still officially in her role last week when she took a bow at the end of her show in Rome. His ascendance reflects the fashion world's shifting view of him. In a short time, he has gone from a critically acclaimed but left field talent to the centre of power in the global fashion industry. But it was Anderson's eye-catching success at the formerly sleepy Spanish handbag brand Loewe that prompted the billionaire LVMH boss, Bernard Arnault, to reward him with the top prize. The decision to entrust a young designer with complete control is a roll of the dice for Dior, which has tended to play safe since being engulfed in scandal by the departure of John Galliano in 2011. A French court found Galliano guilty of making anti-Semitic remarks later that year and he was handed €6,000 (£5,060) in suspended fines. In 2023, Anderson crafted the outfit which Rihanna used to announce her pregnancy during the Super Bowl half-time performance, as well as Ariana Grande's Met Gala gown in 2024. He also created the patchwork cardigan worn by Harry Styles that went viral and was inducted into the Victoria and Albert Museum fashion collection this year. Delphine Arnault said: 'I am convinced that he will bring a creative and modern vision to our house, inspired by the fabulous story of Monsieur Dior and the codes he created.' - Guardian


Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
Aer Lingus owner sees transatlantic slowdown recovering
IAG said the weaker demand on transatlantic routes has shown signs of easing over the past three weeks as the travel outlook begins to stabilise following a period of uncertainty. The Aer Lingus and British Airways owner noticed 'several weeks' of demand softness in its economy cabins from the US, though the situation is now recovering, IAG chief executive Luis Gallego said on Monday in a Bloomberg TV interview. Some corporate travel also slowed after the US announced tariffs and business passengers delayed some travel as a result, he added. Some airlines saw a decline in travelers flying between Europe and the US after President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on countries around the world. IAG, Air France-KLM and Deutsche Lufthansa AG all previously said that the weakness was more noticeable on their cheaper seats, while demand for premium travel remained robust. 'I think it's more the uncertainty,' Gallego told Bloomberg's Guy Johnson in New Delhi at the annual general meeting of the International Air Transport Association. 'People don't know what's going to happen.' READ MORE IAG, which also owns Spain's Iberia, last month announced a large purchase of Boeing and Airbus wide-body jets, a decision it made independently of tariffs, Gallego said. Following a US trade deal with the UK, the airline group won't pay duties on its Boeing aircraft delivered to British Airways, he said. 'It's true that we wanted to have more certainty on tariffs,' Gallego said. 'We still need more details about the complete aviation picture.' Aer Lingus narrowed its losses to €55 million for the first three months of this year, as it focuses on its key summer season. The carrier is banking on transatlantic demand remaining strong, having launched new routes including to Nashville. It has also announced new flights to Mexico's Cancun, traditionally popular with holidaymakers travelling from the US. - Bloomberg