Overview
What is a Nurse?
The role of the nurse is to provide evidence-based, culturally-sensitive care in order to assist the individual to lead an independent healthy lifestyle, overcome ill health or experience a peaceful death. The nurse achieves this through working as part of a professional multidisciplinary team to provide primary healthcare, acute hospital care, community and home and continuing care, based on individual and population health needs across the lifespan.
Students of nursing learn about caring and the complexities of health and illness through interactive teaching and learning strategies in the classroom and the healthcare environment. Practice (clinical and community) experience provides the student with opportunities to integrate the art and science of nursing and promotes the development of caring relationships with patients and their families and significant others.
Nursing practice, rooted in compassion, draws upon extensive knowledge and experience to provide physical and psychological care of the highest quality. Nurses take centre stage in ensuring efficient and effective delivery of accessible, integrated and consumer-driven healthcare, creatively designing health related services, and ensure quality through advocacy, policy-making, service management, education and research.
The four-year nursing courses (the Children’s and General Integrated stream lasts for 4.5 years) are offered in partnership with six health service providers. Trinity’s linked health service providers for this course are:
- Stewart’s Care, Palmerstown
Nursing: The course for you?
Do you love working with and for the benefit of people of all ages and from diverse backgrounds?
If you want a rewarding and respected career with great employment and travel opportunities, then the professional course in nursing could be for you.
A genuine interest in people and a desire to care for others are core requirements for any individual who wishes to become a nurse. In addition, you will need to have a keen interest in healthcare and be capable of working as part of a team. Like all professional courses in health sciences, nursing places extra demands on students’ time. It can be demanding, both physically and emotionally and so you should ensure that you are in a position to fully engage with the course during your time in Trinity.
Nursing at Trinity
The School of Nursing and Midwifery, Trinity College, has a world renowned reputation and courses are taught by academics at the top of their discipline and profession. With more than 1,000 undergraduate nursing students in Trinity, you will become part of a vibrant student community – the School of Nursing and Midwifery at Trinity College Dublin is the largest School of Nursing and Midwifery in the country.
You will have the opportunity to meet and mix with students from all nursing disciplines and midwifery profession as you study core modules together. You will also form cohesive bonds within your own discipline as you begin to specialise within your chosen area of nursing.
Nursing students are taught theory predominantly in the School of Nursing and Midwifery building on D’Olier Street, which is a wonderful historic building in the heart of the capital. The School is a great place to learn and interact with classmates and with its close proximity to Trinity’s main campus, nursing students are never far from the centre of student life.
Graduate skills and career opportunities
Graduates from the Trinity School of Nursing and Midwifery will be competent, innovative, and caring professionals who are capable of leading change, shaping policy and responding to an ever evolving healthcare environment.
You will be qualified to continue your education and further specialise should you wish to do so. The Trinity School of Nursing and Midwifery offers a wide range of postgraduate courses for furthering your studies.
There are QQI/FET routes available for TR091, TR093, TR095 and TR097. Please see www.cao.ie for details.
Your degree and what you’ll study
This course will provide you with the knowledge, skills, attitudes and, professional values necessary to provide high-quality, competent and caring practice in your chosen discipline of nursing. There are two components to the nursing degree course; a theoretical component and a practice (clinical/community) component.
Theoretical component
The theoretical component will be taught in the Trinity School of Nursing and Midwifery building, the main Trinity campus and in the Trinity Centre for Health Sciences in St. James’s Hospital. Teaching methods include lectures, tutorials, practical classes, clinical skills laboratories, group teaching, web-based learning and reflective workshops.
A combination of examinations, essays, clinical projects, clinical skills, laboratory techniques, literature reviews (review of past and current literature relating to the subject matter), reflective practice (thinking about an experience and reflecting on its meaning) and clinical assessments are used.
Click here for further information on modules/subjects.
Practice (clinical/community) component
For the practice component you will be linked with one of the health service providers and also have clinical/community placements in a variety of settings. During the fourth year of the course you will undertake a 36-week roster of continuous placement. This placement spans the fourth and fifth years of the course.
Intellectual disability nursing
The intellectual disability nurse is a professional, who works autonomously and collaboratively to provide person-centred care and support to persons of all ages, with a variety of abilities and capabilities. The intellectual disability nurse employs skilled interpersonal approaches and therapeutic interventions to provide this care across various states of health and wellbeing and promoting wellness. The values and skills inherent in the nursing programme enables the intellectual disability nurse to support and empower people with and intellectual disability across their lifespan, building relationships with the person and their families grounded in human rights, inclusion, advocacy and support to live as independent a life as possible.
Students who successfully complete the theoretical and practice component of the course will be eligible to apply to register with the Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland as a Registered Nurse Intellectual Disability (R.N.I.D.)
What health service provider will you be training with?
When you accept an offer for one of the nursing courses you will receive orientation information from Trinity. This information contains a form asking you to indicate which health service provider you would prefer to be linked with. Requests are dealt with on a first-come, first-served basis. Where possible you will be assigned your first choice. If the number of applicants exceeds the number of places available, you will be assigned your second choice. A reserve list is held and if a vacancy arises it may be possible to transfer to your first choice. Most students are allocated their first choice of health service provider.
International placements during training
The Erasmus programme enables students to study at another European university as part of their university degree. This is an exciting opportunity for students to experience a core clinical placement in another EU healthcare system for a maximum period of eight weeks. Erasmus exchange takes place in semester two of second year and semester one of third year.
We have partnerships with many EU universities for our various nursing and midwifery courses. Students currently have the opportunity to go on Erasmus to the following (dependent upon profession or nursing discipline): Turku University of Applied Sciences, Finland; University of Malta; University of South Wales; LUND University, Sweden; University of Northern Denmark, Aalborg, Denmark; Hanze University College, Groningen, Netherlands; University of Applied Science, Maastricht, Netherlands; and Wolverhampton University, UK.
Study Nursing or Midwifery at Trinity
This is a short presentation by Dr. Damien Brennan giving an overview of the Nursing and Midwifery courses available at Trinity College Dublin.
Course Details
Awards
B.Sc. (Cur.) Honours Bachelor Degree (NFQ Level 8)CAO Information
CAO Points 320 (2024) CAO Code TR097Number of Places
30 PlacesAdmission Requirements
This programme is not open to non-EU applicants. Please refer to this page to determine if you are considered a non-EU applicant.
Leaving Certificate:
O6/H6 in Mathematics
O6/H6 in one of Biology, Physics, Chemistry, Physics/Chemistry or Agricultural Science
GCSE:
Grade C/5 in Mathematics
Grade C/5 in one of Biology, Physics or Chemistry
International Baccalaureate:
SL Grade 4 in Mathematics
SL Grade 4 in one of Biology, Physics or Chemistry
Mature Students:
Applications must be received by the CAO by 1st February of the proposed year of entry. You are not required to submit a mature-student supplementary application form to Trinity. However, you will be invited to attend a written assessment by the Nursing Careers Centre.
Entrants will have to pass Trinity's health screening requirements. You can learn more at: www.tcd.ie/students/orientation/undergraduates/health-screenings.php
Students will also be required to undergo Garda Vetting. For further details, see: ww.tcd.ie/students/orientation/undergraduate/grada-vetting.php
English Language Requirements
All applicants to Trinity are required to provide official evidence of proficiency in the English language. Applicants to this course are required to meet Band B (Standard Entry) English language requirements. For more details of qualifications that meet Band B, see the English Language Requirements page here.
Course Fees
Click here for a full list of undergraduate fees.
Apply
To apply to this course, click on the relevant Apply Link below
EU Applicants
Read the information about how to apply, then apply directly to CAO.
Get in Touch
Telephone Number
+353 (0)1 8962692
Website
Register Your Interest
Register your interest in studying at Ireland’s leading university, Trinity College Dublin, the University of Dublin.
My mum is also an RNID (Registered Nurse in Intellectual Disability) and when I was younger she would share interesting articles she came across, many written by my current lecturers. The knowledge these lecturers had left me in awe and inspired me to choose this course. On my course, I enjoy my placement the most. I have learnt useful skills not only for being a nurse but also life skills from the people I work with including staff nurses and clinical placement coordinators. Working in various environments will prepare me for my future careers and I believe Trinity has given me every opportunity to learn and grow.
Student
I thoroughly enjoyed my experience as an Intellectual Disability Student Nurse in Trinity. I have had the privilege of meeting, and working closely with such inspiring people both at Trinity and through my practice placements. Trinity created a truly memorable and enjoyable experience, and has instilled desire for life-long learning. I am extremely grateful to be able to do what I am most passionate about every day – making a real difference in the lives of people with intellectual disabilities. As a recent graduate, I would highly recommend Trinity for those interested in following a rewarding career as an Intellectual Disability Nurse.
Grdauate