Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The Centre for Talented Youth Ireland (CTYI) is a programme for students of high academic ability between the ages of six and seventeen in Ireland. [1] There are sibling projects around the world, most notably the CTY programme at Johns Hopkins University, the original model for CTY Ireland. CTY students are eligible to participate in CTY's ...
Sign in to your AOL account.
As of 2016, over 1.5 million students had participated in CTY's Talent Search. In 2016, over 28,000 students participated in CTY programs. Summer Programs were over 9,000 and CTY Online had over 13,000 enrollments. In 2016, CTY had summer programs running at 21 different sites, along with two international sites in Hong Kong and Anatolia, Greece.
RTÉ's Home School Hub, or simply Home School Hub, and its companion show Home School Extra, was an educational television programme which was created in response to the closure of all schools during the COVID-19 pandemic in Ireland in 2020. [2]
On the opening night of series one, The All Ireland Talent Show had over 500,000 viewers, with Ireland only having a population of over four million people. The opening was similar to the Got Talent series. The twenty-five finalists competed for a first prize of €50,000, [4] which was eventually won by Mulkerrin Brothers of the Aran Islands.
The Intermediate Education Board for Ireland. The Commissioners of Education in Ireland (Endowed Schools). The Inspector of Reformatory and Industrial Schools. The Department of Agriculture and Technical Instruction for Ireland (business and functions relating to Technical Instruction only). The College of Science. The Geological Survey in Ireland.
The local talent pool has received a boost from Google, [15] which opened its Dublin headquarters in 2002 and has since been recruiting highly trained tech talent from all around the world, [16] thanks to Ireland's lenient work visa process. As of 2015, Google employs some 3,500 people in Dublin.