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University College Cork-Cork, Ireland

A pond and a meadow in the countryside of Cork, Ireland

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Background

Students study at the University College Cork (UCC). The university was established in 1845 and is one of Ireland's oldest universities. UCC is also a leading research university. Today, it is the home campus for over 17,000 students. There are over 1500 international students who attend UCC for a semester or year. UCC has 4 colleges: Art, Celtic Studies, and Social Science; Business and Law; Science, Engineering and Food Science; and Medicine and Health.

Choosing When to Study in Cork

Semester only (fall or spring)

The fall and spring semesters offer very different opportunities for students to study at UCC. We recommend that you investigate the benefits for the fall and spring semesters before deciding on which semester you want to study abroad. The Office of International Programs will provide several information sessions throughout the fall term. 

Fall Semester at University College Cork

Fall: Mid-August to late-December

Students participate in the pre-term program called Early Start. The early start courses offer excursions around Ireland. It is an excellent opportunity for students to gain an introduction to Ireland and Irish Studies through a carefully guided approach to the country's rich culture, history, politics, business, and civilization. 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« provides excursions for the students who study in the spring, along with other cultural activities and group dinners.

Students can choose from the following early start: (fall semester only)

  • Early Start in Archaeology
  • Early Start in Modern Irish History
  • Early Start in Literatures in Ireland
  • Early Start in Music

Spring Semester at University College Cork

Spring: Early -January to late-May

Students start classes early in January with registration taking place upon arrival. Students have approximately two and a half weeks off to prepare for finals and some use this time to travel. 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« provides excursions for the students who study in the spring, along with other cultural activities and group dinners.

Academics
  • 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« students will be studying in a European educational environment at UCC. As an example, for many of the courses offered at UCC, there may only be one test in the course, the final examination. The final examination can be written or oral and this final examination grade will be your final grade earned in the course. So, if you do well on the final examination that is your final grade.
  • Registration takes place overseas. You need to have as many course options as possible to counter any registration problems, like a course cancellation or course time conflict.
  • All students should save at least 3-4 electives to use as back-up courses for abroad.
  • Students have to follow the same prerequisites for courses abroad as you would at 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ«. Therefore, make sure you have satisfied any prerequisite(s) in order to be able to take certain core or major courses at UCC.

*All grades from abroad are transferred and calculated into your 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« GPA; no courses can be taken as pass/fail.

Benefits

Students/parents pay to 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« the following charges:

  • 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« tuition
  • 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« housing charge
  • Program fee

Students receive the following benefits on the Cork Program:

  • Tuition fee covered at UCC
  • Shared housing at Jennings Pool Apartments
  • Limited trips through Early Start Program (fall only); and limited cultural excursions
  • (no Early Start in the spring semester)
  • Roundtrip airfare
  • Official airport pick-up and drop-off
  • Orientation on campus and abroad
  • Enrollment in student travel plan
  • Guide fees, entrance fees, and motor coach expenses
  • Services provided by part-time on-site director

Items not included in the 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« charges but should be budgeted for (items marked with * are required):

  • *Meals (past students suggest budgeting $1,800- $3,500)
  • *Passport
  • cell phones and other communication expenses
  • Personal travel (hostels, hotels, airline or rail tickets, food, etc.)
On-site Support

Students will be supported by our part-time director, Mary Breen. She is a Professor Emeritus in the Department of English at UCC. Our part-time director will help students get acclimated to their new surroundings and direct them to the appropriate personnel or office that can assist them with any questions they may have. .

In addition to Mary Breen, students can consult the International Education Office for additional support.  

When reviewing the above information, please note that certain services and accommodations provided by 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« may not be available abroad, or services or accommodations provided abroad may not be provided at the same caliber or manner as 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ«. You should contact the Office of International Programs  early in the process to find out more detailed information or to get in contact with the appropriate department at UCC.

Course Information

The course approvals and equivalencies provided are the most current for the Office of International Programs. Once accepted to a study abroad program, students will have an academic interview with the appropriate director and will be advised on their course selection.

*Please be advised: All students are solely responsible for informing themselves about the status of these courses. Course approvals and equivalencies are subject to change.

 

Housing/Meals

Semester students currently live in Jennings Pool Apartments, part of the Brookfield Village complex.

  • Jennings Pool apartments is approximately 20 minutes from the city center and 5-10 minutes from campus.
  • Most of the rooms are single bedrooms in a shared apartment.
  • The apartments are fully furnished.
  • Students share a living room, kitchen, and bathroom.
  • Apartments are co-ed or mixed gender apartments.
  • Jennings Pool rents to various groups of students, and not exclusively to 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ«. Therefore, we cannot guarantee that all students will have a single bedroom.
  • Meals are not included. Students must provide for their own meals. There is a cafeteria on campus and other eateries around campus and in the city. Most students cook their own meals. There is an English market in town, and supermarkets.
Cost

2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« financial aid applies and students are eligible for consideration for all forms of federal, state, institutional and private sources of aid except the Federal Work Study Program. Students studying abroad for either a semester or full academic year will forfeit the value of a Federal Work-Study assignment. Students who receive GI bill funding or Veterans Benefits for tuition should reach out to SAS for additional steps in securing the ability to use these funds while abroad.

Students/parents pay to 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« the following charges:

  • 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« Tuition
  • 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« housing
  • Program fee

Students’ expenses in Cork will vary depending on how much they travel, shop, and go out at night. Most students will take advantage of the proximity to other European countries and cheap airline tickets and travel, and that usually accounts for much of their spending.

Insurance

Medical insurance is provided for all students during the program term by 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« University Maryland through Chubb Insurance. This insurance coverage includes medical evacuation and repatriation, as well as 24-hour support services for medical issues. This insurance functions as a primary insurance while abroad.

Students are required to submit a copy of their U.S. health insurance card/policy. Please be sure not to cancel your US insurance policy while abroad since the provided insurances only function while on program and outside of the US.

Money and Banking

Students can easily use both American credit cards (MasterCard and Visa mostly) and American ATM/Debit cards from US banks to pay for goods and services in Ireland. Make sure you contact your bank and credit card company prior to your departure in order to let them know you will be in Ireland for a specific period of time. It is also good to let the banks know when you will be traveling outside of Ireland, too, so your card will not be deactivated.

  • Students reported spending anywhere from $3.000-$5,000 during a semester in addition to paying for tuition and housing. These funds are primarily used for travel, meals, and entertainment. The exchange rate and other factors can affect spending amounts.
Visa

No visas are necessary to study abroad in Ireland.

Travel to and from Cork

2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« will arrange and pay for group travel to and from Cork. Any change to the students booked itinerary is done at their own cost. 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« does not pay for any flight deviations or tickets changes. Group flights are arranged for students traveling to Cork. Student departures are usually from Newark International Airport in New Jersey or JFK Airport in New York.

Criteria for Applying

Application Requirements 

Students must submit an online application AND a Course Planning form by 11:59 pm on the first Wednesday after Thanksgiving break of their sophomore year to study abroad in the fall or spring term of junior year. 

  • Attend a Study Abroad 101 information session.
  • Declare a major before applying to the study abroad program.
  • Discuss with your major advisor the possible courses you could take abroad and see if there are any potential problems, he/she sees with your plans to study abroad; Students cannot be on disciplinary probation nor have a history of serious disciplinary problems.

Criteria for Acceptance

  • Minimum cumulative CQPA average of 3.00
  • Students who can find courses which fit their 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« program and allow full-time participation and who are neither on disciplinary probation nor have a history of serious disciplinary problems.
  • ROTC candidates can apply as freshman to study abroad in the spring of their sophomore year. 
  • An academic interview with the program coordinator at 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« is required.

*Please keep in mind that study abroad information, dates, benefits, and fees are subject to change without notification. You are encouraged to contact the Office of International Programs directly for the most up-to-date information regarding any study abroad programs offered at 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ«.

*Disclaimer: In case of strikes or unexpected disruption to the academic semester 2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« University will work with the host university abroad to provide additional support or other academic arrangements to enable students to complete their coursework in agreement with the rules and regulations of the host university and the laws of the host country.  2023°ÄÃŲÊÃâ·Ñ×ÊÁÏ´óÈ« will not makes any changes to its course, grade, or credit transfer policies following such circumstances.

  • Biology
  • English
  • History
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Philosophy
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Sociology

All students who are able to find core classes or free electives may also apply

  • CQPA Minimum-3.00

Contact the Program Director, Madison Leadley

Madison Leadley program Director standing on a Uk street

  • Contact Madison Leadley
  • with the Program Director
  • M-F 9-4:30

 

Contact Us

Phone: 410-617-2910
Office: Humanities 132
Email: international@loyola.edu

Additional contact information

Apply

In order to apply, all students must attend a Study Abroad 101 (Powerpoint) session before the application deadline. The application deadline for all Fall, Spring, and year-long opportunities during academic year 2025-26 is December 4, 2024.

Study Abroad 101 (Powerpoint)