Friday, 12 December 2008
CHRISTMAS IS COMING
Thursday, 4 December 2008
BOOK CLUB
Thats My Goal
Monday, 1 December 2008
Your local Reps
Thursday, 27 November 2008
Daly talks to Mooney
Wednesday, 26 November 2008
Defib Training
Tuesday, 25 November 2008
Operation Christmas Child
Monday, 24 November 2008
It has begun!
Tuesday, 18 November 2008
Athy College construction to begin next week
After nine years of waiting Construction work on Athy College begins in the coming week on the 25 acre education campus on the Monasterevin road. Construction is expected to take 15 months. The new state of the art accommodation will contain computer labs, sports, hall, engineering and construction facilities and playing fields. Adult courses and evening classes will be a feature of the new college.
Adjacent to the college St. Patrick’s Primary school is about to move into its new facility with Gaelscoil expected to also be located on the campus next year
Details of the proposed facilities are available on www.athycollege.ie and applications are invited for 2009 and 2010
Sunday, 16 November 2008
Athy College teaching leads the field
Yet again, Athy Community College is at the cutting edge of exciting innovations in education. Trinity graduate, Natalie O’Neill, a teacher at the College has been invited to speak before world renowned educational thinkers in Toronto later this month. A teacher of science and biology for the past 10 years, Natalie will attend The Quest for Increased Student Achievement from November 19th to 21st at the invitation of the York District School Board. Natalie along with fellow teacher Karen McLaughlin from St. Brigid’s in Callan, will be showcasing an innovative project which both have been working on in their schools in conjunction with the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment. Co-incidentally, Karen is a past pupil of Athy Community College, and a graduate of NUIMaynooth.
With the help of her students , Natalie has been working on integrating the key skills of
The NCCA key skills project has been running in 9 schools across Ireland with 30 teachers involved. The project is looking at how key skills can be developed in different subject areas and to date all schools have reported that students are more engaged in the learning process as a result of participating in the project. One of the aims of the project is to help senior cycle students become effective learners in a world where the important skill is not how to memorise, but how to analyse and find the essentials in vast amounts of
Natalie and a teaching teaching colleague, Deirdre Murphy have also been working with the NCCA in further innovative curriculum development at Leaving Certificate level. The Flexible Learning Programme which they will help to develop and pilot will look at expanding the width and depth of the traditional Leaving Certificate nationally.
Friday, 24 October 2008
Graduation Night
Excitement was tangible in the Clanard Court Hotel on Thur night as graduands for the FETAC awards were presented with their certificates. Over 112 certificates were presented to students who had completed FETAC courses in French, Computers, Art, Computerised accounts, Communications, and many more. Among the guests and presenters were Cllr Senan Griffin, Mayor of Kildare, Cathaoirleach of Athy Town Council, Minister Sean Power, Noel Dalton, Education Officer of Kildare VEC, Cllr Mark Dalton, chairperson of the Board of Management, Martin Quilty, FETAC, Paul Cunningham, President Athy chamber of Commerce.
Athy Community College is the main provider in the county of HSE/SkillVEC training to health Board employees and many administrative staff of St Vincent’s Hospital were among the well wishers to the host of recipients of their awards.
A posthumous award was presented by Cllr Mark Dalton to Joan Hartnett Howe and was accepted by her daughter Sinead. Dr Sunderland, Deputy Principal, spoke of how Joan’s work and her life had been so full of exuberance and joy.
Excitement was heightened when, in his address Principal Richard Daly announced that a letter of intention had been received by Kildare VEC for the construction of the new college. Construction of the college is expected to commence in two to three weeks and the 25 acre campus will offer so many possibilities in primary, secondary and further education.
Cllr Lawler spoke of how a small school established in the late 30’s was now at the cutting edge of education provision within the town and offered the full support of the Town Council in expedition the project