-
Courses
Courses
Choosing a course is one of the most important decisions you'll ever make! View our courses and see what our students and lecturers have to say about the courses you are interested in at the links below.
-
University Life
University Life
Each year more than 4,000 choose NUI Galway as their University of choice. Find out what life at NUI Galway is all about here.
-
About NUI Galway
About NUI Galway
Since 1845, NUI Galway has been sharing the highest quality teaching and research with Ireland and the world. Find out what makes our University so special – from our distinguished history to the latest news and campus developments.
-
Colleges & Schools
Colleges & Schools
NUI Galway has earned international recognition as a research-led university with a commitment to top quality teaching across a range of key areas of expertise.
-
Research & Innovation
Research & Innovation
NUI Galway’s vibrant research community take on some of the most pressing challenges of our times.
-
Business & Industry
Guiding Breakthrough Research at NUI Galway
We explore and facilitate commercial opportunities for the research community at NUI Galway, as well as facilitating industry partnership.
-
Alumni, Friends & Supporters
Alumni, Friends & Supporters
There are over 90,000 NUI Galway graduates Worldwide, connect with us and tap into the online community.
-
Community Engagement
Community Engagement
At NUI Galway, we believe that the best learning takes place when you apply what you learn in a real world context. That's why many of our courses include work placements or community projects.
Bachelor of Arts (Child, Youth and Family: Policy and Practice) APP
Course Overview
This programme is designed to provide students with an in-depth knowledge and understanding of the key trends and changes in family life and child and youth development, complimented by in-depth sociological and political studies. There are two underpinning beliefs built into the programme, one being that children and young people need to be valued, listened to and enabled to reach their full potential and the other that at some stage, all families, no matter who they are need help and support to function.
Given this, the programme places specific emphasis on developing the knowledge and practical skills required to work in the youth work, family support and community development sectors. The policy and practice focus of the programme is enhanced by the study of sociology, which builds knowledge about society and how it shapes individuals and social relationships, and political science, which ensures a solid understanding of key aspects of political life and fundamental ideas such as freedom, democracy and equality.
The core strengths of this programme include: a nine-month work placement in year three; small group teaching delivered in the Institute for Lifecourse and Society, the University’s flagship Institute for applied social science research that informs policy and practice (www.nuigalway.ie/ilas); and teaching that is led by professionals working in practice, and staff from the School of Political Science and Sociology and the internationally recognised UNESCO Child and Family Research Centre (www.nuigalway.ie/childandfamilyresearch).
Applications and Selections
Who Teaches this Course
Requirements and Assessment
Key Facts
Entry Requirements
Minimum Grade H5 in two subjects and passes in four other subjects at O6/H7 Grades in the Leaving Certificate, including Irish, English, another language, and three other subjects recognised for entry purposes.
Additional Requirements
Duration
4 years
Next start date
September 2022
A Level Grades (2021)
nuigalway.ie/alevels
Average intake
40
QQI/FET FETAC Entry Routes
21 (More Info)
Closing Date
NFQ level
Mode of study
ECTS weighting
Award
CAO
GY110 APP
Course code
Course Outline
This course is delivered through a series of modules centred around child, youth and family studies. These modules introduce students to the disciplines of political science, sociology, public and social policy, economics, psychology, the creative arts, information technology and law. Many of the modules have a strong focus on personal and professional skills development, equipping students with both research skills and the range of skills necessary to work in the sector.
Year 1
- Introduction to Child, Youth and Family Studies
- Introduction to Politics and Sociology
- Practising Sociology and Politics
- Personal and Professional Development
- Applied Public Policy
- Applications Programming
- Youth Development
- Development Psychology
- Concepts and Practices of Politics and Sociology
- Applied Economics
- Internet and Web Development
Year 2
- Youth Work Principles and Practice
- Understanding Family and Society
- Economics of Public and Social Policy
- Promoting Mental Health and Well-Being in Families
- Child, Youth and Family Service Provision in Ireland
- Communities in Focus
- Professional Skills
- Social Issues and Policy Responses
- Research Methods
Year 3
- Work Placement
Year 4
- Connecting Research, Policy and Practice in Children’s Services
- Connecting Research, Policy and Practice
- Child Protection and Welfare
- Comparative Public Policy
- Project Planning and Evaluation
- Family Law
- Issues in Contemporary Families
- Youth and Society
- Advocacy, Diversity and Equality
- Option Modules
Equivalent modules may be substituted from time to time for any of the above under exceptional circumstances and when approved by the College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Celtic Studies
Curriculum Information
Curriculum information relates to the current academic year (in most cases).Course and module offerings and details may be subject to change.
Glossary of Terms
- Credits
- You must earn a defined number of credits (aka ECTS) to complete each year of your course. You do this by taking all of its required modules as well as the correct number of optional modules to obtain that year's total number of credits.
- Module
- An examinable portion of a subject or course, for which you attend lectures and/or tutorials and carry out assignments. E.g. Algebra and Calculus could be modules within the subject Mathematics. Each module has a unique module code eg. MA140.
- Subject
- Some courses allow you to choose subjects, where related modules are grouped together. Subjects have their own required number of credits, so you must take all that subject's required modules and may also need to obtain the remainder of the subject's total credits by choosing from its available optional modules.
- Optional
- A module you may choose to study.
- Required
- A module that you must study if you choose this course (or subject).
- Required Core Subject
- A subject you must study because it's integral to that course.
- Semester
- Most courses have 2 semesters (aka terms) per year, so a three-year course will have six semesters in total. For clarity, this page will refer to the first semester of year 2 as 'Semester 3'.
Year 1 (60 Credits)
Required SP1118: Practising Sociology and Politics 1 - 5 Credits - Semester 1Required EC1110: Introduction to Economic Policy - 5 Credits - Semester 1
Required SP1103: Introduction to Child, Youth and Family - 5 Credits - Semester 1
Required SP158: Introduction to Politics & Sociology - 5 Credits - Semester 1
Required CT122: Applications Programming - 5 Credits - Semester 1
Required SP239: Youth Development - 5 Credits - Semester 1
Required SP1119: Practising Sociology and Politics 2 - 5 Credits - Semester 2
Required SP1101: Personal and Professional Development - 5 Credits - Semester 2
Required PS1101: Developmental Psychology - 5 Credits - Semester 2
Required SP159: Concepts and Practices of Politics & Sociology - 5 Credits - Semester 2
Required EC132: Applied Economics - 5 Credits - Semester 2
Required CT124: Internet & Web Development - 5 Credits - Semester 2
Year 2 (60 Credits)
Required SPL307: Youth Work Principles & Practice - 5 Credits - Semester 3Required SP243: Understanding Family and Society - 5 Credits - Semester 3
Required EC267: Economics of Public and Social Policy - 5 Credits - Semester 3
Required SP237: Qualitative Research Methods - 5 Credits - Semester 3
Required SP2113: Developmental work through the outdoors - 5 Credits - Semester 3
Required SP241: Professional Skills - 5 Credits - Semester 3
Optional SP2115: Historical perspectives in Political and Social Thought - 5 Credits - Semester 4
Required SP2108: Child, Youth and Family Service Provision in Ireland - 5 Credits - Semester 4
Required SP2109: Human Rights, Inter-culturalism and Equality - 5 Credits - Semester 4
Required SPL308: Promoting Mental Health & Well-Being in Families - 5 Credits - Semester 4
Required EC272: Economics of Family Policy - 5 Credits - Semester 4
Required SP242: Communities in Focus - 5 Credits - Semester 4
Required SP248: Quantitative Research Methods - 5 Credits - Semester 4
Year 3 (60 Credits)
Optional SP3145: Advocacy, Diversity and Human Rights - 5 Credits - Semester 5Required SP3135: Work Placement - 60 Credits - Semester 5
Required SP3136: Community Based Research Project - 60 Credits - Semester 5
Year 4 (60 Credits)
Optional SP406: Principles Of Political Theory - 5 Credits - Semester 7Optional SP3101: 'Community' - Significance and Change - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3103: European Union: Political Theory and Pol. Economy - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3116: Ocean and Marine Politics - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP493: Environmentalism - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3134: Human Rights Advocacy: Concepts, Law and Practice - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP698: Transforming Children's Services - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP469: Political Anthropology - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3145: Advocacy, Diversity and Human Rights - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SPL304: Women, Men & the Economy: Critical Explorations of Theory & Policy - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3128: Travellers, Rights, Nomadism and Ethnicity - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SPL315.I: Smart & Liveable Cities and Suburbs - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3113: Early Years Education and Care: Research & Policy - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3105: Globalisation, prostitution and the state - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SPL316: Contemporary Irish Health Policy in Comparative Context - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP693.I: Ethnicity, Nationalism and The State - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP705.I: Revisiting Violence - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP404: Development And Change - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3140: The Practices and Politics of Transport - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3141: Socially-Engaged Art and Relations of Power - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3109: Sociological reflections on the Holocaust - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP6121 (SEM 1): The Power of Story and Narrative: Researching our Lives - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP694: The Power of Story and Narrative: Researching Our Lives - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP3151: Development, Equality, Advocacy - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Required SP3135: Work Placement - 60 Credits - Semester 7
Required SP4120: The Value of Arts and Creativity in the Lives of Children - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Required SPL306: Child Protection & Welfare - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Required SPL310: Project Planning & Evaluation - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Required SP4118: Connecting Research, Policy and Practice 1 - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3117: Sociology of Agriculture - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP3120: Degrees of Freedom: The Politics of Poverty, Welfare and Punishment - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SPL314: Theories of Nationalism - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP3137: Youth and Society - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP419: Marxist Theory - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP649: Power - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP673: Generic training and presentation skills 4 - 10 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP705.II: Revisiting Violence - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP618: Welfare Words: Key Words in Social Work & Social Welfare - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP407: Sociology Of Work - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP3139: Comparative Government and Politics - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP219: Political Sociology - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP498.I: Sociology of Religion - 5 Credits - Semester 7
Optional SP305: Comparative Public Policy - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP3129: Sexualities, Genders and Diversities - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP405: Contemporary Social Thought - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP3119: Green Political Thought - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP449: Mexican Politics And Society - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP3123: Travellers, Rights, Nomadism and Ethnicity - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP3115: Volunteering: Theory, Policy and Practice - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP3107: Political Reform in Ireland - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP701: Children & Young People in Families Today - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP3152: Comparative Government and Public Policy - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Optional SP3153: Topics in Contemporary Social and Political Theory - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Required SP3110: Theatre of the Opressed in Youth and Family Work - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Required SP4119: Connecting Research, Policy and Practice 2 - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Required SPL312: Issues in Contemporary Families - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Required SP240: Family Law - 5 Credits - Semester 8
Further Education
For students who wish to pursue further education and training, graduates with this degree will be eligible to apply for a range of postgraduate courses on offer at NUI Galway and other third level institutions. Post graduate courses that students will be eligible to apply for in NUI Galway include:
- MA in Social Work
- MA in Family Support Studies
- MA in Gender, Globalisation and Rights
- MA in Public Advocacy and Activism
- LLM In International Human Rights
Postgraduate courses that graduates of this degree will be eligible to apply for in other third level institutions include:
- Masters in Community and Youth Work (NUI Maynooth)
- Masters in Youth Work, Community Arts and Sports Studies (UCC)
- MA in Child, Family and Community Studies (DIT)
- LLM in Child and Family Law (UCC)
- MA in Child, Youth and Community
The BA also provides excellent foundational preparation for the BA in Applied Policing, the programme delivered to Garda trainees by the Garda College in Templemore.
Why Choose This Course?
Career Opportunities
This degree programme will offer a variety of career opportunities. Upon graduation, students will have the necessary knowledge and skill-set to apply directly for positions in the community, non-profit and statutory sector. With an emphasis throughout the programmes on practice and public policy, as reflected in the modules delivered, students are well-placed to seek employment in the following areas:
- Youth work
- Family Support
- Community Development
- Public Administration
- Research
The BA Child, Youth and Family Placement programme in 2018-2019 is supported by the following organisations
Who’s Suited to This Course
Learning Outcomes
Work Placement
Study Abroad
Related Student Organisations
Course Fees
Fees: EU
Fees: Tuition
Fees: Student Contribution
Fees: Student levy
Fees: Non EU
EU Fees are comprised of Tuition + Student Contribution Charge + Student Levy** €140. **Payable by all students and is not covered by SUSI. Further detail here.
Find out More
Dr. Deirdre Hardiman
Programme Director
T: +353 91 495203
E: deirdre.hardiman@nuigalway.ie
Dr. Helen Casey
Programme Director
E: helen.casey@nuigalway.ie