Tuesday 17 May 2016

An English Speech on Why Ireland is great.

Write a speech to be given to a school assembly in which you discuss why Ireland is a great country to live in. 

By Georgia Ferguson.

                                         Beauty comes from the inside. In Ireland, everything that surrounds us is beautiful, whether it be the authentic beauty of our green landscape, our adoration of music and dancing, our welcoming, honest people or our inspiring poets, playwrights and writers. Inside and out, Ireland is a beautiful country which stands up to any other land. 

                                           Good morning, teachers and fellow pupils. Today I will be talking to you about why Ireland is a great country to live in. Although Ireland has many unique, uplifting and charming features, the main elements of Ireland I will be touching on today are our love for music, our passion for drama and acting and the change and evolution in our religion. 

      Ireland is a place where beauty and serenity, laughter and music come together, wrapped up in myths and legends, and sprinkled with fairy dust and witty people. In my opinion, I feel that Ireland’s enchanting nature comes from the music we produce and listen to. From buskers on the street to The Guinness Jazz Festival, our variety of talented musicians just keeps growing and varying. We have produced so much talent in recent years and of course years and years ago, from upcoming talent like Hozier to seasoned bands like U2 we should be proud of the music that Ireland is sharing with the rest of the world.  You can’t walk anywhere on Grafton Street without hearing some type of music flowing through the air, most of us are singing for the money but also for the craic of open-air performance and for the love which the Irish bear their music. In Ireland, we don’t just stick to our amazing and unique trad music and sean nós singing but we are open to all types of music like pop, rock, jazz and many more. We love connecting to lyrics, having sing-songs and playing an impromptu piece on an instrument. Our love for music is as solid as a beating heart, and without it we would be lost. As the old Irish proverb goes, ‘The older the fiddle, the sweeter the tune”. 

           Our passion for drama is also something to be admired. Upcoming Irish actors get their inspiration and initiative from the breathtaking poems and plays that actors and playwrights produced years and years ago. From Seamas Heaney to Oscar Wilde, our array of talented actors, poets and playwrights just keep giving and giving. There is something so peaceful and serene about listening to an Irish poem, our poets are not afraid to wear their hearts on their sleeves and touch their poems with something deep, meaningful and personal. Oscar Wilde once said ‘Be yourself, everyone else is taken’. In a roundabout way, it is like he was talking about Ireland. Ireland stands on its own two feet and is in a sense being itself. We as a country copy no one, we do what we feel is best, we create music and poetry that comes from Irish thought and most importantly we are original. Wilde was right, everyone else is taken, and Ireland is being itself. 

           In our most recent census in 2011, an overwhelming 84% of Irish people ticked the box to declare that they were of roman catholic religion. Some say that is a true representation, others say it is just an excuse to tick some box. No matter what religion you are in Ireland, we as a country have become much more including of other religions and religious ideas. Our passing of the same sex marriage referendum proved that Ireland is willing to change for the better and willing to give freedom to anyone residing here. Whether you practice a religion or don’t at all, we as Irish believe the most important thing is to do what others would like done to them. We believe in equality, freedom, and most importantly we believe that being nice is the key to everything. Looking out for each other and finding the time to listen and give are as important as any religious belief. Our generosity and kindness proves that Ireland is in fact not just a great country to live in but a fair, juste and kind country to live in. 

                    Today I have spoken to you about why Ireland is a great country to live in. In order to prove this is the fact, I have touched on our love for music, our passion for drama and acting and the change and evolution in our religion. Through so many mediums, Ireland represents itself in a way that no other country could ever. Our country shines through our strengths and even our weaknesses and in everything we do we show that Ireland is a great country that deserves to be appreciated. Sometimes, Ireland falls like in recent recessionary times but as Seamas Heaney once said ‘Even if the hopes you started out with are dashed, hope has to be maintained’ and thats what Ireland does, it spreads hope to everyone. 


             

Monday 16 May 2016

Careers Project

Careers project on  a Barrister.
    By Georgia Ferguson  4.D   
Barrister
Offers advice about legal cases to clients and advocates on their behalf in court.
Barristers are professional advocates who deal with court work at all levels. Barristers specialise in providing an advisory and/or advocacy service for which they are briefed by a solicitor (or professional body). Barristers can be seen as consultants to solicitors. Much of their work involves conducting research. Some specialise in specific areas: criminal, commercial and family law are the most common, while other specialisms can include employment or labour law and human rights law, personal injury and litigation.
Barristers do not usually deal with the public directly. A barrister may only carry out work if instructed by specified categories of professionals, including solicitors (for all types of work) and in connection with non-contentious matters – accountants, surveyors, architects and tax experts in their areas of expertise.


Leaving Certificate Requirements:Passes in six subjects including English, Irish, a third language & three other recognised subjects. Two of the six subjects must be minimum HC3.


Law in Trinity College Dublin
Course Type: Undergraduate
CAO Course Code: TR004
No. of Places: 90
Min Entry Points for 2014: 525* points
Duration: 4 Year(s) Full Time
Award: LL.B.




Law in University College Dublin 
Course Type: Undergraduate
CAO Code: DN600 BCL
CAO Points Range 2015: 520 - 625
Length of Course: 4 Years
DN600 Places: 120



Law in Griffith College Dublin 
Validated by: QQI
QQI Level:8
Course Level:Undergraduate
Duration:3 Years
Points: 270




Content of the Trinity Law course (I used this particular college and course as an example because I am most interested in studying in Trinity)

- The LL.B. degree involves two year's study in the core subjects: Contract, Tort, Constitutional Law, Irish Legal System, Legislaiton and Statutory Regulation, Administrative Law, Equity, Land Law, EU Law and Criminal Law. For the final two years, students are free to choose to study modules to the total sum of 60 credits per year from the up to twenty six options. 
Students may also spend the third year abroad, on the SOCRATES scheme, at a university in any European country with which the Law School has links. They include France, Germany, Spain, Belgium, Italy and the Netherlands.

Work activities in a Barrister’s job.
Giving opinions on whether a case would be successful if taken to court.
Researching similar cases for examples of case law.
Representing individuals in court by presenting the facts of the case to the judge and jury, examining and cross-examining witnesses and summing up.
Representing organisations who appear before public enquiries and tribunals.
Advising on legal matters, draft legal documents and giving expert legal opinions on particular issues.


Work conditions
Travel: travel within a working day is a common feature, although it is relatively rare to travel or work overseas.

Working hours: frequent long, unsocial hours involving evenings and weekends, particularly for the newly qualified, despite courts sitting at regular hours during the day.

Location: most of the 2,000+ barristers in Ireland practise in Dublin, but approximately 100 practise in Cork and 130 in the rest of the country.

Opportunities for self-employment: most barristers are self-employed as sole practitioners.




Typical employers

Barristers are self-employed. They are forbidden to establish ‘chambers’ and cannot form partnerships with another barrister; they work as sole practitioners and are entirely independent.
However, some are employed outside of practice in in-house legal counsel positions with corporations and large organisations. In the public sector, barristers can find work in the Office of the Attorney General, the Office of the Director of Public Prosecution, the Law Reform Commission, the Courts Service, and the Legal Aid Board.
Practising barristers in the Republic of Ireland can work in one of nine circuits (geographically defined legal practice areas): Dublin Circuit, Cork Circuit, Northern Circuit, Midlands Circuit, Eastern Circuit, South Eastern Circuit, Western Circuit and South Western Circuit. Barristers will normally practise in one circuit.
In Northern Ireland, barristers are based at the Bar Library in Belfast, which provides office and library facilities. Barristers work from a new library building in Chichester Street and the old library at the Royal Courts of Justice. They also work at a number of other courts and tribunals around Northern Ireland. Like all barristers, they will do much preparation work at home.
In the public sector, barristers in ROI can find work in the Office of the Attorney General, the Office of the Director of Public Prosecution, the Law Reform Commission, the Courts Service, and the Legal Aid Board. They may also take on prosecution work on behalf of the state. The Civil Service has been a traditional career path for many qualified barristers, who can enter at Administrative Officer level or higher, working in any government department. Some in-house legal counsel positions arise with corporations and large organisations, and are usually open to barristers or solicitors.
In Northern Ireland, there are a limited number of opportunities for barristers in the public sector. In most cases, they will need to have between three and five years’ experience to be eligible to apply. The Attorney General's Office and the Public Prosecution Service provide the main opportunities for barristers.

Career development

A barrister (or 'counsel') at the start of their career is known as a junior counsel and it usually takes a few years to build up a practice. After approximately 12 years in practice, a junior counsel can apply to become a senior counsel – a status awarded by the Government and reserved for barristers of particular ability and experience. About 12 per cent of barristers are senior counsel. After taking part as a senior counsel member you can then be called to become a judge. This is a very high honour and most barristers are delighted to take on the role of a judge after many years working as a barrister. 



Salaries

Republic of Ireland: Income is by fees rather than regular salary and can be low during the first few years. Experienced barristers earn between €55,000 and €110,000 a year. Top earners can make over €280k a year. This can be a very lucrative profession for some individuals.



Entry requirements

King’s Inns School of Law is the only provider of professional training to prospective barristers in Ireland. Admission to the Barrister-at-Law degree course is via an entrance exam. To be eligible to take the entrance exam a candidate must hold either an approved law degree or the Society's Diploma in Legal Studies. On successful completion of the degree course students are conferred with the degree of Barrister-at-Law. Only holders of the degree may be called to the Bar by the Chief Justice and admitted to practise in the Courts of Ireland as a member of the Bar of Ireland.
Non-law degree graduates can study for a two year Diploma in Legal Studies at King's Inns instead of a third-level law degree. Students over 25 with no degree can also take the Diploma course.

Specific degree subjects required
Law
Legal studies.

Postgraduate study
Republic of Ireland: Specialist law postgraduate degrees (both taught and research) in areas such as criminology, intellectual property and European law are available.
Northern Ireland: The Institute of Professional Legal Studies at Queen’s University Belfast offers an internationally recognised one-year postgraduate course for trainee barristers and solicitors. See the Institute of Professional Legal Studies.


Training
Students on the degree course are required to keep commons by dining in the Hall of the Society for ten days of each academic year. Newly qualified barristers have to train with an experienced Dublin-based barrister (Master) for a minimum of one year following their call to the Bar. This is commonly known as ‘devilling’. The work is unpaid and forms the essential learning period where they have an opportunity to apply their knowledge in a practical setting. Masters usually allocate a lot of background research, and much of the training period is spent drafting documents. The barrister accompanies their Master to court and observes the skills applied in the courtroom.
All practising barristers must take part in the Law Library’s Continuing Professional Development scheme.




Skills and qualities
Excellent written and oral communication skills
Confidence and the ability to argue a case persuasively
Thorough, methodical and patient approach to research
Excellent analytical skills and the ability to absorb and interpret large quantities of often complex information and to use concise, plain English to explain this to clients
Excellent memory
Tact and discretion
Excellent organisational skills to plan and prioritise cases
Mental and physical stamina combined with the ability to work well under pressure and the ability to think on one’s feet
Ability to network effectively.










Interest Profile results from Careersportal.ie

Linguistic
"I like work that involves speaking or writing about things. I like the opportunity to express myself through discussion and debate, and communicating using a variety of media."



Creative
"I like work that allows me to express my ideas or imagination. I like a flexible workplace where there is room to develop and expand my creativity"



Enterprising
"I like work that allows me to take charge and make important choices. I like to help people make decisions and motivate them. I like the challenge of something new."

       - I feel that the results from my interest profile on careersportal.ie show that I have the qualities and interests to study and go on to have a career in Law. I also think that the creative element of my profile proves that I have interests and passions in acting and singing and that even though I am interested in studying the law and eventually become a barrister, I should still keep my options open in regards to studying acting or music. 









Personality Profile from careersportal.ie

Idealist - Description
Idealists are concerned with personal growth, and want their life to be meaningful and significant. They like being with people, sharing with them, and encouraging them. This is the most philosophical of the four Temperaments, and they place a high value on being true and honest with themselves and others. They like to see people grow and develop, and are always ready to help out when a friend needs them.

  • I got ‘Idealist’ as my top description as part of my careersportal.ie personality profile. I think this personality description fits the job of a barrister well as a barrister has to be able to work well with people and actually want to help them find solutions to their problems. 

Summary and Conclusions 


          In my opinion I think studying law and going on to become a barrister is the best path for me. I have a passion for public speaking and debating and I love to prove my point and debate against others no matter what the topic. My passion for public speaking and debating ties in perfectly with becoming a barrister as the majority of a barrister’s work is using well structured arguments to defend or prosecute and use their thought process and research to put a point forward in a way that can either solve many problems or make bigger problems for opposing counsels. A barrister’s job is in a vibrant, hard-working, and passionate environment, an environment that suits me best. I also have a love for the law and absolutely adore learning how it works and how justice can prevail no matter what. My first choice is studying pure law in Trinity College Dublin as I feel that Trinity is the best fit for me and the course is very popular and extensive. 

Organ Donation Talk

        A Talk on Organ Donation 

       Yesterday, the 12th of May, we had an organ donation talk with Mr. John Whealen, the secretary of the Irish Kidney Association. The IKA’s mission is as follows; 

The prime role of the Irish Kidney Association is to support patients and their families effected by end stage kidney disease and are either being treated by dialysis or have a working kidney transplant. By providing information on kidney diseases, associated medical scenarios and social benefits and entitlements, the IKA helps patients and families live as normal a life as possible, given the presence of the kidney related illness.
As the only organisation representing the views of Irish kidney patients, the IKA continually lobbies on their behalf. This ongoing activity covers a wide variety of areas, including government departments, the HSE, hospitals, renal units and many other agencies. By joining with other organisations, the IKA helps in furthering the aims of all patients with chronic illness and improving their quality of life.

      John Whealen spoke to us about his personal experiences with having a kidney transplant and told us how he recovered successfully from his operation and how the IKA has offered him so much help and support. He also showed us the statistics about kidney donors and kidney transplants which we were amazed at. 


Overall it was a vey interesting speech and I learnt a lot about the kidney and how we can save lives by becoming donors. 

Part 1 of The French Exchange

    French Exchange

                   At the moment I have a french girl called Chloé staying in my house as part of the French Exchange. She is staying for 7  days and then I will go over to her and stay in her house in Bordeaux for 10 days. I think we have fully immersed the French into the Irish Culture and they have got a taste of; shopping in Dundrum, dinner in Dublin, 99s in Greystones and Irish food in general. On Monday, Tuesday and Friday, the French have followed us around school, attending our classes and becoming involved in St Gerard’s School life. On Wednesday and Thursday, they went on two trips. One into Wicklow and the other into Dublin City Centre. Chloe told me that although they were tired, they really enjoyed their trips and found it interesting to see some of Ireland. On Friday, all the Irish and French are going to Adam’s house for a BBQ which will be great fun. 

                  Throughout the french exchange process so far, I have already learnt so many new french words and phrases. Every night, Chloe and I sit down and fill out a booklet Ms. Finane gave us. We fill in 15 new words and 5 new phrases. It is a great thing because it helps me to learn new words and phrases in french and it helps Chloe to learn new words and phrases in English.


                  Chloé is such a nice girl and I get on really well with her. I am so excited to go to France and it will be great to be able to speak French in day to day situations. So far, I am really enjoying the first stage of The French Exchange and I can’t wait to travel to France at the start of June and learn the language and immerse myself into French culture. It really will be the trip of a lifetime.     

Becoming a first aider

         First Aid
         

We practised many times on each other wrapping bandages and dressings and putting slings on each other and then we also performed CPR on dummies called Little Anne which we found hilarious for some reason!          First Aid was definitely one of the most useful extracurriculars we took this year. I am so happy that I signed up for this course as I know that it will help me in the future if I am ever in a life-threatening situation with myself or others. Over the course of 3 days we learnt so much practical and theoretical elements to the art that is first aid. Our first aid leader, Trisha Finnerty, was brilliant, so helpful and interested in us. Instead of just pretending all the time that we were in a situation, she would almost transfer the situation into real life using role plays to help us get a feel for how first aid can save lives. Because we took First Aid, we are now 3 times more likely to get involved in an accident if we see or hear one.



         Some of the practical things we learnt in First Aid were; CPR, how to use a defibrillator/AED, how to put someone into the recovery position, how to put slings on, how to put pressure on external bleeding using materials and how to stop someone from choking using abdominal back thrusts. These practical skills will stay with me for life and I now feel that if someone is in trouble I can help. 




              As well as learning practical skills, we also learnt the theory that comes hand in hand with the practical skills. We were informed about diabetes, epilepsy, cardiac arrest, heart attacks, internal and external bleeding, choking and blockage and many many more. We learnt this theory as we knew we had a test on it on the third day. To know the practical side to first aid you must also know the theory side too. 

              On the third day, we had a written exam in the morning on all the theory we learnt and in the afternoon we had a practical exam with another examiner who asked us to perform CPR, role-plays and answer questions. Our examiner told us that everyone in our class had received a distinction in the practical element, so hopefully we received distinctions in the written element too!


           
       First Aid was a valuable experience and one I will never forget. It is amazing to think if someone is in trouble, we as first aiders have the skills now to save lives. 

Sunday 15 May 2016

History Project

                 History Project on the album       
              ‘What’s Going On’ by Marvin Gaye. 






                                        by Georgia Ferguson

          

                 Early life and background


Born in 1939, in Washington, D.C., Marvin Gaye sang in his father's church and in the Moonglows before signing with Motown. He recorded songs by Smokey Robinson before becoming his own producer on the protest album What's Going On (1971). Gaye's later records developed his production style and yielded several hits, including "Let's Get It On," "Sexual Healing" and "I Heard it Through the Grapevine." Gaye was killed in 1984 during a domestic dispute with his father.

Early Life
Singer Marvin Pentz Gaye, Jr., also known as the "Prince of Soul," was born in Washington, D.C., on April 2, 1939. Gaye was raised under the strict control of his father, Reverend Marvin Gay Sr.—Marvin Gaye Jr. added the "e" on the end of his name later in life—the minister at a local church, against a bleak backdrop of widespread violence in his neighborhood.
Throughout his childhood, Gaye often found peace in music, mastering the piano and drums at a young age. Until high school, his singing experience was limited to church revivals, but soon he developed a love for R&B and doo-wop that would set the foundation for his career. In the late 1950s, Gaye joined a vocal group called The New Moonglows.
The talented singer had a phenomenal range that spanned three vocal styles and he soon impressed the group's founder, Harvey Fuqua. It wasn't long before Gaye and Fuqua both came to the attention of Detroit music impresario Berry Gordy and were signed to Gordy's legendary Motown Records.


            About the album

         What’s Going On is the eleventh studio album by soul musician Marvin Gaye, released May 21, 1971, on the Motown-subsidiary label Tamla Records. Recording sessions for the album took place in June 1970 and March–May 1971 at Hitsville U.S.A., Golden World and United Sound Studios in Detroit and at The Sound Factory in West Hollywood, California. What's Going On was the first album on which Motown Records' main studio band, the group of session musicians known as the Funk Brothers, received an official credit.
              
          The first Marvin Gaye album credited as being produced by the artist himself, What's Going On is a unified concept album consisting of nine songs, most of which lead into the next. It has also been categorised as a song cycle the album ends on a reprise of the album's opening theme. The album is told from the point of view of a Vietnam war veteran returning to the country he had been fighting for, and seeing only hatred, suffering, and injustice. Gaye's introspective lyrics discuss themes of drug abuse, poverty, and the Vietnam War. He has also been credited with criticising global warming before the public outcry against it had become prominent.
What's Going On was an immediate success upon release, both commercially and critically. Having endured as a classic of 1970s soul, a deluxe edition set was released on February 27, 2001, and featured a rare recording of a May 1972 concert shot at Washington, D.C.'s Kennedy Centre Worldwide surveys of critics, musicians, and the general public have shown that What's Going On is regarded as one of the landmark recordings in pop music history, and one of the greatest albums of the 20th century. The album was ranked number 1.                 


Album Cover

The album cover was not designed by an artist but is a photograph of Marvin Gaye. It is a photograph of personal copy and it comes from Motown record corporation. The photograph is used as the album cover in order to illustrate the front and also to give a face and body to the passionate music that comes from the album. 





   


Set List



 Disc one 
   1 "What's Going On"  – 3:53
2 "What's Happening Brother"  – 2:43
   3 "Flyin' High (In the Friendly Sky)"  – 3:49
4 "Save the Children"  – 4:03
5 "God Is Love"  – 1:41
6 "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)"  – 3:16
7 "Right On"  – 7:31
8 "Wholy Holy"  – 3:08
9 "Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)"  – 5:26
10 "What's Going On" (Detroit Mix) – 4:08
11 "What's Happening Brother" (Detroit mix) – 2:43
12 "Flyin' High (In the Friendly Sky)" (Detroit mix) – 3:49
13 "Save the Children" (Detroit mix) – 4:02
14 "God Is Love" (Detroit mix) – 1:47
15 "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)" (Detroit mix) – 3:08
16 "Right On" (Detroit mix) – 7:32
17 "Wholy Holy" (Detroit mix) – 3:08
18 "Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)" (Detroit mix) – 5:46
19 "What's Going On" (Rhythm and strings mix) – 3:50
Disc two
1 Sixties Medley (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 13:23
2 "Right On" (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 7:33
3 "Holy Holy" (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 3:32
4 "Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)" (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 9:06
5 "What's Going On" (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 5:42
6 "What's Happening Brother" (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 2:54
7 "Flying' High (In the Friendly Sky) (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 3:51
8 "Save the Children" (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 4:22
9 "God Is Love" (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 1:43
10 "Stage Dialogue" (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 2:34
11 "Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)" (Reprise) (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 5:12
12 "What's Going On" (Reprise) (Live at the Kennedy Centre) – 4:07
13 "What's Going On" (Single Version) – 3:56
14 "God Is Love" (Single version) – 2:56
15 "Sad Tomorrows" – 2:27
16 "Head Title (AKA "Distant Lover")" – 4:07

Historic Events that happened when this album was released. 

1970
U.S. President Richard Nixon orders an invasion of Cambodia, widening the war in Vietnam. ...
The U.S. Senate repeals the Gulf of Tonkin resolution that had given Presidents Johnson and Nixon sweeping powers in the Vietnam War.
The Beatles break up.
Egyptian president Gamal Abdel-Nassar dies.


            Marvin Gaye’s death

           Marvin Gaye was an American musician who gained worldwide fame for his work with Motown Records. He was fatally shot by his father, Marvin Gay, Sr. on April 1, 1984 at their house in the West Adams district of Los Angeles. Gaye was shot twice following an altercation with his father after he intervened in an argument between his parents. The wounds were fatal and he was pronounced dead on arrival at the California Hospital Medical Center. Gaye's death inspired several musical tributes over the years including recollections of the incidents leading to his death. Gaye was given a burial plot at Forest Lawn Cemetery and was later cremated and his ashes spread around the Pacific Ocean. Gaye's death was listed at No. 8 on VH-1/VH-1 Classic's 100 Most Shocking Moments in Music.  

  
  The     End