Well, I’m now into the 2nd teaching week of the Autumn Semester and thankfully so far there have been no major problems – all the rooms have been sussed out and have already got coursework to do
The joys of the student life…………. So far, everyone seems nice, students and lecturers alike, some more so than others.
At leas there’s only 10 full weeks left of Semester

Guess who’s now a fully registered University student at the University of Ulster?!
That’s right – after 14 years of a combination of Primary and Grammar School I’ve now progressed up the ladder to Full Time Third Level Studies following a programme which, at the end of, I will hopefully be a ‘Bachelor of Arts of the University of Ulster with Honours in French and Spanish. Registration was on Monday 15 September 2008 at the Coleraine Campus and it was more a case of musical chairs (without the music!) as each student had to enrol for modules, have the form signed off, pay for tuition fees, send the form to the Registry Office and collect their ID/Library Card (which this year wasn’t a pathetic piece of laminated paper!)
That done, there was an Induction for all YrI students in the Faculty of Arts, today – 16 September 2008 – whereby services of the University were outlined, tours of the campus and its facilites shown and queries raised. In the afternoon each had an interview with their Advisor of Studies. Al lthat remained to be done after that, for some, was to go back home and get pi*sed! Naturally I wouldn’t do something like that…or would I?

As you are more than likely aware, I’m planning to sit the Advanced RCE sometime within the next few months, having heard that a local(ish) club is planning to facilitate the exam in December 2008. For this exam, and the course they are offering, they want £105 (the last time I checked).
This got me thinking last week…and I wondered if it would be less expesive to travel to the Republic of Ireland to sit the exam in the ComReg offices in Dublin. To my pleasant surprise, when I included return train tickets to Belfast and on the Enterprise Service to Dublin Connolly, inclusive of the cost of sitting the exam and the study material provided by the IRTS, the total came to £60.
I’m quite happy to self teach the material for the Advanced Exam or for the Experiementer’s Exam (in RoI) and with the vast difference in the cost of sitting each I’m increasingly considering going to Dublin, after which I may apply for both an EI callsign and use the HAREC facility (due to the fact that the Republic of Ireland, like the UK, is a CEPT signatory) to apply for a ‘Reciprocal’ licence with Ofcom.
Comments please…