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Dear Professor,
Would you please clarify if the closing date is, in fact, 17 April? Should it read 17 May, instead?
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Cormac O Cuilleanain <[log in to unmask]>
    To: [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>
    Date: 12 May 2000 06:48
    Subject: Two Italian jobs at Trinity College Dublin
    
    
    
    Dear colleagues,
    
    Some further details, as promised, about the permanent lectureship and the
    one-year contract lectureship in the Department of Italian at Trinity
    College, Dublin. These have now been advertised in the newspapers.
    
    The closing date for applications is 19 April (=NEXT FRIDAY!).
    
    The salary range is as follows:
    
    17,878-44,164 Irish pounds per annum (an Irish pound is currently worth
    about three-quarters of an English pound). Appointment will be made within
    the salary range 17,878-25,227 per annum at a point to accord with
    qualifications and expertise to date.
    
    The job description remains unaltered (except that I typed "included" for
    "excluded" last time, which DOES make a slight difference....
    
    "We will be looking for proven research ability in any of the following
    areas: post-renaissance drama, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
    twentieth century, women writers.  Other areas of expertise are NOT
    EXCLUDED.  Particular emphasis will be placed upon innovative methods
    of language teaching."
    
    Application forms and further particulars are obtainable from:
    
    Establishment Officer
    Staff Office
    Trinity College
    Dublin 2
    Tel. 353-1-608-1678/FAX 353-1-677-2169
    e-mail:  [log in to unmask]
    
    
    
    Some information about the Department and what we do can be found at
    http://www.tcd.ie/Italian
    
    - - - - -
    
    Italian at Trinity
    
    Trinity College has some 13,000 students spread over six Faculties. It is
    situated in the centre of Dublin, with many fine buildings and a copyright
    library which houses the largest book collection in Ireland, including good
    holdings in Italian.
    
    Trinity's Department of Italian, which dates from 1776, is the oldest in
    Ireland or Britain. Over 140 students study Italian in two four-year degree
    programmes: a joint honour degree known as the Two-Subject Moderatorship,
    and the European Studies degree. Most students start as beginners
    in Italian. There are SOCRATES exchange programmes with several Italian
    universities.
    
    The Department currently has three permanent members of staff (one
    Associate Professor and two Senior Lecturers), one contract lecturer, an
    Italian Government sponsored lecturer, a language assistant, and a
    part-time Executive Officer. The Head of Department is Professor Corinna
    Salvadori Lonergan. The permanent appointment now advertised will replace
    our contract post at the end of the current academic year. The temporary
    appointment is to allow one of our Senior Lecturers to take a year's study
    leave. Staff teach an average of 9 or 10 hours per week in a 24-week
    teaching year: roughly half of this is language work, while the other half
    is concerned with literature and other cultural or historical topics.
    Secretarial support is necesssarily limited, but staff members are provided
    with computer equipment for teaching, administration and research.
    
    Recent developments in our course structure include an increased emphasis
    on options which students choose from a list of topics in Italian
    literature, language and society; the introduction of videos and computers
    in language teaching at junior and senior levels; and the availability of
    optional courses in technology awareness and linguistics.
    
    The New Posts
    
    The continuing permanent members of staff have particular competence in
    medieval and Renaissance literature and contemporary Italian literature and
    society. With the new permanent appointment the Department will consolidate
    its strengths in the areas of post-Renaissance drama, the eighteenth and
    nineteenth centuries, twentieth century, women writers; the contract
    lecturer will teach mostly in the modern area.
    
    The Department expects a good standard of language performance, and
    teaching methods are kept under constant review. Lecturers are expected to
    have a native or near-native level of competence in Italian. There is
    considerable expertise in language learning among our colleagues; Trinity
    teaches a wide range of languages, and the Centre for Language and
    Communication Studies provides research and active support in this field.
    The College's European Studies programme also places a strong emphasis on
    language competence.
    
    Lecturers are expected to teach both language and literature courses, and
    to offer option courses in areas of special interest. Some of the teaching
    is thus related to one's personal interests and research, but one may be
    called upon to contribute to various parts of the degree programme. In
    addition to normal contact hours, staff members provide supervision for
    Senior Sophister dissertations. All lecturers are expected to share in the
    administrative work of the Department, including SOCRATES exchanges,
    European Studies contributions, and other projects.
    
    The Department has a tradition of open discussion at both formal and
    informal meetings; new ideas are welcomed and colleagues are encouraged to
    bring their own perspectives to the future development of Italian in
    Trinity.
    
    The Selection Procedure
    
    Candidates shortlisted for interview will be invited to present a short
    paper on a research topic and to demonstrate the teaching of a language
    topic.
    
    - - - - -
    
    
    
    Cormac O Cuilleanain
    Department of Italian
    Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
    [log in to unmask]
    Telephone +353-1-6081527
    Home tel. +353-1-2831393