Posts Tagged ‘Film CEL’

Dr Simon McGuire

The landscape of higher education in Ireland, and particularly within the creative sectors of film and television, is undergoing a profound recalibration. As educators, we find ourselves navigating a convergence of technological acceleration, infrastructural constraint, and shifting economic and cultural realities. Yet within this turbulence lies an opportunity: to rethink not just how we teach, but what it means to prepare students for a screen industry that is itself in a constant state of flux.

With a sector that is expanding faster than its classrooms, Ireland’s audiovisual industries are thriving. Recent data highlights employment of nearly 16,000 people and significant economic contribution, underlining the industry’s vitality and global relevance (Screen Ireland Link). Alongside this, reports on immersive technologies and virtual production point toward a future defined by real-time rendering, AI-assisted workflows, and cross-platform storytelling (Skillnet Ireland Link). However, Higher Education has not expanded at the same pace. Institutions are expected to deliver industry-ready graduates while contending with ageing facilities, limited access to high-end equipment, and increasing student numbers. This mismatch between industry expectation and educational capacity is becoming one of the defining tensions in Irish creative education and I am sure is a talking point in this week’s teaching union meetings across the country.

There is a material reality also with the financial constraints being well documented. A widely cited government report showed a funding gap of over €300 million annually in Irish higher education, a deficit that continues to shape institutional decision-making (The Irish Times Link). While the report is three years old now, this underfunding still exists and I would argue that the figure is far greater and manifests itself in tangible ways such as: insufficient studio space, outdated post-production labs, and limited access to industry-standard tools such as camera, lighting and sound equipment. At the same time, the cost of keeping competitive film and television programmes is rising. Cameras, lighting rigs, editing suites, and now virtual production environments require continuous and not just the initial capital investment. Yet universities increasingly rely on hybrid funding models, including in some cases industry partnerships, which can risk narrowing the scope of academic inquiry toward commercially workable outputs (Public Policy Link).

Space is another critical pressure point. Reports on Higher Education infrastructure note that institutions are being forced to rethink how physical environments are used, with flexible and multi-purpose spaces becoming essential (Savills Link) For film and television education, traditionally reliant on dedicated studios, this presents both a challenge and a creative constraint. The most significant shift is technological. The integration of AI into editing workflows, the rise of cloud-based collaboration, and the emergence of virtual production are fundamentally altering the grammar of screen production. These are not incremental changes; they redefine authorship, labour, and craft.

Irish higher education has already begun adapting. Quality reports highlight increased digitalisation of teaching, learning, and assessment, alongside hybrid and remote workflows (Quality and Qualifications Ireland Link). However, there is still a gap between adopting digital tools and embedding them meaningfully into pedagogical or andragogical practice. The challenge is not simply access to technology, but developing critical, reflective practitioners who can navigate and question these tools. Considering these pressures, I propose three practical, scalable responses that can be implemented across Irish Higher Education.

Firstly, a distributed studio model.

Rather than centralising production within a single campus facility, institutions should adopt a distributed model of practice. This would involve:

  • Leveraging community media hubs and regional partnerships
  • Embedding production activity in real-world contexts
  • And if possible, sharing resources across institutions and sectors

In my doctoral research, I suggested an in-house production (IPU) unit to bring teaching and learning of craftsmanship together with industry engagent. I create one such IPU at my institution in the form of Film Cel (Film Craftsmanship, Excellence and Learning) (Link) at my institution, LSAD, TUS, and I believe that an IPU like this could bring together the the three elements above together for the distributed model of practice. National policy already points in this direction. The Future of Media Commission recommends the development of shared media hubs and collaborative training infrastructures to support talent pipelines (RTE Link). For educators, this model would not only alleviate space constraints but situate learning within authentic production ecosystems.

A second approach would be to look at curriculum as a workflow and not a module.

Traditional module-based teaching structures are increasingly misaligned with industry practice. Instead, curricula could be restructured around workflows such as:

  • Development → production → post-production → distribution
  • Cross-disciplinary collaboration (editing, sound, VFX, producing)
  • Integration of AI and virtual tools as part of process, not add-ons

This approach would reflect the realities of contemporary screen industries, where roles are fluid and pipelines are interconnected. It also aligns with broader Higher Education trends toward flexible or hybrid learning environments (Royal Irish Academy Link).

Finally, there is an opportunity for industry embedded learning, but with safeguards for the institution, staff, and students. Partnerships with industry are essential but must be carefully structured. Institutions should:

  • Co-design projects with industry partners
  • Embed internships, mentorships, and live briefs into programmes
  • Maintain academic independence and critical inquiry

While private sector funding can provide vital resources, it also raises concerns about the commercialisation of education (Public Policy Link). The goal, therefore, is balance: enabling access to industry without compromising the broader educational mission.

So, with these three suggestions we could take the future of teaching film and television in Ireland from constraint to creative. The teaching and learning would not be defined by the resources we lack, but by how we respond to those limitations. Financial pressures, spatial constraints, and technological disruption are not temporary obstacles, they are the conditions within which contemporary education must operate. As educators, our role is to transform these constraints into pedagogical or even andragogical innovation. To move from the idea of the university as a site of instruction to a site of production, collaboration, and experimentation.

If we can achieve this, we will not simply keep pace with the industry, we will help shape its future.

This episode features the new building at the Moylish Campus and the EUNIC Film Festival at the Millennium Theatre. Word On The Street is a non-for-profit news programme, produced by Film CEL, the in-house production unit, consisting of students and staff members of Limerick School of Art and Design TUS. Opening theme track: Ampyx & SANDR – New Colors

Limerick School of Art and Design TUS.

A short montage video highlighting a number of features of the LSAD Graduate Show 2025, including the special commissioned portrait by lecturer and artist Ken Coleman to the outgoing Dean of LSAD, Mike Fitzpatrick. Produced by Film CEL, LSAD’s in-house production unit. filmcel@tus.ie

Taking place at the annual LSAD Graduation show at the Clare Street Campus, Limerick, will be the screening of end of year capstone projects from the 4th year Creative Broadcast & Film Production students.

There will be a series of short films, documentaries, portfolios and dissertations available to the public in a selected location in the campus, where the students themselves will also be in attendance to chat about their work and hopefully network too with visitors and even interested industry parties.

Why not come along to this event which is open from May 31st to June 8th 2025.

This highlights reel features a selection of content and programmes that were created by the 2025 crew of Film CEL. This years crew excelled themselves on all productions and projects, gaining experience on planning, camera operation, grip and rigging, lighting and sound and post production using Avid Media Composer.

This crew will continue as students in the year 4 of the Creative Broadcast and Film Production programme at LSAD, TUS where they will take these skills and develop new content and creative works for their final year.

Music track: Tell Me by Burgundy Source: https://freetouse.com/music Copyright Free Music for Video

Film CEL is an in-house production unit for the Creative Broadcast & Film Production Programme at LSAD, TUS.

Film CEL releases new episode of ‘Word on The Street’ produced by CBFP Year 3 Work Practice students

Congradulations to Year 3 Film CEL crew of LSAD, on the release of the final episode of ‘Word on the Street’ Series 8 Episode 5. This episode features stories on the N.I.C.E. Italian Film Festival, The Access All Areas event at Troy Studios and the upcoming Millennium Sessions Programme in April. 

Produced by the crew of Film CEL, LSAD’s in-house production unit.

Watch it below

Follow and subscribe for news on Film CEL productions on LSAD YouTube channel and on Instagram 

Film CEL crew 

Film CEL Crew (L to R): Liam de Klein, Melissa Rudge David Vetharudge, Alan Wynne, Kaila Huynh, Diarmuid Burke, Yeva Kravchenko and Ger Hickey

Additional dates for your diaries:

Millennium Sessions 2025 Programme debuts on April 9th, 1:15pm on YouTube and at the Millennium Theatre.

LSAD Grad Show – CBFP 4 Exhibition of graduate work opens May 31st- June 7th 2025 at LSAD, Clare Street Limerick 

Unlock your creative potential with the BSc (Hons) in Creative Broadcast and Film Production at TUS in Limerick City. This dynamic, skills-based programme covers film and TV production, visual effects, editing, screenwriting, and more, preparing you for a thriving career in Ireland’s booming film and broadcast industry. With hands-on work placements, industry-led practices, and opportunities to showcase your work at the LSAD Graduate Show, you’ll gain the experience needed to succeed.

Discover more: TUS Creative Broadcast and Film Production

Film CEL is back in production once again on a new series of Word On The Street, which is now in its eight year.

Covering stories across the multiple campuses of TUS, WOTS will be bringing all the colour, faces and events that students and staff are engaged in during the academic year.

We are proud to cover these events and should there be a story you would like to see covered then drop us an email to filmcel@tus.ie

This is the Film CEL Highlights Reel 2024, featuring an array of programmes, productions and projects the crew worked on.

Well done to the whole crew.

We look forward to the next crew joining us and seeing what creativity and ideas they bring.

This is the completed Millennium Sessions programme, which premiered on Wednesday 24th April. Produced by LSAD’s in-house production unit, Film CEL and the staff and students of the Music Production and Technology programme at TUS.