he doesnt have much interest in pursuing a very techy role
I'm ex DCU and remember that the computer courses there were very good but very tech focused.
Likewise Trinity provided many of the graduates that ran Iona (Orbix). Again very techie.
I would say the growth in IT here will depend on savvy business analysis and Project Management skills as well as having excellent subject matter experts.
We're beginning to see India loom large in outsourcing, not just from multi-nationals but small Irish companies are outsourcing too.
In this situation I wouldn't start a pure IT course here now, and I am surmising possibly wrongly that the business content in the mentioned courses is relatively minimal, if I didn't want to be an utter techie. It's getting tougher and tougher out there if you're only tech focused as jobs and projects move east and skilled developers come here from abroad.
I'd find a combined IT/business course or more specifically IT/Finance as thats where the money is right now.
Just my tuppence and maybe I'm being gloomy here, but I think the days of the pure coders, and I include myself among them, are numbered in this industry. It was a much easier business 10 years ago, but there will be good opportunities still for those who can specify the work and parcel out to the likes of Gurgaon and Bangalore.
Other areas that may stay in Ireland are IT security as it is much less likely to be trusted to overseas entities.
Good luck. Well chosen courses but I just wonder whether a broader business based IT degree might be better in the long-run...