It is here [broken link removed]
I don't compile these reports -- just read them. Although I am a past pupil, I wouldn't send my dog cat or anything else near the place. When I was there they showed their true beliefs of been totally and utterly Anti-Semitic but as they say Do your own research.
Ah I see now. You mean the league of those who go to university (which is a different question entirely). I can't find a copy of the full research, so I can only go on what is published in the Times, but it doesn't impress me.
It gives high scores to the UCD/TCD, so it shouldn't be too much of a surprise to see a Dublin bias in the results. [broken link removed] shows the flaws in the research.
So in 2008, a student getting 290 points and gaining access to say Psychiatric Nurisng in Trinity would get more kudos for their school in this ranking than say a student getting 560 points and getting into medicine in NUIG.
Schools with alot of boarders tend to send alot of their students to universities in other countries. You therefore end up with the peculiar phenomenon that you get extra points for a pupil going to TCD but lose points if a student makes it to Harvard or Cambridge.
So a school which sends say 50% of its students to Maynooth for example, and one that sends 33% to Trinity are the same?
And even ignoring these flaws, why is sending people to 3rd level the only measure of success used. If a school produces a brilliant plumber, or a brilliant pilot, or a brilliant chef, none of these will be considered to be successful based on these tables.
I wouldn't recommend that anyone choose a school based on whether it is public or private. Look at the school - all aspects of the school. I'm not ruling out the local private school for us (if my equity SSIA accounts recover enough to support these), but I'm not ruling out the local public schools either.
A good friend of mine in Mt Merrion was curious as to why most of his well-heeled neighbours send their kids way up the road to Blackrock, when Oatlands CBS has an excellent reputation, and attracts (generally less well-heeled boys) from all over the southside.