Help to choose far Kazakstan student :)

<p>Hello everyone.
This year i'll get bachelor in economic. So, i decide to get master in Canada. Yesterday I was browsing the forum, and i got that there are some best uni in Canada (McGill, U of BC, U of T, Queen's, Waterlo and McMaster). Now i need help. Please, if someone know give me the rate of this Uni, i mean in economic/business majors.
+ Do I need to take TOEFL?
+ I'm not rich :) What uni is best money/knowledge.
Thank You.</p>

<p>mmm… 20 views and no replies. Well nobody knows?</p>

<p>i dont know about the rankings
but with regard to rest of the stuff
try these</p>

<p>[Study</a> Abroad - Study in Canada - Doctorate - Masters -Postgraduate System in Canada - Fourth-Level Education System in Canada - Universities and Colleges in Canada - <a href=“http://www.postgrad.ie%5B/url%5D”>www.postgrad.ie](<a href=“http://www.postgrad.ie/study_abroad/canada.html]Study”>http://www.postgrad.ie/study_abroad/canada.html)</a>
[Schools</a> in Canada: Universities, Colleges, Language Schools, Secondary Schools- Study Canada](<a href=“http://www.studycanada.ca/]Schools”>http://www.studycanada.ca/)</p>

<p>Any reason you’re limiting yourself to programs in Canada? Not that they aren’t excellent programs, but you might stand a better chance of receiving a fellowship if you apply more widely and include some U.S. universities.</p>

<p>to AmicusPeregrini: just because I like the nature of this country :slight_smile: I can say that it’s my dream.
to prateek92: thank you, i’ll try.
If someone knows, what’s the easiest way to get visa?</p>

<p>hello northwolf,
1- the reason you’re not getting answers is because you’re posting to the wrong forum. this is a forum for international applicants to undergraduate programs. in addition, most people here are looking at US institutions. try posting to CC’s graduate and professional school forums or, better yet, try to find a more canadian-oriented forum
2- this is a college application website, not a visa forum. if your focus is on studying in canada, then focus on gaining admission first and the university you will attend will provide you with the information you need to apply for a student visa, which is usually a straightforward process once you have been admitted.
good luck.</p>

<p>NorthWolf, I only have a working knowledge of Canadian immigration law, but jenoks is right that you should focus on admission first and let the visa follow, as the Canadian system more or less tracks the U.S. process in this regard. Nor do I know much about Economics programs at Canadian schools, but in the U.S. at least applicants stand a better chance of admission with a fellowship if they apply to PhD programs rather than Masters programs (quite a few end up dropping out of the program after they receive their Masters, though to be fair you probably shouldn’t enter with this intention). Most of the money available for graduate study is aimed at students with a more academic interest in economics rather than those looking for a more business-oriented program (with finance students somewhere in between). If your math is strong and things like mixed equilibia, matching games, behavioral economics, etc. are of interest to you, then you might want to pursue those programs. If you are more interested in the business angle, you could always go for a Bolashak, though of course that wouldn’t be consistent with your settling in Canada right away. If you want student visa and/or immigration info, Canada’s official CIC website is good: <a href=“http://www.cic.gc.ca/english[/url]”>http://www.cic.gc.ca/english&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;