I'm Canadian and have done a TON of research on all Canadian Uni's. Ask me anything.

<p>As I said I have dont so much research in looking into which uni to go to for myself so I have a ton of knowledge to share. Ask away :)</p>

<p>Canada is a great country for studying abroad. In all my reasearch and while talking to the student resource guides at the many university’s I talked to I found that some characteristics held a high priority at all university’s. An emphasis on diversity, a focus on ‘research schools’, and campuses that include elements of the city in which they reside.
For any student in the US considering a Canadian education you should know that many Canadian universities are known for the number of international students they welcome and the quality of education that they provide.
(now that I’m done my little overview of why Canada is great… ask me a question!).</p>

<p>Hello :)</p>

<p>I was accepted to McGills BCom program with a predicted IB score of 36/42 points. I now dropped to 30/42 points. Do u think that my offer will be revoked?</p>

<p>thanks</p>

<p>Hi, could you let me know which is the best for commerce among UOFT, york, western ontario, queens and Mcgill??</p>

<p>And do I need to learn french in order to lead a good life in Mcgill ?</p>

<p>Canadagirl, If I want to take up a job in the Finance sector (US or Asia) which among the universities I mentioned is best you think ?</p>

<p>canadagirl, how is U of Alberta and U of Calgary?
can you also rank the different undergraduate Business programs?
thanks.</p>

<p>If you want to work in the financial sector of US / Asia, why not study at a university in US/Asia?</p>

<p>Prinki94, since canadagirl is absent, I shall voluntarily answer your queries.</p>

<p>In fact, all the universities you mentioned (except for McGill) are pretty strong in commerce, so you’ll do just fine going to any of them. </p>

<p>And if you wish to work in the US, McGill is your best bet as it is prolly the most well-known Canadian uni around in the US. But, UofT isn’t that far behind in terms of reputation among the Americans, and is pretty renowned among the Asian academic circles. Thus, if you want the best of both worlds, UofT is prolly your best bet.</p>

<p>Which Canadian Universities offer upto full financial aid for international students?</p>

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This is NOT correct. For commerce, Ivey > Queens > *</p>

<p>@willpostforfood, NO universities give full need-based FA, even for Canadians. In fact, you may not even get any FA. There are a few merit-based scholarships for internationals, but you will have to research that yourself.</p>

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<p>+1 yeah its pretty much ivey and queens trump all and after that its a mix.</p>

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<p>Best schools to go to if you want to have something to do with oil. That being said i cant comment on their business programs.</p>

<p>Hi! I was wondering which universities would end up being the most affordable once you factor in all the costs for university?</p>

<p>If your an international student it will be expensive no matter where you go. It will depend on the program. (ex. engineering is more money then an arts degree)</p>

<p>Queen’s University would be the cheapest if you include scholarships and busaries. UofT/McGill provide very little help in this area. UBC and Western also provide great scholarships/bursaries but less so than Queen’s.</p>

<p>How much would I miss out from going to UBC rather than an Ivy?</p>

<p>aregularguy, I’m canadian actually. :)</p>

<p>EccEHomo, thanks! Any others that are particularly helpful in the scholarship area?</p>

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<p>Depends. If you wish to work/live in canada going to UBC is much cheaper and IMO better choice. However if you want to work in the states an ivy school will get you all the connections.</p>

<p>An Ivy is obviously going to offer a much better experience than UBC, intra-grad and post-grad.</p>

<p>Canadian universities that have good journalism progrograms?
What kind of requirments are needed to get into Queen’s university?</p>