Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd always heard that McGill was the most prestigious university in Canada so I was surprised to learn that it has an admissions rate of 46%.
Different model. Have high/clear/objective standards for admission, no arbitrary cap on enrollment (often driven by dorm capacity in the US), and then use the whole grading scale (not just B- and above). So fewer lottery ticket applicants, everybody who has done the groundwork and can afford not to work FT post-HS gets a chance at a high quality education, and students get judged/sorted based on how they perform in college (HS achievements have little lingering impact). Seems like a pretty sensible approach to me. Would be similar to the top UCs if the system had kept pace with population growth.
Not sure where this myth of B- being the floor started. Just not true. I have four in college at a wide range of schools and we’ve seen grades below that. Not many, but they happen. We have one at an “unselective” school and the work he’s doing is definitely not as demanding, but they will happily hand him a C when he doesn’t study or submits a crap paper.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. I know the rankings (current year), McGill ranks highest then University of Toronto, and then University of Montreal.
Anonymous wrote:NP, and sorry OP for not asking a question directly on topic, but do any Canadians on this thread have opinions or experience with Dalhousie? My DD is interested in marine biology and fell in love with Halifax but we don’t know anyone who has attended.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd always heard that McGill was the most prestigious university in Canada so I was surprised to learn that it has an admissions rate of 46%.
Different model. Have high/clear/objective standards for admission, no arbitrary cap on enrollment (often driven by dorm capacity in the US), and then use the whole grading scale (not just B- and above). So fewer lottery ticket applicants, everybody who has done the groundwork and can afford not to work FT post-HS gets a chance at a high quality education, and students get judged/sorted based on how they perform in college (HS achievements have little lingering impact). Seems like a pretty sensible approach to me. Would be similar to the top UCs if the system had kept pace with population growth.
Anonymous wrote:I'd always heard that McGill was the most prestigious university in Canada so I was surprised to learn that it has an admissions rate of 46%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify, I know about the French language requirement and I'm specifically looking for info from people with EXPERIENCE of the following three colleges
McGill University
University of Toronto
University of Montreal
thanks
They aren't colleges. What do you want to know about them? I have experience with two of the three but your question is so vague and broad it is impossible to answer.
And one of these things is not like the other. There is no University of Montreal. The UdeM is a francophone institution. Are you wanting to study in English or in French?
You must not be Canadian, because you’re rude AF.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify, I know about the French language requirement and I'm specifically looking for info from people with EXPERIENCE of the following three colleges
McGill University
University of Toronto
University of Montreal
thanks
They aren't colleges. What do you want to know about them? I have experience with two of the three but your question is so vague and broad it is impossible to answer.
And one of these things is not like the other. There is no University of Montreal. The UdeM is a francophone institution. Are you wanting to study in English or in French?
You must not be Canadian, because you’re rude AF.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify, I know about the French language requirement and I'm specifically looking for info from people with EXPERIENCE of the following three colleges
McGill University
University of Toronto
University of Montreal
thanks
They aren't colleges. What do you want to know about them? I have experience with two of the three but your question is so vague and broad it is impossible to answer.
And one of these things is not like the other. There is no University of Montreal. The UdeM is a francophone institution. Are you wanting to study in English or in French?
Anonymous wrote:UofT is an Ivy League quality institution. It has no peers in Canada in terms of research. For undergrad, Queen's, McGill, Western and UBC are all excellent. Waterloo is great for computer science. Simon Fraser, McMaster and Guelph are not bad either. If you're not afraid of the cold, University of Manitoba and University of Saskatchewan are also big research schools and in some ways it's easier to focus, learn more and thrive there.
Maclean's magazine does a popular ranking each year you could look up. Try looking at a 5-year average of the results instead of any single year.