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Tertiary Education and Postgraduate Studies

Tertiary education in Canada is evolving with every year passing which makes Canada vastly appealing to international students. The system of education in the developed countries changes accordingly to the countries priorities, and by developing new tactics they tend to come up with programs that will train students for the ever-changing global job market.

 

All in all, Canada as the rest of the developed world countries is moving step-by-step towards a structural and functional academic country, developing experts and masterminds where needed. In Canada, tertiary education includes every type of formal teaching program past secondary schools, be it academic, vocational, technical, or the professional education offered primarily by universities, colleges, and special institutes.

 

Masters degrees, MA (i.e. Masters of Arts) or MSc (i.e. Masters of Science) are commonly referred to as postgraduate degrees. MA stands for the arts, humanities and social science, while MSc is for life sciences and chemistry. Separately, there are also specialist Master degrees for education (MEd), music (MMus) and business administration (MBA).

 

Canada’s Universities and graduate schools are open to international students; however that hasn’t been the case until recently. The developments in education in the past decade have brought thousands of internationals interested in postgraduate degrees.

 

With well-developed and innovative undergraduate and graduate programs in world-class ranked universities, reasonably priced tuition fees and relatively low cost of living, all within one of the most vivid and friendly countries in the world, Canada is a hell of a choice to study abroad.

 

Opposed to the US infamous costs of studying as an international student, Canada offers adequate undergraduate and postgraduate study programs for less: lower tuition fees and a lower cost of living will get you a degree without the quality of education being compromised.

 

The academic year tends to run from September each year, but some universities have significant starting dates for their postgraduate degrees.

 

Commonly, masters last for a whole academic year including an obligatory internship added to the overall duration. Side to side with lectures and instructive theories, the programs include brainstorming and interactive classes, group projects, close observation and practical engagement.  Most masters will include a dissertation as an aftermath, which is sometimes replaced by a consultancy project (if you subject area is a professional one), which will cover a massive part of the program’s credits.

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