Study in America!, How?
Study in America!, How?
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Nov 15 2008, 04:49 PM
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#1
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Senior Member
637 posts Joined: Feb 2008 |
Problem with UoT is that only St George campus counts. Is it true that UoT degree now indicates which campus the student graduated from? I'm from U of Toronto.) For finance, banking, econs, I think U of Toronto is still a great school as many US banks and the top 4 Canadian banks are close by. U of Toronto is situated right in the city of Toronto - which means there is some nightlife. U of Waterloo would be your typical university town where it's located outside of a major metropolis and so not much goes on there. I think it really depends on what type of university you're looking at and how you want to explore your education. I know for a fact U of Toronto has plenty of Asians, has great Chinese food nearby and have quite a few Singaporeans and Malaysians studying there so you might get less homesick. It's also easier to get around to big shopping malls and hot spots - the tradeoff would be that rental could be expensive if you plan on staying close to school. [/quote] |
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Mar 16 2010, 09:15 PM
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637 posts Joined: Feb 2008 |
That's the matriculation format. When I did my G12 in Canada, that was the format but with different percentage When i went to university sama sama, except no marks for attendance and 1 or 2 midterm exams
QUOTE(gjoy993 @ Mar 12 2010, 06:24 PM) I graduated in New York in 2009. Well is US, almost everything that you do in the courses counts toward the final grade. Here's the typical grading policy and grade distribution in my engineering course: 5% - attendance 5% - final presentation 10% - weekly quizzes 10% - weekly homework 15% - Exam 1 15% - Exam 2 15% - Exam 3 25% Final exam |
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