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Displaying items by tag: Canada
  • Tom studied Modern Languages (French and Italian) at Oxford University and spent his year abroad as a Language Assistant in a secondary school in Joliette, Canada. He graduated in 2011 and is now doing a Law conversion course.
    Published in Language Assistants
  • The Mole Diaries: Montréal

    Monday, 16 January 2012

    Louise Wiseman is 21 and studying French and Italian at the University of Kent. She has spent five months in Montréal at the Université de Montréal and will be spending five months in Italy at Università di Parma from February. She fell in love with Montréal and Canada almost immediately after arriving for the first time in August, and is planning to move back once she graduates. Here she passes on her top tips to students studying either French or English and thinking of living in Montréal on their year abroad.

    Published in French-speaking
  • The Mole Diaries: Kingston, Ontario

    Saturday, 27 November 2010

    Lauren Pluss gives us an in-depth account of her year abroad as a Geography student at Queen's University, Kingston, Canada. She tells TYA about her time out there, what to watch out for, how crazy the parties get and loads more...

    Published in English-speaking
  • Canada or USA: Studying in North America

    Wednesday, 01 February 2012

    If you choose to study in an English-speaking country, you might turn your attention to the States and Canada. With top universities and colleges, high-ranking departments and a reputation for first-class lectures, it’s easy to see why. Inevitably, rising tuition fees and living costs in the UK have boosted the trend to go to North America for many students - either for full-time study or a year abroad. Although studying across the pond is not exactly chump change, with many colleges in the US charging upwards of $30,000 in private institutions and Canada marginally cheaper at $25,000 for international students, it is still an appealing option for many. Aside from the fact financial help is available through grants and bursaries and the bureaucratic paperwork studying abroad may entail, over 9,000 UK students decided to make the switch. The big question is: where should you study, Columbia, UCLA and Harvard or McGill, British Columbia or Trent? Read on to find out what are the pros and cons to each country and what they could offer you.

     

    Published in Not a linguist?
  • Preparing for Ottawa: Chapter 1

    Sunday, 14 August 2011
    If I’m honest, when the year abroad choices for next year were presented to us in October last year, I was slightly disappointed. There was no New York, no San Francisco and no Toronto, and the locations such as Vancouver only offered a place to one student, and were much fought for (curse my relaxed fresher attitude to attendance and exams). We were told that this was due to students’ lack of enthusiasm to come to our uni, the University of Birmingham. This I still don’t understand; a Russell Group uni in a vibrant city with a great nightlife and academic programme not appealing? But I digress. I chose to apply to the University of Ottawa, as I’ve always wanted to go to Canada, I love snow and if I’m completely honest, the drinking age limit isn’t 21.
    Published in Emma's Ottawa Journal
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