We provide a one shop stop for studies in Canada. Once you have specified your interests, we revert to you with a list of potential universities that offer those courses. Working with you, we apply to a short list of three universities. We do the follow ups with the admissions offices. Our consultants ensure that all documentation requirements are met and the admission granted. After the University admission is received, we process your student visas with the nearest Canadian mission.
Canada has two streams for higher education - Community Colleges and Universities. Both of the streams have their certain terms and conditions for the admission of foreign students in Canada. Out of the top ten Universities around the world, two are located in Canada.
In coming together to build their country, Canadians from many cultural backgrounds discovered that tolerance and flexibility were necessary in order to unite so many different historical, geographical and ethnic elements. The education systems that evolved were designed to accommodate this diversity.
Public education in Canada is co-educational and free up to and including secondary school. The law requires children to attend school from the age of 6 or 7 until they are 15 or 16 years old. In Quebec, free education is extended to include attendance at the general and vocational colleges (CEGEPs), which charge only a minimal registration fee. The student pays tuition for most other post-secondary education.
Canada gives especially high priority to post-secondary education, which is proving increasingly important for knowledge-based economies. Compared to other industrialized counties, Canada is among the leaders in expenditures for enrollment in post-secondary institutions. Canada also ranks near the top of all industrialized nations in the share of the gross domestic product devoted to public-sector funding of education. About 8% of Canada's GDP is spent on education. Canada is second only to the United States in the proportion of the population aged 18-24 enrolled full-time in Canada's universities, colleges and technical institutes. More than a quarter of the Canadian working population has a university or college degree and approximately one half are high school graduates.
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