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College (Canada)

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Type of tertiary school in Canada
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Find sources: "College" Canada – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
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The student commons building atAlgonquin College in Ottawa, Ontario.

InCanadian English, the termcollege usually refers to acareer college,technical,trades,community college, college of applied arts or applied technology, or an applied science school. These arepost-secondary institutions grantingapprenticeships,citations,certificates,diplomas, andassociate's degrees.

Terminology

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Main article:List of colleges in Canada

In the English-speaking parts of Canada, the term "college" is generally used to refer tovocational schools that providetrade andtechnical education in various specialized vocational disciplines across specific employment fields. Among the institutions that fall into the "college" category include vocational colleges,career colleges,community colleges,institutes of technology or science,technical schools, colleges of applied arts or applied technology, and in Quebec through collèges d’enseignement général et professionnel.

There is a distinction between "college" and "university" in Canada. In conversation, one specifically would say either "They are going to university" (i.e., studying for a four-year bachelor's degree at a university) or "They are going to college" (which may imply enrolling in avocational school in some parts of the country). In American English, (and in formal British English as well) the word college is especially used for what Canadians would call the undergraduate level of a university, but in popular use it to refers to the entire gestalt of the realm of post-secondary studies, regardless of level of prestige. Canadians, on the other hand, use the termuniversity to exclusively mean the pursuit of undergraduate and graduate post-secondary studies.

InOntario andAlberta, and formerly inBritish Columbia, there are also institutions which are designateduniversity colleges, as they only grant undergraduate degrees. This is to differentiate between universities, which have both undergraduate and graduate programs and those that do not. Prior to use of the term University College in Canada, some colleges in British Columbia offered university-level courses equivalent to a full freshmen and sophomore year where college transfer credits can be earned and applied towards a 4 year degree in selected programs if a student expresses a desire to transfer to a Canadian university.

Quebec

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Main articles:College education in Quebec andCEGEP
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InQuebec, mostly with speakers ofQuebec English, the term "college" is seldom used for post secondary education. Instead the wordCEGEP has become the more common term, althoughcollégial remains the preferred adjectival form. A CEGEP is a publiccollege in theQuebec education system, offering either a two-year diploma, which allows one to continue on to university (unless one applies as a 'mature' student, meaning 21 years of age or over, and out of the educational system for at least two years), or a three-year diploma in a variety of trades and technologies (e.g. nursing, mechanical engineering or computer science).

Other uses

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Institution within a university

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The termcollege also applies to distinct entities that formally act as an affiliated institution of the university, formally referred to asfederated college, or affiliated colleges. A university may also formally include several constituent colleges, forming acollegiate university. Examples of collegiate universities in Canada includeTrent University, and theUniversity of Toronto. These colleges act independently, but in affiliation or federation with the university that actually grants the degrees. For example,Trinity College was once an independent institution, but later became federated with the University of Toronto, and is now one of its residential colleges.

Occasionally, "college" may also refer to a subject specific faculty within a university that, and while academically distinct, do not operate in an autonomous manner asfederated oraffiliated. Examples of the wordcollege used in this instance includes College of Education, College of Medicine, College of Dentistry, College of Biological Science,[1] among others.

Private career colleges

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The registration and accreditation of private career colleges are regulated by Private Career College Acts for each province. In British Columbia for example, the Private Career Training Institutions Agency (PCTIA) is responsible for the registration and accreditation of private career college in British Columbia under the Private Career Training Institutions Act (SBC 2003, Chapter 79), Regulations (BC Reg.466/2004), an bylaws.[2]

Regulatory college

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Regulatory colleges also use the wordcollege in reference to itself. Examples of such include theRoyal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.

University-level institutions

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TheRoyal Military College of Canada is amilitary college that aims to train officers for theCanadian Armed Forces. However, the institution is a full-fledged degree-granting university, despite the use of the wordcollege in its name. The institution's sister schools,Royal Military College Saint-Jean also uses the termcollege in its name, although it academic offering is akin to the standard definition ofcollege in Canada.

A number of post-secondaryart schools in Canada formerly used the wordcollege in their names, despite formally being universities, and having the authority to issue postgraduate degrees. However, most of these institutions were renamed or re-branded in the early 21st century, dropping the wordcollege in favour ofuniversity. In 2003, the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design was renamedNSCAD University. In 2010, the Ontario College of Art and Design was re-branded asOCAD University, although formally its name was changed to the Ontario College of Art and Design University.

The Alberta College of Art + Design was another post-secondary arts school that had the wordcollege in its name. However, unlike NSCAD, or OCAD, it did not have the authority to grant postgraduate degrees, making its academic offerings akin to the standard definition ofcollege in Canada. The Alberta College of Art + Design was formally granted university-status in 2019, and was subsequently renamed theAlberta University of the Arts to reflect its new status.

Use in secondary education

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A number of secondary schools continue to use the wordcollege in their names. Publicseparate school boards in Ontario use the wordcollege in the names of their secondary schools.[3] A number ofindependent secondary schools also use the wordcollege in their names, includingColumbia International College,Crestwood Preparatory College,Havergal College,Lakefield College School,Lower Canada College,Ridley College,St. Andrew's College,Trinity College School, andUpper Canada College.[4]

Publicsecular school boards in Ontario also refer to their secondary schools ascollegiate institutes. The term originated from a historical parallel secondary school system operated in Ontario, where two streams of secondary education were offered. Collegiate institutes offered academic education for prospective university students, whereas High Schools/Secondary Schools, offered vocational training for students planning to immediately enter the workforce. The education system was reorganized in the early 20th century, with the two secondary streams merged. After the merger, the termsCollegiate Institute,High School, andSecondary School were all used in conjunction to refer to secondary institutions in Ontario. Saskatchewan also modelled their secondary system after Ontario's two-stream model in the early 20th century. As a result, a number of secondary schools in Regina, and Saskatoon are referred to asCollegiate.

References

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  1. ^"College of Biological Science".
  2. ^"PCTIA - About Us & Contact Information". Archived fromthe original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved2010-07-29.
  3. ^Find a School or School BoardArchived 2009-09-08 at theWayback Machine search form on the Ministry of Education of Ontario web site—click "Secondary" and "Separate"
  4. ^Private Elementary and Secondary Schools search form on the Ministry of Education of Ontario web site—enter "college" in the "name contains" field and check the "secondary" checkbox
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