Introduction to the University of Toronto

After more than 100 years of development and change, the University of Toronto has become the largest university in Canada with the largest number of disciplines, strong faculty and advanced facilities. There are more than 55,000 students enrolled in the University of Toronto. Among them, 8,000 are graduate students. There are more than 3,700 foreign passport holders from more than 100 countries and regions in the world. In addition, there are 12,000 part-time students. There are more than 3,700 full-time faculty members, including 1,080 professors, 878 associate professors, 430 assistant professors, and 33

7 lecturers. There are 4,000 administrators, laboratory staff, secretaries, computer specialists, school police, and various handymen. The university covers an area of 26,000 square kilometers. There are 225 buildings of various building construction. Each year it stands majestically above Yale, Harvard, Oxford and Cambridge.

The University of Toronto has three campuses. One is St. George's College, which covers 0.55 square kilometers and is known as the main campus. The other two are the Scarborough Campus and the Adair Campus, each 1.21 and 0.84 square kilometers in size, and are located 33 kilometers from St. George's College in the east and west of the University of Toronto city, respectively. There are daily shuttle buses to and from the period, the transportation is extremely convenient.

The University of Toronto is one of Canada's largest cities, with a population of 2,000,000, and is bordered by Lake Ontario, one of the Great Lakes of North America, and the U.S. city of Detroit and Chicago. Transportation is well-developed, with daily flights to New York, London and Frankfurt, as well as the world's largest cities in South America. Highways and railroads are well-connected. Economic prosperity, developed business, is Canada's largest economic and cultural center. It is also one of Canada's most active tourist destinations.

The University of Toronto, commonly referred to as the University of Toronto, is located in the heart of Toronto, and once you step into the campus, you will immediately be engulfed by an ancient and lively university atmosphere. The entire campus has a harmonious, quiet and relaxing atmosphere. Ancient Victorian buildings and modernized steel mixed earth buildings are in close proximity to each other. Sculpture, shade, flower beds everywhere, green as a carpet. In the center of the campus, there is very little traffic and noise, making you forget that you are in one of the world's most vibrant metropolises.

The University of Toronto has always had a strong arts and sciences focus. Since the 1960s, applied science research has also caught up. For example, Applied Science and applied to the Canadian federal and Ontario governments to 22 large applied scientific research projects, research success, will be able to put forward plans to change the energy structure of the whole of Canada. In order to make the university research results as soon as possible applied to production and social practice, the University of Toronto in 1980 established the "Invention Foundation". It introduces the technical inventions and ideas of the university to the society and the industry, and then extracts a certain percentage of the share from the enterprises which obtain the business permit or business license by using these achievements, and then uses these shares to finance the university's scientific research. In 1981-1982 alone, this revenue amounted to $73 million, funding 2,091 research projects.

The University of Toronto currently has more than two dozen interdisciplinary institutes or research centers that are primarily engaged in research and development in marginal disciplines. They are not only fully equipped and self-contained from equipment to personnel, but also have autonomy in the selection of topics, hiring of personnel and use of funds. The university encourages the old majors to strengthen the traditional advantages, and at the same time, to continuously open up new fields and research new disciplines. Only in this way, can always walk in the forefront of scientific and technological development. For example, mechanical computer manufacturing and auxiliary design, as early as in the world of computers soon after the beginning of the research agenda, and now every year to train this aspect of the doctoral and master's degree students, in Canada is very influential.

At the University of Toronto, the year is divided into two semesters. Winter semester and Summer semester. The winter semester begins in early September and ends in mid-May of the following year; the summer semester begins in mid-May and ends in late August. The winter semester is further divided into two short semesters, fall and spring. The fall semester begins with enrollment in early September and ends in late December, and the spring semester begins in early January and ends in mid-May, each ranging from 16 - 18 weeks. The normal math program is scheduled for the winter semester, and a winter semester is equivalent to one academic year in our country. Courses within the program are taken during the summer semester.

The first few weeks of each short semester are trial periods. During the trial period, students can try out a wide range of courses. Then, they choose and register for their course of study according to the teaching program. Credits are calculated only for courses that have been registered exclusively in person and approved by the College. The final grade for a course is based on a percentage system and consists of three grades: a final exam, regular assignments, and quizzes. The final grade is usually only 25 ----35%. Thus, to get a good grade, you have to do your best from the day you take the course, do every assignment and cope with every quiz to get a good grade.

In order to assess the "quality" of a student's performance, the University of Toronto divides the "100" into six grades: A, B, C, D, E, F. A grade of D (50) or less is a failing grade, and a failed course must be repeated without the opportunity for a make-up exam. However, to assess the merits of a student's performance and whether he can obtain a degree, we must not only look at whether he has completed the teaching program, but also look at his overall performance. The University of Toronto has two types of methods for evaluating a student's overall performance, one is called the performance point system and the other is called the composite system. Although the two methods are slightly different in practice, the purpose is the same: to cultivate students who are good at what they do. Students do not have to use their strengths equally to cope with higher education, they can put more effort into the courses or fields they are interested in, study y and thoroughly, and get high grades, and just get credits for the general courses.

The University of Toronto's teaching management system includes the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and the Credit Elective System, the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering, the Faculty of Architecture and Landscape Architecture and the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry's Academic Year System, and the School of Medicine and Dentistry's Academic Year System. In the credit system and the academic year system in the School of Medicine and the School of Dentistry and many other forms.

Under the credit course system, the total number of credits for each degree program is specified. In order to ensure that students have a broader knowledge and a solid foundation, students are usually required to take a certain number of credit courses from a variety of different disciplines. The academic elective system allows students to have greater freedom in choosing courses due to differences in intelligence and fundamentals, so that students can acquire different knowledge structures and easily form cross-disciplines and fringe disciplines. But the talent training program is poorer, in comparison, the success rate is lower.

Academic year teaching program to the academic year as a phase, each period has a small number of interdisciplinary elective courses, the least freedom of course selection. This is probably why dental students entering medical school have already received one or two years of "general" education in the College of Arts and Sciences.

The academic year system and the academic year credit system are more planned and more closely related to the development of the national economy. There are specific requirements and regulations at all stages of study, and the success rate is higher.

No matter which kind of teaching management system, students of the University of Toronto are exposed to a broader humanities and social education. In addition to specialized knowledge, students are trained to have a high level of cultural cultivation.

The University of Toronto has a supercomputer that is outstanding even in North America, as well as dozens of other large and medium-sized computers and hundreds of terminals. In addition to the University Computer Center, many faculties have their own computer centers. These computers have access to data, information materials, software, etc. in the City of Toronto, Canada or North America's classified access system.

The University has an audio-visual teaching center, dedicated to teaching, research, including staff, equipment rental, venue audio-visual installations, equipment, including transportation, film, tape and other audio-visual materials production and reproduction, audio-visual equipment, such as the use of training to provide services.

The University of Toronto has the largest library in Canada with over 5 million volumes.

The campus is well-equipped with living facilities, and there are more than 10 student social dormitories for nearly 3,000 students. There are dozens of restaurants and bars of all kinds, as well as a post office, a university bookstore, a theater, a gymnasium and a music recital hall.

The University of Toronto also has a number of prestigious affiliated institutions, such as the Royal Schools of Music, which is well known in Canada, and the Frederick Harris Music Company, which publishes and distributes music records and tapes. The University of Toronto Press, the University of Toronto Printing Press and the University Observatory, which publishes high-quality scholarly works.

The University of Toronto is ranked as the top Canadian university this year, according to Maclean's magazine. This is the eighth consecutive year that the University of Toronto has received this honor. There are 15 universities*** in Canada that offer bachelor's, master's, doctoral and medical degrees. The University of Toronto has consistently ranked among the top in this category since 1994.

Programs

Undergraduate Programs

Undergraduate Programs: Insurance Statistics, Aerospace Engineering, Applied Mathematics, Architecture, Biochemistry, Biology/Bioscience, Biophysics, Chemical Engineering, Chemistry, Civil Engineering, Tongue and Groove, Computer Engineering, Computer Science, Earth Science, Ecology, Economics, Electrical Engineering, Engineering and Applied Science, Engineering Physics, Engineering Sciences, Finance/Banking, Geological Engineering, Geology, Geophysical Engineering, Geophysics Industrial Engineering, Materials Engineering, Mathematics, Mechanical Engineering, Metallurgical Engineering, Metallurgy, Microbiology, Molecular Biology, Nuclear Engineering, Petroleum/Gas Engineering, Physical Education, Physics, Plastics Engineering, Statistics, Surveying Engineering, Welding Engineering, African Studies, American Studies, Anthropology, Arabic, Archaeology, Art Education, Art/Fine Arts, Art History, Arts Administration, Asian/Oriental Studies, Astronomy, Biblical Linguistics, Business Administration, Canadian Studies, Chinese Language, Classics, East Asian Studies, East European and Soviet Studies, Education, English, Ethnic Studies, European Studies, Film Studies, French, German, Germanic Languages and Literatures, Greek, Guidance and Counseling, Hebrew, Hispanic Studies, History, History of Philosophy, History of the Natural Sciences, Humanities, International Studies, Islamic Studies, Italian, Japanese, Jewish Studies, Workforce Studies, Latin, Latin American Studies, Law Enforcement/Policing, Law (Pre-Law), Linguistics, Literature, Materials Science, Medieval Studies, Modern Languages, Music, Music Education, Music History, Native American Studies, Near/Middle Eastern Studies, Paleontology, Philosophy, Political Science/Government Administration, Portuguese, Psychology, Public **** Administration, Religious Studies, Germanic Linguistics, Russian, Russian and Slavic Studies, Natural Sciences, Slavic Linguistics, Sociology, South Asian Studies, Spanish, Studio Art, Theater Arts/Drama, Theology, Urban Studies, Women's Studies, Botany/ Plant Science, Environmental Science, Forestry, Landscape Architecture/Design, Forest Science, Zoology, Anatomy, Biopharmaceutical Engineering, Dentistry (Pre-Dental), Genetics, Medical Illustration, Medicine (Pre-Medicine), Neuroscience, Nursing, Nutrition, Occupational Liaison, Pharmacology, Pharmacy/Drug Science, Physical Therapy, Physiology, Rehabilitation Therapy, Toxicology. Graduate Studies Biology/Life Sciences, Computer Information Science, Engineering and Applied Science, Library and Information Studies, Mathematics, Business Administration and Administrative Institutions, Education, English Language/Literature and Works, Fine Arts, Foreign Languages and Literatures, Interdisciplinary Studies, Law and Legal Studies, Philosophy, Natural Sciences, Psychology, Social Sciences, Theology/Religion, Dentistry, Medicine. Source: People's Daily Online

Language Requirements:

1. TOEFL TOFEL: Minimum 600 (5+ in writing) or 100 (22 in writing) on the online test.

2. IELTS IELTS: 6.5 (individually no less than 6.0).

Academic Requirements:

1. Graduation from high school.

2. Provide high school baccalaureate and college entrance examination results. o(∩_∩)o...