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stubobnumbers · 10 months ago
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CFB Promotion and Relegation - The Big East
Big East Tier One - The Big East (FBS): Louisville Cincinnati West Virginia Penn State Pittsburgh Syracuse Rutgers Boston College Connecticut
Big East Tier Two - Conference USA (FBS): Marshall Temple Villanova Albany Buffalo Stony Brook Massachusetts Rhode Island New Hampshire Maine
Big East Tier Three - Coastal Athletic Association (FCS): Central Connecticut State Merrimack College Monmouth (NJ.) Long Island University Marist College Wagner College Duquesne University Robert Morris (PA.) St. Francis (PA.) Bryant University
Big East Tier Four - Patriot League (FCS): Georgetown Holy Cross Stonehill College Colgate University Fordham University Bucknell Lafayette College Lehigh University Mercyhurst University
Big East Tier Five - Atlantic Football Association (D2): Sacred Heart University Southern Connecticut State Western Connecticut State University Post University U. of New Haven American International College Assumption University Bentley University Franklin Pierce University Saint Anselm College
Big East Tier Six - Eastern Football Association (D2): Pace University College Of New Jersey Fairleigh Dickinson-Florham Kean University Montclair State Rowan University William Paterson U. Trinity College – Connecticut Wesleyan University
Big East Tier Seven - Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference (D2): Slippery Rock University Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania California University of Pennsylvania Clarion University of Pennsylvania East Stroudsburg University of Pennsylvania Edinboro University Gannon University Indiana University of Pennsylvania Kutztown University of Pennsylvania Lincoln University Pennsylvania
Big East Tier Eight - Keystone Football League (D2): Lock Haven University Millersville University of Pennsylvania Seton Hill University Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania West Chester University of Pennsylvania Allegheny College Carnegie Mellon University Albright College Alvernia University Gettysburg College
Big East Tier Nine - West Virginia Conference (D2): Alderson Broaddus University Bethany College – West Virginia Bluefield State College Concord University Fairmont State University Glenville State University Shepherd University University of Charleston West Liberty University West Virginia State University West Virginia Wesleyan College Wheeling University
Big East Tier Ten - Northeast Football Alliance (D3): Bates College Bowdoin College Colby College Husson University Maine Maritime U. of New England (ME.) Plymouth State Salve Regina University
Big East Tier Eleven - Little East Conference (D3): US Coast Guard Academy US Merchant Marine Academy Vermont State – Castleton Middlebury College Norwich University Massachusetts Maritime SUNY Maritime College Amherst College Anna Maria College Curry College
Big East Tier Twelve - Eastern Football Association (D3): Bridgewater State University Fitchburg State University Framingham State Dean College Endicott College Umass-Dartmouth Springfield College MIT Nichols College Tufts University
Big East Tier Thirteen - Northern Small Colleges Coalition (D3): Western New England U. Westfield State Williams College Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) Worcester State Alfred University Alfred State Buffalo State University Hamilton College Hartwick College
Big East Tier Fourteen - Empire Football Alliance (D3): Brockport State Cortland State Hilbert College Hobart College Ithaca College Rensselaer Polytech – RPI St. John Fisher College St. Lawrence University SUNY Morrisville Union College – New York
Big East Tier Fifteen - Northeast Conference (D3): U. of Rochester Utica University ASA College – New York Erie CC Hudson Valley CC Monroe College – New Rochelle Nassau CC Sussex County CC College Of Mount Saint Vincent
Big East Tier Sixteen - Small Pennsylvania Schools Conference (D3): Delaware Valley University Dickinson College Eastern University Franklin & Marshall College Geneva College Grove City College Juniata College Keystone College King's College – Pennsylvania Lebanon Valley College
Big East Tier Seventeen - Pennsylvania Football Alliance (D3): Lycoming College Misericordia University Moravian University Muhlenberg College Saint Vincent College – Pennsylvania Susquehanna University Thiel College Ursinus College Washington & Jefferson College Waynesburg University
Big East Tier Eighteen - Eastern Football Coalition (D3): Westminster College – Pennsylvania Widener University Wilkes University Lackawanna College Thaddeus Stevens College of Technology New England College Williamson College of the Trades
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canadaimmigrationexplore · 1 year ago
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Saskatchewan Polytechnic Career Fair Regina 2024 | career and Jobs
https://youtu.be/FhEO9BINXK4
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papamama-ca · 2 years ago
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inc-immigrationnewscanada · 2 years ago
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Sask. Polytech in Regina provides free dental care for Ukrainian immigrants
Descrease article font size Increase article font size New Ukrainian immigrants were offered free dental care and wellness strategies at the Saskatchewan Polytechnic campus in Regina on Saturday with the help of over 160 students and volunteers. Each year, the campus chooses a different group of people in need for its health and wellness day. The day included presentations by nursing students…
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ughwaitwhat · 6 years ago
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Hey There!
I’m a student at Trinity Western taking Global Ecological Issues, and part of our mark is to conduct a survey. If you’re a University student studying in Canada and can spare 5 minutes- or if you want to procrastinate- I’d appreciate your participation!  By participating you get the choice to enter a draw for a 25$ Starbucks gift card.  Your answers will remain anonymous.
If you could share this survey with other university students studying in Canada I’d appreciate that too!
edit: I’m a dumbass and i forgot to link the survey! Take it here:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfGWQc-mjPxrV4pyQlOjFiAMGDUTkUM8zC7SlambSmr8rYU4w/viewform
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kittesencula · 3 years ago
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Sergey Bratkov was born in 1960 in Kharkov (Ukraine). In 1978 he graduated from the Repin Art College and Polytechnical Academy in 1983. From 70’s he became interested in photography, in the 80s he began experimenting with the shooting making collages and objects. From 1988 to 1993 he was in a group of artists called “Litera A”: creating semifigurative painting, he participated in group exhibitions in Ukraine and Germany. From 1994 to 1997 he was a member of the Fast Reaction Group («Rapid Response Group”) together with the photographer Boris Mikhailov, Viktoria Mikhailova and Sergey Solonsky. They created a provocative campaigns, objects and photo series. In 1993 in his Kharkov studio Bratkov founded the gallery “Apdaun”, it lasted until 1997. Since 2000 he lives and works in Moscow, collaborating with Regina Gallery. He creates photo series (reportage, staging), video, installations and performances. In his works he reflects the social reality of Russia and Ukraine, focusing on the life of homeless, poor and middle-class people. He addresses the society’s problems and fixes the “peoples kitsch – an absurd collage of everyday life, typical of the post-Soviet space” (S. Bratkov). His author’s signature is best known by his brutal frankness and irony: “In order to reach out to the audience the provocation is necessary”, – says the artist. ©📸 Sergey Bratkov @ovcharenko_art #SergeyBratkov #FastReactionGroup #lovedandposted #thestreetiswatching 🥳🔉 🍕🖕🏿 #Ⓚ #kittesencula 𝖉𝖗𝖆𝖌𝖔𝖕𝖚𝖇𝖑𝖎𝖘𝖍𝖊𝖗.𝖈𝖔𝖒 ᴋɪᴛᴛᴇsᴇɴᴄᴜʟᴀ.ᴄᴏᴍ https://www.instagram.com/p/CakJuerN9GB/?utm_medium=tumblr
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mishinashen · 4 years ago
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Boléro violet by Henri Matisse, 1937
Suffused with the brilliant light of the South of France, Boléro violet is an exquisite portrait from one of the most important and creative periods of Matisse’s art. The arrangement of the exotically dressed girl, with her upper body posed diagonally across the painting, is invitingly intimate, with the sweeping arm of her chair creating a subtle distinction between the position of the model and the picture's surface. The emphasis Matisse placed on decorative patterns is particularly apparent in Boléro violet. The buttercup gold and orange striped wallpaper, vivid purple coat and strikingly stylised features of the model - her dark hair and red lips being especially pronounced - combine to create a beguiling vision of the artist’s opulent domain.
The model in the painting is Princess Hélène Galitzine, daughter of Russian aristocrat Prince Serge Galitzine and Helene Ghijitzky. Not yet eighteen years-old when Matisse created Boléro violet, her strikingly dark hair provided a perfect foil to Lydia Delectorskaya’s fair colouration. Throughout 1937 Hélène was one of Matisse’s principal models and posed for a number of important works, often alongside her cousin Delectorskaya. The pair continued to model together for the next couple of years, and posed for the monumental La musique in 1939 (fig. 1). In the same year he completed La musique, Matisse made a statement recognising the importance of his models: ‘The emotional interest aroused in me by them does not appear particularly in the representation of their bodies, but often rather in the lines or the special values distributed over the whole canvas or paper, which form its complete orchestration, its architecture… It is perhaps sublimated sensual pleasure’ (H. Matisse, quoted in Henri Matisse. Figure Color Space (exhibition catalogue), Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf, 2005, p. 40).
Throughout his life, Matisse approached clothing and textiles with the keen eye of a collector. Costumes of all descriptions could be found in numerous chests about his house and studio. From Romanian peasant clothing to Parisian ball gowns, Matisse’s appetite for clothing was enormous. He commissioned the celebrated designer Paul Poiret’s sister to make dresses for his wife and daughter, and on one occasion in 1938, he spent a day in the area around the rue de la Boëtie in Paris buying several items of haute couture at the spring sales. By the time he moved to his new apartment in the old Excelsior-Regina Palace Hotel in Cimiez in 1939, his collection of costumes required a whole room to store them. As Hilary Spurling has noted: ‘Moroccan jackets, robes, blouses, boleros, caps and scarves, from which his models could be kitted out in outfits distantly descended - like Bakst's ballet, and a whole series of films using Nice locations in the 1920s as a substitute for the mysterious East - from the French painterly tradition of orientalisation’ (H. Spurling, Matisse: His Art and his Textiles (exhibition catalogue), The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2005, p. 29).
According to Lydia Delectorskaya in 1937 Matisse had become particularly fascinated with a set of Romanian blouses which he rediscovered amongst his studio props. These blouses had been a gift from the Romanian painter Theodor Pallady, who regularly corresponded with Matisse, discussing their art and in particular the important role of its more decorative aspects. Hélène Galitzine was photographed by the artist wearing one of these blouses (fig. 2), and he subsequently painted a number of works - using other models - that used the geometric oak-leaf embroidery as the central decorative motif. Similarly, Matisse produced several improvisations on the decorative qualities of a richly hued jacket decorated with elaborate gold embroidery (fig. 3). Matisse had used this coat in an earlier oil (fig. 4), and echoes of its orientalist charm are reawakened in his paintings in the late 1930s.
In a discussion concerning his working methods with the poet Tériade, which was later published in 1937, Matisse wrote: ‘In my latest paintings, I united the acquisitions of the last twenty years to my essential core, to my very essence. […] The reaction of each stage is as important as the subject. For this reaction comes from me and not from the subject. It is from the basis of my interpretation that I continually react until my work comes into harmony with me... At each stage, I reach a balance, a conclusion. At the next sitting, if I find there is a weakness in the whole, I make my way back into the picture by means of the weakness - I re-enter through the breach-end, I reconceive the whole. Thus everything becomes fluid again and as each element is only one of the component forces (as in an orchestration), the whole can be changed in appearance but the feeling sought still remains the same. A black could very well replace a blue, since basically the expression derives from the relationships. One is not bound to a blue, to a green or to a red, whose timbres can be introverted or replaced if the feeling so dictates… At the final stage the painter finds himself freed and his emotion exists complete in his work' (quoted in Jack Flam (ed.), Matisse on Art, Berkeley, 1995, p. 123).
Discussing Matisse’s portraits of the mid-1930s, John Elderfield wrote: ‘his model is shown in decorative costumes – a striped Persian coat [fig. 5], a Rumanian blouse – and the decorativeness and the very construction of a costume and of a painting are offered as analogous. What developed were groups of paintings showing his model in similar or different poses, costumes, and settings: a sequence of themes and variations that gained in mystery and intensity as it unfolded’ (J. Elderfield in Henri Matisse, A Retrospective (exhibition catalogue), The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1992, p. 357). Boléro violet is an extraordinary example of Matisse’s constantly evolving perception of form and colour. The paintings of the late 1930s are the supreme outcome of decades of improvisation on these decorative elements, wherein contrasting patterns and colours of the present work harmonise, and the features of the young Hélène are transfigured into the epitome of timeless elegance. The first owner of the present work was Aldus Chapin Higgins of Worcester, Massachusetts. Higgins acquired Boléro violet from Paul Rosenberg’s Paris exhibition of Matisse’s recent works in 1937 which subsequently travelled to London. The previous year Rosenberg persuaded Matisse to sign a three year contract, thus becoming his principal dealer. These exhibitions in Paris and London, held for the next few years, helped the artist to sell directly to a large number of collectors from America and Europe. Aldus C. Higgins was a businessman who spent his entire career with his family’s firm, the Norton Emery Wheel Company. He also invented a water-cooled electric furnace which won the John Scott medal for exceptional achievement in mechanical arts in 1914. Higgins also commissioned the architect Grosvenor Atterbury to build him a house modelled on Compton Wyngates, the Elizabethan seat of the Marquesses of Northampton. The house was completed in 1923, and Higgins and his wife, Mary, lived there until their deaths when it was given to the Worcester Polytechnic Institute, of which his family had been tremendously supportive. Aldus and Mary Higgins were avid collectors of art, and during trips to Europe purchased many wonderful paintings including the magnificent Fauve canvas, L’Oliviers by Georges Braque and Georges Rouault’s Coucher du soleil which were both eventually bequeathed to the Worcester Art Museum. Boléro violet remained in Higgins' family possession until 1990, when it was acquired by the present owner.
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brampton-consultancy94 · 2 years ago
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Affordable student cities in Canada 
Affordable student cities in Canada 
Canada provides low tuition rates and globally recognised degrees for its top-notch education. Additionally, the nation is home to a sizeable community of international students because of its top-notch colleges and a wide variety of courses. It is apparent to think about the cost of living before travelling to Canada to study. Knowing which Canadian cities are the cheapest will help you budget your money effectively.
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Canada’s most cheap cities for students to live
Therefore, you should look at some of the possibilities listed below if you’re seeking the cheapest student city in Canada for international students. You should also consider that even if the cost of living may be high in certain places, the average income rates for international students are more excellent there. This is not because they have the lowest living expenditures. Therefore, they are more affordable than the cities with the lowest cost of living.
1. Victoria, British Columbia
With a population of 350,000, Victoria, the capital of British Columbia, is a tidy, peaceful, and welcoming medium-sized city. Known as the “City of Gardens” and one of the top 15 friendliest cities in the world. At the southernmost point of Vancouver Island, there is a well-known, year-round tourist attraction known across the globe that is one of the greatest sites to learn more about Canadian culture. This location provides an endless variety of things to see and experience.
Victoria is the mildest climate in Canada and is one of the most attractive locations to live in. Vancouver, located one hour away by boat or 30 minutes by plane, receives 60% more rain than Victoria.
2. Calgary, Alberta
Calgary offers both top-notch educational institutions and leisure activities for visitors. It is hardly surprising that Calgary, Canada’s fourth-largest city, is also its most culturally diversified location. The city is home to more than 200 different ethnic groups, which fosters a friendly global atmosphere. According to Oxford Economics’ North American home affordability study, Calgary is the tenth most affordable city in North America.
In addition, Alberta’s income tax rates are between 10 and 15 per cent, whereas the federal tax bracket goes from 25 to 48 per cent, meaning that even if you pay the lowest tax rate, you still make 15% more each year than residents of other provinces.
Compared to all of Canada’s major cities, Calgary has the second-highest level of educational accomplishment. Close to Toronto. If you live in Calgary, you can be confident that your educational needs will be satisfied to a high quality acknowledged worldwide.
3. Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
Despite being the largest city in Saskatchewan, Saskatoon needs to be better liked by international students. Most overseas students have a hazy understanding of Saskatchewan province and believe it to be one of Canada’s coldest and remotest regions. But the University of Saskatchewan and the Saskatchewan Polytechnic College are located in Saskatoon.
With a population of around 317,480, Saskatoon’s economy has traditionally been tied to potash, oil, and agriculture, but more recently, its digital media and IT industries have experienced exponential growth. Saskatoon has one of the lowest living costs among the leading Canadian cities. Thus, the cost of housing, bills, food, and taxes is lower for students who attend school in Saskatoon.
With an average yearly pay of C$30,000 to C$40,000, McDonald’s, Walmart, Amazon, Best Buy, and Home Depot are the biggest employers of part-time workers in Saskatoon.
4. Regina, Saskatchewan
The capital and largest city of Saskatchewan, Canada, is Regina. The city expanded quickly after World War II to become a significant manufacturing, distribution, and transportation centre for a sizable agricultural region. The city is well connected to all major railroads, including the Trans-Canada Highway and Regina International Airport. It is also quite accessible. Oil, natural gas, potash refining, food manufacturing, rich grasslands, and mineral resources contribute to its economy.
The leading grain-handling firm, with its headquarters in Regina, is The Saskatchewan Wheat Pool, the largest wheat pool in the world. It has relationships both domestically and abroad. The city has recently begun to transform into an IT hub as well.
Steel fabrication, agricultural implement manufacture, communications equipment manufacturing, paint manufacturing, and building material manufacturing are other well-liked job sectors in Saskatchewan.
The Saskatchewan government has declared around 98,000 job openings across the province between 2019 and 2023 to support the economic growth in the area, and Regina will have a significant portion of these possibilities.
Additionally, Regina city is home to industries actively employing, including wholesale and retail, healthcare, agriculture, and educational services. The region will also see increased sales, skilled crafts, transport operators, business, finance, and administration. A single person’s monthly expenses, including rent, come to about C$1,500; if they share a room, they fall to C$1,200. The median after-tax income in Canada is $3,465 and can support 2.3 months’ worth of spending.
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5. Winnipeg, Manitoba
The province of Manitoba’s capital, Winnipeg, is close to the eastern edge of the Canadian Prairies. Among Canada’s major cities, Winnipeg is ranked as the third-fastest growing economy. The town is a haven for immigrants and international students due to its low cost of living and low rental revenue. Despite the severe winters, the city continues to be an industrial and tourism powerhouse for Canada. As the location of the University of Manitoba, the University of Winnipeg, Red River College, and the Manitoba Institute of Trades & Technology, it has developed into a vibrant student community that offers both locals and immigrants a wide variety of job opportunities.
One of Canada’s top cities for new and expanding firms, Winnipeg offers newcomers excellent professional choices. It is a centre for manufacturing, and its leading industries include ICT, agribusiness, aerospace, and advanced manufacturing.
Did you know that manufacturing firms employed more than 35,000 people in Winnipeg as of 2021? All businesses in Winnipeg benefit from clean, renewable hydroelectric electricity and the lowest energy expenses in North America. The typical yearly student income in Winnipeg is roughly $34,000, while monthly payments are standard $900.
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6. Kitchener-Cambridge-Waterloo, Ontario
The Tri-Cities sometimes referred to as Kitchener, Waterloo, and Cambridge (KWC), are dispersed between 100 and 120 kilometres (62 to 75 miles) southwest of Toronto. Daily commuters will find this helpful. Housing costs have surged around the Greater Toronto Area as a result of its continued growth, and many individuals look forward to moving to Toronto to work to avoid the increased living expenses. People like living in the tri-city, which is a 1-hour drive from the GTA region, for the same reasons as Silicon Valley is, and the Toronto-Waterloo Corridor is developing into one of the biggest tech centres in North America after it. Canada may not have as many chances in the tech industry compared to America, but the Toronto-Waterloo Corridor stands out as the “Silicon Valley of Canada.”
The smartphone maker, with a market worth of more than C$80 billion and approximately 20,000 workers during its peak in 2008, was founded in Waterloo.
All techies interested in relocating to the tri-city area will have access to various job possibilities, including those in drones, wearable technology, intelligent marketing, and space manufacturing. It is also the location of Google. Kitchener is one of the most balanced places to live and work, with a healthy combination of open space and busy downtown. International students’ average monthly living expenses in tri-city are C$1,275, but their average yearly income is C$40,000.
Over 5000 start-ups and 15,000+ tech firms operate in the Kitchener-Waterloo-Cambridge region, employing over 300,000 IT professionals.
7. Montreal, Quebec
Given that it has more than 11 universities and 60 institutions, Montréal, the capital of Canada’s French-speaking region, is frequently named one of the greatest cities in the world for students. It is also the second-largest city in Canada and is renowned as the country’s centre for the arts, fashion, and technology. It also has one of the largest video game businesses in the world, ranking within the top five.
Montreal is home to some of the world’s most significant video game firms, including UBISOFT, Warner Bros. Games, Gameloft, and EA Games.MNCs like Facebook, Microsoft, Google, and Samsung are among Montreal’s significant investors and IT behemoths, serving as a hub for AI research worldwide.
Along with being a Canadian industry powerhouse in the financial, film, television, oil refining, aerospace, and pharmaceutical sectors, it also boasts a thriving video game industry. With a low cost of living of about, the average yearly salary for international students working part-time in Montreal is approximately C$33,200.
The majority of people in Montreal are multilingual, speaking both English and French (making it the second-largest primarily French-speaking city after Paris).
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8. Moncton, New Brunswick
Moncton, commonly known as “Atlantic’s Business Capital,” is a tiny city with a respectable population and a large number of open employment that has recently started drawing a lot of immigrants and foreign students. Prominent educational institutions with the most affordable tuition rates include New Brunswick Community College, Mount Allison University, and Crandall University.
Within the first two weeks of moving to Moncton, immigrants get jobs, earning an average yearly salary of C$32,000 against the city’s cheap cost of living of C$800–C$900. The students select Moncton not just for its low cost of living and education but also for its Atlantic Immigration Pilot Program, which enables them to relocate within six months after finishing their degree.
Moncton is a clear victor regarding the quality of life because of its thriving city, engaged residents, and balanced, easygoing way of life. Here, students have quick commutes to both employment and school.
The RBC Royal Bank and Tangerine are the only two major financial institutions with headquarters in Moncton, thanks to the city’s advantageous location, skilled workforce, and affordable business costs.
9. Halifax, Nova Scotia
Halifax, the largest and most well-known city in Nova Scotia, also has the most university campuses. Students make up 25% of Halifax’s population due to the city’s affordable tuition and top-tier colleges. Because of the sizeable student population, most things in the Halifax area are already reasonably priced, whether they be goods for food, drink, or clothing. With each graduating class, Halifax offers IT firms a consistent supply of fresh employees, making it a vibrant start-up environment.
The city’s manufacturing sector saw the most job growth last year, up 20%, followed by professional, scientific, and technical services, which witnessed a boost of 17%. 
Due to Halifax’s consistently expanding economic opportunities and educational sector, thousands of immigrants have been welcomed to the city, and its population is expected to reach 500,000 within the next five years.
Halifax’s cost of living is about. Compared to the average student wage of C$35,000 per year, C$1230 is a relatively small amount.
It would be best if you also kept an eye out for the following cities in addition to the ones named above: Kelowna, BC; Edmonton, AB; Moose Jaw, Regina; Brantford, MB; Oshawa, ON; Windsor, ON; Laval, QC; Fredericton, NB; St. John, NF; and Charlottetown, PEI. These towns provide excellent employment and relocation options. It is also simpler to obtain admissions and early approval to apply for a study permit to begin your academic career in Canada. 
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digitalvision · 3 years ago
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Guide to applying for a Canadian student visa
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Canada is not only a popular tourist destination but also an attractive study abroad destination. Canada is highly developed with an excellent education system and valuable degrees. This is the reason why many parents want to enroll their children in Canadian primary and secondary schools, and many adults choose to begin their university and graduate studies there. Students must obtain a study visa and study permit for that.
Canada is one of the best countries for international students, with world-class institutes and vibrant, multinational student communities. If you want to study in Canada- one of the first things you will need is a Canadian study permit. A study permit is a document that allows foreign nationals to study at designated learning institutes in Canada. DLIs are universities that are approved by the territorial government to enable them to host international students. To study in Canada, the majority of nationals require a study permit. Intstu Aspirations is one of the best overseas consultancy surat.
How to apply for a Canadian student Visa
1. Formalise your application to a Canadian institution.
2. Determine if you require a student visa for Canada.
3. Apply for a student visa in Canada.
4. Know the fees related to Canadian student visas.
5. Canadian student visa requirements for international students
6. Canadian student visa process: biometrics and Interviews
7. Applying through the Student Direct Stream
1. Formalise your application to a Canadian institution
Suppose you still haven't applied for a study permit. In that case, the first step you need to take for a Canadian student visa is to confirm your acceptance by applying for a study permit at a Canadian university. You will need to have firm approval to begin your Canadian student visa application. If you are looking for the best university in Canada, the following are excellent places to start your dream journey.
Cape Breton University
Conestoga College
Kwantlen Polytechnic University
Pacific Coast Community College
Pacific Link College
Niagara College
Sault College
Thompson Rivers University
University Canada West
University of Regina
Vancouver Film School
2. Determine if you require a student visa for Canada.
The majority of students require a Canadian visa to study there, but there are a few exceptions that you should be aware of before applying for a visa. You may not require a Canadian student visa in the following circumstances:
If you are completing your course in six months or less.
If you are under the age of 18 or 19, it will depend on the province you are studying in. 
If you’re a member of the armed forces on active duty while studying
You can check out the official government tool to find out whether you need a study permit.
3. Apply for a student visa in Canada.
Now you have already confirmed your acceptance, it’s time to start your Canadian visa application. You should have to fill out the online application form via the Citizenship and Immigration Canada website. When you are applying online, you’ll need the following documents.
A letter of acceptance: You need a letter of acceptance from the designated learning institution. If you have been selected conditionally, you might have to take English and French courses before starting your studies.
Proof of Identity: A valid passport or travel document with two passport-size photos is required for proof of identity.
Proof of Financial support: This is the most important document as it proves that you’ve got enough money to support yourself or any family members while in Canada. This includes a student's bank statement or an official letter from the sponsor.
Letter of explanation: This is like your personal statement that would help the visa officers to understand why you want to study in Canada and also that you understand all the responsibilities as a student.
4. Know the fees related to Canadian student visas.
Currently, the Canadian student visa application fee is 150 CA$. You might also have to pay additional fees that include medical exams, biometrics data collection, and language tests such as TOEFL, PTE, and IELTS. Make sure to include tuition fees payable to your institution when assessing your budget. Intstu Aspirations provides the best IELTS class in surat.
5. Canadian student visa requirements for international students
It is a part of the Canadian visa application process to understand the requirements and responsibilities placed on international students. This is important for maintaining your study permit and it is a part of the interview process.
Requirements while studying in Canada
Always try to maintain your enrollment at your institution of study.
Respecting all the conditions of your study permit.
Leaving Canada when your study permit expires, which is usually valid for 90 days after your study period.
6. Canadian student visa process: biometrics and Interviews
Once you've filled out the online application and submitted all the documents, you're almost there. After that, you will need to book an appointment at a Canadian Visa Application Center to have your biometrics, which includes things like fingerprints and an official photo taken. The biometric fee is $85 CA$.
Apart from this process, you may also be called for an interview with a Canadian immigration officer. The student visa interview is only to ensure that you are a genuine candidate and also understand your responsibilities in your home country. Intstu Aspirations is one of the best foreign education consultants and IELTS coaching in surat.
7. Applying through the Student Direct Stream
The Canadian student visa process can take up to 90 days. You can speed up your application through the Student Direct Stream. This usually takes around 20 days to open for several countries including Brazil, China, India, Morocco, Pakistan, Philippines, and Vietnam. You can also go through the Canadian Government’s website for further information on eligibility and how to apply for a Canadian student visa.
Once your visa is approved, you’ll receive confirmation through the online portal. If you are currently going through the Canadian visa application process, we wish you the very best of luck. Intstu Aspirations is one of the best overseas education consultants in surat. Contact today to start your dream journey.
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digitalvision05 · 3 years ago
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Guide to applying for a Canadian student visa
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Canada is not only a popular tourist destination but also an attractive study abroad destination. Canada is highly developed with an excellent education system and valuable degrees. This is the reason why many parents want to enroll their children in Canadian primary and secondary schools, and many adults choose to begin their university and graduate studies there. Students must obtain a study visa and study permit for that.
Canada is one of the best countries for international students, with world-class institutes and vibrant, multinational student communities. If you want to study in Canada- one of the first things you will need is a Canadian study permit. A study permit is a document that allows foreign nationals to study at designated learning institutes in Canada. DLIs are universities that are approved by the territorial government to enable them to host international students. To study in Canada, the majority of nationals require a study permit. Intstu Aspirations is one of the best top 10 ielts classes in surat.
How to apply for a Canadian student Visa
1. Formalise your application to a Canadian institution.
2. Determine if you require a student visa for Canada.
3. Apply for a student visa in Canada.
4. Know the fees related to Canadian student visas.
5. Canadian student visa requirements for international students
6. Canadian student visa process: biometrics and Interviews
7. Applying through the Student Direct Stream
1. Formalise your application to a Canadian institution
Suppose you still haven't applied for a study permit. In that case, the first step you need to take for a Canadian student visa is to confirm your acceptance by applying for a study permit at a Canadian university. You will need to have firm approval to begin your Canadian student visa application. If you are looking for the best university in Canada, the following are excellent places to start your dream journey.
Cape Breton University
Conestoga College
Kwantlen Polytechnic University
Pacific Coast Community College
Pacific Link College
Niagara College
Sault College
Thompson Rivers University
University Canada West
University of Regina
Vancouver Film School
2. Determine if you require a student visa for Canada.
The majority of students require a Canadian visa to study there, but there are a few exceptions that you should be aware of before applying for a visa. You may not require a Canadian student visa in the following circumstances:
If you are completing your course in six months or less.
If you are under the age of 18 or 19, it will depend on the province you are studying in. 
If you’re a member of the armed forces on active duty while studying
You can check out the official government tool to find out whether you need a study permit.
3. Apply for a student visa in Canada.
Now you have already confirmed your acceptance, it’s time to start your Canadian visa application. You should have to fill out the online application form via the Citizenship and Immigration Canada website. When you are applying online, you’ll need the following documents.
A letter of acceptance: You need a letter of acceptance from the designated learning institution. If you have been selected conditionally, you might have to take English and French courses before starting your studies.
Proof of Identity: A valid passport or travel document with two passport-size photos is required for proof of identity.
Proof of Financial support: This is the most important document as it proves that you’ve got enough money to support yourself or any family members while in Canada. This includes a student's bank statement or an official letter from the sponsor.
Letter of explanation: This is like your personal statement that would help the visa officers to understand why you want to study in Canada and also that you understand all the responsibilities as a student.
4. Know the fees related to Canadian student visas.
Currently, the Canadian student visa application fee is 150 CA$. You might also have to pay additional fees that include medical exams, biometrics data collection, and language tests such as TOEFL, PTE, and IELTS. Make sure to include tuition fees payable to your institution when assessing your budget. Intstu Aspirations provides the best IELTS class in surat.
5. Canadian student visa requirements for international students
It is a part of the Canadian visa application process to understand the requirements and responsibilities placed on international students. This is important for maintaining your study permit and it is a part of the interview process.
Requirements while studying in Canada
Always try to maintain your enrollment at your institution of study.
Respecting all the conditions of your study permit.
Leaving Canada when your study permit expires, which is usually valid for 90 days after your study period.
6. Canadian student visa process: biometrics and Interviews
Once you've filled out the online application and submitted all the documents, you're almost there. After that, you will need to book an appointment at a Canadian Visa Application Center to have your biometrics, which includes things like fingerprints and an official photo taken. The biometric fee is $85 CA$.
Apart from this process, you may also be called for an interview with a Canadian immigration officer. The student visa interview is only to ensure that you are a genuine candidate and also understand your responsibilities in your home country. Intstu Aspirations is one of the best foreign education consultants and IELTS coaching in surat.
7. Applying through the Student Direct Stream
The Canadian student visa process can take up to 90 days. You can speed up your application through the Student Direct Stream. This usually takes around 20 days to open for several countries including Brazil, China, India, Morocco, Pakistan, Philippines, and Vietnam. You can also go through the Canadian Government’s website for further information on eligibility and how to apply for a Canadian student visa.
Once your visa is approved, you’ll receive confirmation through the online portal. If you are currently going through the Canadian visa application process, we wish you the very best of luck. Intstu Aspirations is one of the best overseas education consultants in surat. Contact today to start your dream journey.
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papamama-ca · 2 years ago
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inc-immigrationnewscanada · 2 years ago
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Sask. Polytech in Regina provides free dental care for Ukrainian immigrants
Descrease article font size Increase article font size New Ukrainian immigrants were offered free dental care and wellness strategies at the Saskatchewan Polytechnic campus in Regina on Saturday with the help of over 160 students and volunteers. Each year, the campus chooses a different group of people in need for its health and wellness day. The day included presentations by nursing students…
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veryeclipselawyerhairdo · 3 years ago
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What goals are you setting for 2022? I am Esther Anyi, currently taking a Master of Applied Science Program in Petroleum Systems Engineering at the University of Regina, Canada where I work as a research assistant at the Petroleum Technology Research Center. I obtained my Bachelor’s Degree in Petroleum Engineering at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Ghana, with First class honor. During my undergraduate studies, one thing I had in mind was the hope to excel and make a better life for myself, family and my community. I must say that I got my graduate school offer even before I finished my Bachelor’s degree. This only comes with hard work and persistence. Before leaving Cameroon to Ghana, I was in my second year of studies at the National Advanced School of Engineering, Polytechnic Yaoundé. Since I got the Mastercard Foundation Scholarship to study at KNUST, I had to leave because I knew I would definitely enjoy more opportunities right away. It's been a hassle-free transition from a fully funded undergraduate program in Ghana to a funded graduate program in Canada, thanks to my dedication. I want to encourage everyone out there to keep working hard because nothing good comes easy. Give your best and God will do the rest. May more of your dreams come true in 2022. Happy New Year from the University of Regina, Canada https://www.instagram.com/p/CYHOplHraPm/?utm_medium=tumblr
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turesh · 4 years ago
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Executive Assistant to the Dean, Schools of Construction & Transportation - Saskatchewan Polytechnic - Saskatoon, SK
Executive Assistant to the Dean, Schools of Construction & Transportation – Saskatchewan Polytechnic – Saskatoon,��SK
Competition Number P12092 Posting Title Executive Assistant to the Dean, Schools of Construction & Transportation Classification Band 5 Location Saskatchewan Polytechnic Saskatoon Campus Other Location(s) Saskatchewan Polytechnic Saskatoon Campus, Saskatchewan Polytechnic Regina Campus Building Saskatoon Campus, Idylwyld Dr. Other Building Date Posted 12/01/2021 Closing…
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mongoose232323 · 4 years ago
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In Canada, Another ‘Horrific’ Discovery
Of Indigenous Children’s Remains
An Indigenous group said the remains of as
many as 751 people, mainly children, had been
found in unmarked graves on the site of a former
boarding school in Saskatchewan.
From The Article
CALGARY, Alberta — For decades, the Indigenous children were taken from their families, sometimes by force, and housed in crowded, church-run boarding schools, where they were abused and prohibited from speaking their languages. Thousands vanished altogether.
Now, a new discovery offers chilling evidence that many of the missing children may have died at these schools: The remains of as many as 751 people, mainly Indigenous children, were found at the site of a former school in the province of Saskatchewan, an Indigenous group said on Thursday.
The burial site, the largest one to date, was uncovered only weeks after the remains of 215 children were found in unmarked graves on the grounds of another former church-run school for Indigenous students in British Columbia.
The discoveries have jolted a nation grappling with generations of widespread and systematic abuse of Indigenous people, many of whom are survivors of the boarding schools. For decades, they suggested through their oral histories that thousands of children disappeared from the schools, but they were often met with skepticism. The revelations of two unmarked grave sites are another searing reminder of this traumatic period in history.
“This was a crime against humanity, an assault on a First Nation people,” said Chief Bobby Cameron, of the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations, the provincial federation of Indigenous groups. “The only crime we ever committed as children was being born Indigenous,” he said.
The burial site also puts new pressure on the current government of Justin Trudeau, Canada’s prime minister, which even today relies on a set of laws that govern the lives of Indigenous people that date back to the 19th century. Indigenous leaders say they hope the latest revelations will be a catalyst for their long sought-after self-governance.
“We are tired of being told what to do and how to do it,” said Chief Cadmus Delorme, of the Cowessess First Nation.
The recent unearthing of remains in Canada has reverberated globally, including in the United States, where this week the interior secretary said the country would search federal boarding schools for possible burial sites of Native American children. Hundreds of thousands of them were forcibly taken from their communities to be culturally assimilated in the schools for more than a century.
It is unclear how the children died at the schools, which were buffeted by disease outbreaks a century ago, and where children faced sexual, physical and emotional abuse and violence. Some former students of the schools have described the bodies of infants born to girls impregnated by priests and monks being incinerated.
Both schools were part of a system started in the 19th century that took Indigenous children from their families.
A National Truth and Reconciliation Commission, established in 2008 to investigate the residential schools, called the practice “cultural genocide.” Many children never returned home, and their families were given only vague explanations of their fates, or none at all. Canada had about 150 residential schools and an estimated 150,000 Indigenous children passed through the schools between their opening, around 1883, and their closing in 1996.
The commission estimated that about 4,100 children went missing nationwide from the schools. But an Indigenous former judge who led the commission, Murray Sinclair, said in an email this month that he now believed the number was “well beyond 10,000.”
Local Indigenous leaders on Thursday demanded an inquiry into what they called a “genocide,” and called for the church and the government to turn over all records related to the administration of the schools.
Chief Delorme also called for Pope Francis to apologize, saying that the Roman Catholic Church needed to address its actions.
“The incredible burden of the past is still with us, and the truth of that past needs to come out, however painful,” Don Bolen, the Archbishop of Regina, wrote in a letter Thursday addressed to the Cowessess group. He apologized and pledged to “do what we can to turn that apology into meaningful concrete acts.”
The discovery in Saskatchewan was made by the Cowessess First Nation at the Marieval Indian Residential School, about 87 miles from the provincial capital, Regina.
Chief Delorme said that his Indigenous community, spurred by the discovery at Kamloops and in conjunction with technical teams from Saskatchewan Polytechnic, began combing the area using ground penetrating radar on June 2, hitting as many as 751 unmarked graves. He said he expected more bodies would be found.
While it is not clear how the discovery of the remains will be investigated, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Saskatchewan said that next steps, including the potential involvement of the force, would depend on the wishes of the Indigenous group’s leaders.
“Our actions must be respectful of the immense grief the people of Cowessess First Nation continue to suffer. We know we have enforced racist and discriminatory legislation and policies,” a police spokesman said in an email.
For Canada’s 1.7 million Indigenous citizens, who make up about 4.9 percent of the population, the finding of yet another mass burial site is a visceral reminder of centuries of discrimination and abuse, which has led to intergenerational trauma among survivors of residential schools and their families.
“There’s no denying this: All of the stories told by our survivors are true,” Chief Cameron said.
Florence Sparvier, 80, an elder of the Cowessess First Nation, said she attended two residential schools, including Marieval, the school where the unmarked remains were found.
“They were very condemning about our people,” she said of the nuns at the schools. “They told us our people, our parents, our grandparents didn’t have a way to be spiritual because we were all heathens.”
Mr. Trudeau on Thursday called the discoveries in Saskatchewan and British Columbia “part of a larger tragedy,” citing the legacies of “systemic racism, discrimination, and injustice that Indigenous peoples have faced.”
In September 2017, Mr. Trudeau acknowledged the nation’s past “humiliation, neglect and abuse” of Indigenous people, and vowed in a speech at the United Nations General Assembly to improve their lives.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/24/world/canada/unmarked-graves-residential-schools-saskatchewan.amp.html?0p19G=2103
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cwinternationalcanada · 4 years ago
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Study in SASKETHEWAN #ApplyNow Apply for September 2021 Intake List of colleges Parkland College University of Regina Great Plains College Saskethewan Polytechnic For more contact us: Our Offices Mohali Office Address: SCF 101, Level 2, Phase 10, Sector 64, Mohali, Punjab 160062 +91-99149-40999 | 74700-99999 Manitoba Office Address: 203-1021 Court Avenue, Winnipeg, Manitoba, R2P 1V7 +1 204-951-0067 204-813-6200 Brampton Office Address: 201-285 Steeles Avenue West, Brampton, Ontario L6Y 5S6 +1 905-872-3544 Surrey-British Columbia Address: 203 8120st Surrey,BC-V3W1R1 +1 236 601 5599 #studyincanada #movetocanada #canada #CWServices #settleincanada #international #internationalstudentsCanada #Manitoba #canadastudies See less
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