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Picking universities - finding it difficult! |
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| Nov27-12, 12:22 AM | #1 |
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Picking universities - finding it difficult!
Hi, I completed two years of my undergraduate Physics study at Imperial College London (2009-2011). Since then, I have interrupted my studies until 2013 due to financial difficulties. Now, I'm looking to transfer to Canadian universities and I have a list of 22 universities which I want to narrow down based on my academic credentials, but I'm getting nowhere. Can anyone here please help me out?
Here are the list of universities: 1. University of Toronto 2. U of British Columbia 3. McGill University 4. U of Waterloo 5. Simon Fraser U 6. York Uni 7. Queen’s Uni 8. U of Western Ontario 9. U of Ottawa 10. U of Guelph 11. Mcmaster uni 12. Carleton Uni 13. Concordia uni 14. Ryerson Uni 15. Brock Uni 16. Wilfrid Laurier Uni 17. Laurentian uni 18. Trent Uni 19. Bishop’s uni 20. Trinity western uni 21. Ontario institute of technology 22. Capilano uni And here's my academic credentials: O levels: 8 A's A levels: A's in Physics, Chemistry, Maths, Further Maths, Additional Further Maths University first year: average 88.6% 1. Mathematics I - 97% 2. Mechanics and Relativity - 93% 3. Electricity and Magnetism - 94% 4. Structure of Matter, Vibrations and Waves, Quantum Physics - 98% 5. Professional Skills - 78% 6. Laboratory and Computing I - 69% 7. Project I - 59% 8. Mathematical Analysis - 95% University second year: average 68.9% 1. Quantum Mechanics - 74% 2. Thermodynamics and Statistical Physics - 64% 3. Electrons in Solids and Applications of Quantum Mechanics - 63% 4. Electromagnetism and Optics - 83% 5. Mathematics and Statistics of Measurement - 73% 6. Laboratory and Computing II - 66% 7. Professional Skills II -82% 8. Mathematics Methods - 51% |
| Nov29-12, 02:46 PM | #2 |
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just to clarify your question. are you wondering what school you would get accepted into based on your marks?
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| Nov29-12, 02:50 PM | #3 |
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cause i know most universities require a minimum gpa of 2.0-2.5 to transfer after two years depending on what school. if your gpa is above 3.0 i dont think there will be a problem getting accepted into any school
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| Nov29-12, 02:52 PM | #4 |
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Picking universities - finding it difficult!
you should definetly take a look at all the schools you are interested in and check out their admission requirements and look under international students
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| Nov29-12, 03:25 PM | #5 |
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I would suggest to go to a site like the Princeton Review or a Canadian version of College Board and go through all the universities you're interested in, rank them in terms of how your own scores, grades and GPA compare to other students, and then start contacting schools for more information. |
| Nov29-12, 07:13 PM | #6 |
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Also, i just looked up UofT and it is 60% for transfer students regardless, to the OP i suggest you take a look at all the universities websites that interest you to find out more information on international transfers. |
| Nov29-12, 07:35 PM | #7 |
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http://www.queensu.ca/admission/appl...l/England.html
to help you get started here is Queen's website for students from England. requirements is around what i stated before. 2.0 - 2.5 |
| Dec9-12, 02:33 PM | #8 |
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Well, my problem is really with converting the canadian GPA into a british grading system (where 70% of above is a first, 60% to 70% is a 2:1, etc.). I don't understand how to convert between the two. If I can do that, then that will narrow down my choice of universities. Can anyone help me with that?
Also, I heard that the University of Toronto does not allow transfer students to transfer their credits to their program of choice if they studies more than two years at their previous university. I have a problem here, because even though I only studied two years at Imperial College London, I covered a lot of the material in the third year courses at University of Toronto. Not sure if I should still apply to U of T. Any thoughts? |
| Dec9-12, 02:49 PM | #9 |
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http://www.collegeboard.com/html/aca...toconvert.html It should be quite similar for Canadian schools. BiP |
| Dec9-12, 04:03 PM | #10 |
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This WP article http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British...classification links to this spreadsheet http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British...te_note-hesa-5 . If I'm understanding correctly, it sounds like the OP's grades in the freshman year are equivalent to a "first," while his/her sophomore grades are equivalent to a 2:1. According to the spreadsheet, a first in the physical sciences put a student in the 89th percentile, while a 2:1 is 64th percentile. Converting these percentiles to US grades is going to be very difficult, because there's so much grade inflation in the US. At some schools in the US with highly selective admissions, the majority of grades are A's. I would suggest applying to one backup school that you're sure you can get into, one from about the middle of your list, and then as many more as you can afford to apply to at the top of the list. You could also look for stats on how many transfer students each of these schools accept every year. I don't know about Canada, but here in the US that statistic shows a huge amount of variation. Some schools get about half their student body as transfers from community colleges, while others (e.g., Cal Tech) might accept something like 10 transfer students every year. |
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