Is Transferring to Canada for a PhD a Good Decision?

  • Thread starter Thread starter uskalu
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Canada Usa
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the potential transfer of a Physics graduate student from Arizona State University to the University of Alberta in Canada due to family reasons. Concerns were raised about the perceived quality of Canadian education compared to the U.S. system. Participants noted that the recognition of PhDs from both countries is comparable, with no definitive advantage for U.S. degrees. The University of Alberta was highlighted for its strong funding in sciences, particularly in physics, and its global ranking, which is better than that of Arizona State. The quality of education in both countries is considered similar, with many professors trained in both systems. Ultimately, the strength of specific programs varies by institution, with Alberta's physics program being regarded as exceptional.
uskalu
Messages
38
Reaction score
0
Hi All,
I'm a Physics graduate student at Arizona State university and I'm willing to tranfer to CANADA ( University of Alberta) due to family reason. However some people say that Canadian education systme is not good as U.S. system.

PhD from U.S more recognize than CANADA?
I need your feedback to get a correct decission.
Please help me.
Thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Depends on supervisor and research, I have a friend who just transferred from University of Arizona to Queen's (Canada), and he prefers the program here for GR. U Alberta has tonnes of oil money being thrown at sciences and their physics program is really booming. I have a feeling you won't really suffer at all from the transfer.
 
Also, though you can take rankings with a grain of salt, THES ranks University of Alberta 59th in the world, while Arizona state doesn't even make the top 200.
 
Do you have any idea about the quality of education in US and CANADA?
 
They are basically the same, a lot of profs at Canadian Universities were trained in the US, and vice versa.
 
PhD's from the USA are not more recognized than those from Canada, and I wouldn't go as far as saying the US education system is better either... Some US universities are more established but this is definitely not an accurate statement. The strength of any specific program varies from school to school. The university of Alberta has a very strong chemistry department. There are other schools in Canada that do have stronger physics departments, but it is still considered fairly exceptional.
 
I graduated with a BSc in Physics in 2020. Since there were limited opportunities in my country (mostly teaching), I decided to improve my programming skills and began working in IT, first as a software engineer and later as a quality assurance engineer, where I’ve now spent about 3 years. While this career path has provided financial stability, I’ve realized that my excitement and passion aren’t really there, unlike what I felt when studying or doing research in physics. Working in IT...
Hi everyone! I'm a senior majoring in physics, math, and music, and I'm currently in the process applying for theoretical and computational biophysics (primarily thru physics departments) Ph.D. programs. I have a 4.0 from a basically unknown school in the American South, two REUs (T50 and T25) in computational biophysics and two semesters of research in optics (one purely experimental, one comp/exp) at my home institution (since there aren't any biophysics profs at my school), but no...

Similar threads

Replies
1
Views
1K
Replies
12
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
1K
Replies
5
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
3K
Back
Top