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gururaj026

Full Member
Jan 29, 2015
45
0
Hi,

My profile:
12th - 91%
B.E Mechanical - 8.1 CGPA
TOEFL - 103
3 1/2 years worked in L&T

I have decided to study abroad a year back, then I decided on Canada. At first I decided to pursue Masters in a university but the cost was high. Then I looked for Colleges which offers graduate diploma & graduate certificate, but some of my friends and colleagues told me that doing a course in college is not much of a value. Also universities can also be cheaper (Regina, Concordia, Saskatchewan, Simon Fraser etc,) One of my friends who is already in Canada asking me to do course in college stating that its not considered whether you studied in university or college when it is seen for a job prospect. I'm in a dilemma right now, whether to choose university or college. I want to study and settle in Canada. Someone pl help me regarding this. It'll mean a lot to me.

Thanks.
 
Your friend doesn't know what he's talking about. I was born in Canada and work in the banking industry and I can tell you that it most certainly makes a huge difference whether you completed your studies at the college or university level. In my department I need university graduates (preferably those with MBAs). Diplomas / post graduate diplomas are meaningless to me.

If you're in Engineering, a Masters in Engineering is far superior to any related college degree you can obtain. Your job prospects will be much stronger with a Masters.

I'm guessing your friend completed a college course in Canada and either doesn't know any better or is trying to make himself feel better about the education choices he has made.
 
There is a huge difference between a university degree and post graduate diploma. A lot of my friends are struggling with jobs who have done PGD course. Try to get into Mechanical, a lot of universities provide funding/ assistantship etc to International Students.
 
scylla said:
Your friend doesn't know what he's talking about. I was born in Canada and work in the banking industry and I can tell you that it most certainly makes a huge difference whether you completed your studies at the college or university level. In my department I need university graduates (preferably those with MBAs). Diplomas / post graduate diplomas are meaningless to me.

If you're in Engineering, a Masters in Engineering is far superior to any related college degree you can obtain. Your job prospects will be much stronger with a Masters.

I'm guessing your friend completed a college course in Canada and either doesn't know any better or is trying to make himself feel better about the education choices he has made.

Thank you very much for the information.
 
luvanuj said:
There is a huge difference between a university degree and post graduate diploma. A lot of my friends are struggling with jobs who have done PGD course. Try to get into Mechanical, a lot of universities provide funding/ assistantship etc to International Students.

Thank you.
 
gururaj026 said:
One of my friends who is already in Canada asking me to do course in college stating that its not considered whether you studied in university or college when it is seen for a job prospect. I'm in a dilemma right now, whether to choose university or college. I want to study and settle in Canada. Someone pl help me regarding this. It'll mean a lot to me.

I cannot agree 100% with others here on the above point. Yes, most of the time, it's true that a University degree is superior to a college one. But it may not be the fact in all job fields.

For example, I work in field at power sector (publicly owned). There is a 3:1 ratio of technician/technologist and engineers in field. The salary range is same with better benefits for technician/technologist as they have stronger union. BTW, I have a bachelors and a masters from Canadian university in engineering.

I'm not saying this is the picture you will see everywhere. In most cases, you will see the opposite. Hence my statement.


Coming to your profile:
It seems you will best fit in a university. You said you want to study and settle in Canada. That's another reason to go to a university. If you had said you just want to settle in Canada, I would have advised you otherwise. :)