Getting into grad school
By Amy Brown-Bowers Bankrate.com
The number of graduate programs and graduate students in Canada and around the world is rising each year.
"Certainly everybody I've spoken to in the US, Canada, Australia and the UK is talking about the growing number of
students," says Douglas Peers, dean of graduate studies at York University. "The general trend right across the world is that numbers
are going up."
The University of Toronto receives about 22,000 applications exclusively each year for its roughly 150 graduate programs.
Simon Fraser University recently saw its number of graduate applications rise to about 6,000 from about 4,500 per year.
Applying to graduate school costs both time and money,
and competition to get in can be fierce. If you are considering
applying to graduate school, here are some things to think about
early on in the process to make sure you put your best foot forward.
Research vs. professional programs
Before researching schools and programs, it's important to determine what type of graduate program suits your needs -- a PhD track or
professional program.
"There's the category of doctoral stream, which is
you're working towards a PhD and you're very much oriented toward
academic scholarship. The other category is what we call professional
Master's degrees, and that's a very fundamental distinction," says
Susan Pfeiffer, dean of graduate studies and vice-provost of graduate
education at the University of Toronto.
"I always tell students that if they want to go to
grad school, first they have to think a little bit about why they
want to go," Peers says. "Is it intense curiosity about a research
question? A desire to teach? Professional upgrading? Applicants
need to think about why they want to go because, in some ways, that's
going to help them figure out the best way forward."
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