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Queen's University Reviews
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21 Reviews Found
The course curriculum and academics is excellent. It focuses more on student understanding rather than rote learning.
there are many reasons for choosing this college. Firstly it was my locational preference because i don't have to struggle with the language thing. secondly it offers multi project and multi year course curriculum that sounds more fascinating for me.
Ive only been in Queens for 1 semester online. But what Ive seen and heard from beforr and other upper year student is that there is a very nice sense of community at queen's. Everyone helps everyonr out. And what ive seen from the 4 profs and several TA's that I have had is that they are all very passionate about their respective courses and very eager to help whoever reaches out.
The city of Kingston where the university is located is very beautiful. And I have talked to some people from that university and one of the major thing everyone mentioned was that the teachers are very passionate. And that is the one thing that matters to me the most about any institute.
You need to stay on top of everything and have to study every day if you want to pass. The course curriculum is well-maintained and structured.
20000 per semester
My first-year courses are fairly basic but also very interesting. They will serve as a good foundation for the business world.
For commerce, it was about 15,000 per year. Books are about 400 per semester. I'm not sure if there are scholarships for international students. There are many entrance and commerce specific scholarships available. I was awarded the chancellors scholarship for 36,000 (9,000 per year). It is for students who excel in academics and extracurricular.
I enjoy what I learn in my program a lot! Sociology is very all-encompassing in which topics I learn can be anything among the following and more: surveillance, technology, consumer culture, gender and feminist theory, labor, or urban development. I believe the content is interdisciplinary and I enjoy that the most about the curriculum.
Tuition for a full course load (100%, 5 courses/ 18 credit units) is CAD$ 3,429.50 per semester and a total of CAD$ 1,099.44 is charged in mandatory student fees and ancillary fees. These include charges for student services, campus extra-curricular, athletics and recreation membership, student government fees, etc. With the introduction of the Ontario Government's Student Choice Initiative, many of these fees will become opt-out which is eliminating many of the programmings our student government offers and supports available on campus. Overall, how much is paid in student fees will vary amongst individuals going forward.
My course curriculum is very good. It is incredibly thorough and well prepares me for working in economics. At the same time, it is incredibly difficult as a result and many people end up dropping out of the program.
Arts and Science (economics) tuition is $7500 per year, with $500-1000 in other fees. The other fees are optional/opt out.
Curriculum was comprehensive, and offered a wide range of subjects within mathematics. Everything from actuary studies to complex analysis to game theory was offered as courses. Professor quality varied.
Basic student fees for transit pass, insurance, gym membership, student government. Courses were included in tuition fees, dropped courses by a certain date are refunded. Textbooks are often expensive, though some profs will use older versions that can be bought secondhand.
They offer a great variety of courses in my program. Some courses are better organized than others, most are weighted well and fairly graded. Some required courses were not very useful but a lot taught me a lot that I will be able to apply to future courses.
In the first year, the residence was quite expensive because of having a food plan. This year I only pay tuition which has made it a lot cheaper. Textbooks are another expense that I had to pay for which can become very expensive very fast when I need one for every class. $200 for a textbook is too expensive when I have to buy 5 of them.
It is in depth and reasonable, although slightly liberal. The best courses are ones that have curriculum focusing on current events and relevancy to real life (e.g. Arts Administration, Organizational Behaviour).
Quarterly tuition fees and optional residence/meal plan charges paid to the school, plus general living expenses like rent and food to various other sources.
I feel that the course curriculum was quite intense but certainly manageable. As I progressed into higher years, I found a suitable routine and organization strategy that worked to balance work and personal life.
The fee structure was 2 payments. 60% due in September and 40%(approximately) in January. It was about $13000 total per year owed to the school. Tuition was 9-11 K and the remaining was health insurance, student fees, and optional club fees.
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