footywiz10 Posted May 11, 2015 Posted May 11, 2015 GPA: 2.96 GRE: Quantitative: 160 Verbal: 157 TOEFL: 105 Any graduate schools in Canada that possibly I can still apply to for this fall and will accept me? I have a degree in Physics with over 32 credit hours of math. I would love a masters degree in Engineering Mathematics or even Statistics. If not I can still do Physics. Please help. Much obliged.
TakeruK Posted May 11, 2015 Posted May 11, 2015 Are you an international student or a Canadian? It might be tough if you are international because at this point, usually (but not always), all of the funding for international students have been allocated. In any case, it never hurts to just ask each program individually--the worst that can happen is that they say no. There are only a few tens of schools in Canada with graduate programs, you should be able to just contact every single one of them and ask. If you want a list of schools, a helpful place to begin is the Macleans magazine rankings. The 2014 version is free online and you shouldn't use the rankings themselves, but just to find out the names of all the schools available. I would recommend you look up each school's website to find the department you are interested in, and then find the contact information and ask if they are still accepting students for Fall 2015. Here are the three ranking lists (Macleans splits the Canadian schools into 3 categories--you may want to avoid the "primarily undergraduate" category since they may not have graduate programs in these fields): Medical/Doctoral: http://www.macleans.ca/education/uniandcollege/2014-university-rankings-medical-doctoral-category-results/ Comprehensive: http://www.macleans.ca/education/uniandcollege/2014-university-rankings-comprehensive-category-results/ Primarily Undergraduate: http://www.macleans.ca/education/uniandcollege/2014-university-rankings-primarily-undergraduate-results/ There are about 30 schools total in the first two categories, so you should be able to get through everything in about 5-6 hours (assuming roughly 10 minutes per school). MathCat 1
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