Dear Netters:
 
Students of IIT's and others alike already know about the prospects of higher 
education in Canada. Today's Global edition of the New York Times  has the 
following piece under the caption: Indian students find abundant reasons to 
enroll in Canadian colleges. In the New York Times the article appeared under a 
different caption possibly one or two days earlier which does not really 
matter...........Bhuban.
Besides the country’s positive attitude toward outsiders, the chief attractions 
for Indian students are the lower costs for both tuition and living expenses, 
in addition to its lenient visa requirements, according to students and 
consultants who advise them about overseas study options. 
The number of Canadian student visas issued in India jumped to more than 12,000 
in 2010, from 3,152 in 2008. 
While applications have increased at all levels, growth has been greatest at 
community colleges, which typically offer career-focused certificate and 
diploma programs, according to Simon Cridland, a spokesman at the Canadian High 
Commission in New Delhi. 
“They offer very practical training that is very job-market focused,” he said, 
adding that courses range from highly technical subjects like aircraft 
maintenance and computer animation to sports management and hospitality. 
Shreya Dasgupta, a recent high school graduate from New Delhi, plans to start 
studying economics and business at Simon Fraser University’s Burnaby campus 
this fall. Ms. Dasgupta, 18, said that while she did not have a strong 
preference for any one country, she found Canada’s relatively liberal visa 
rules attractive. 
“I think it’s easier than the United States,” she said. “Plus, you do have job 
opportunities later on. In the U.S., it’s very expensive and it’s not sure that 
you’ll get a job.” 
Kartik Rao, who has been admitted to an M.B.A. program at Concordia University 
in Montreal, also said that Canada is more welcoming. “Irrespective of my 
getting a job, I have a three-year work visa which will allow me to work, which 
will in turn allow me to pay back my loan,” he said. 
Mr. Rao, 25, estimates that his business degree in Canada will cost 35 percent 
to 40 percent less than what it would cost in the United States or in Britain. 
Also driving his optimism is the belief that employment prospects in Canada are 
better. 
“The financial downturn has forced people to look for new avenues,” he said. 
“Canada was not as badly affected, which really tilted people’s views about 
Canada.” 
Also, warming political ties have raised the country’s profile in India. Among 
the agreements signed during a visit to Canada last summer by Prime Minister 
Manmohan Singh was a pact on broadening ties in higher education. To promote 
this initiative, 15 university presidents from Canada visited India last 
November. 
Last month, the heads of dozens of Indian universities participated in a high 
level meeting at Carleton University in Ottawa to explore possibilities for 
increased collaboration. 
“There is increasing awareness of what kinds of experience and expertise are 
available in the Canadian higher education system,” said Gail Bowkett, the 
assistant director for international relations at the Association of 
Universities and Colleges of Canada. “Indian students can find pretty much any 
niche that they are looking for.” 
As part of its effort to showcase the variety of academic programs, Canada has 
launched a program for Indian students to complete three- to four-month paid 
research internships at leading Canadian universities. In 2010, 105 students 
from the prestigious Indian Institutes of Technology were chosen for the 
all-expenses-paid program. They travelled to British Columbia, Ontario and New 
Brunswick to conduct research. 
Ms. Bowkett said the positive experience of these elite students has been a 
huge image booster. “The program exposes them to faculty and facilities, and 
those students are going back to India and it spreads like wildfire by word of 
mouth when they go back.” 
Also, starting in 2009, the Canadian visa offices in India started to increase 
the promotion of community colleges. According to Mr. Cridland, the jump in 
applications to these institutions is a sign that Indians who normally send 
their children overseas for a university degree are now open to the idea of 
also sending them to community colleges. 
For instance, a course in accounting or public relations “can be an additional 
qualification that complements a university degree, or it can be a stand-alone 
qualification, depending on the needs of the student,” he said

 Article by Vir Singh






 
 

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