Council of Ontario Universities
Established | 1962 |
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President | Steve Orsini |
Address | 180 Dundas Street West Suite 1800 Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 , Toronto , Ontario , Canada |
Affiliations | Universities Canada, IAU, COU |
Website | cou.ca |
The Council of Ontario Universities (COU) provides a forum for Ontario's universities to collaborate and advocate in support of their shared mission to the benefit and prosperity of students, communities and the province of Ontario. A membership organization consisting of Ontario's 20 publicly assisted universities and one associate member, the Royal Military College of Canada, COU works with members to find consensus on a wide range of university issues and advances them with government and other stakeholders.[1]
The Ontario Universities' Application Centre, a division of COU, is the processing centre for all of the province's universities. It collects and distributes applications for undergraduate, professional and selected graduate programs. The centre's website provides data on applications each year.
Member Institutions
- Algoma University
- Brock University
- Carleton University
- University of Guelph
- Lakehead University
- Laurentian University
- McMaster University
- Nipissing University
- OCAD University
- Ontario Tech University
- University of Ottawa
- Queen's University
- Toronto Metropolitan University
- Trent University
- University of Toronto
- University of Waterloo
- Western University
- Wilfrid Laurier University
- University of Windsor
- York University
Associate Member Institution
Provisional Member Institutions
- Northern Ontario School of Medicine University
- Université de Hearst
- Université de l'Ontario français
External links
- Council of Ontario Universities' website
- Ontario's Universities
- Ontario Universities' Application Centre (OUAC)
- eINFO - a guide to Ontario's universities
- Accessible Campus
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Public universities[1] | |
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Private universities[2] |
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Public universities grant degrees under the authority of an Act of the Legislative Assembly or a Royal Charter.[3] Private universities grant degrees under the authority of an Act of the Legislative Assembly or may provide individual degree programs with the consent of the Minister of Training, Colleges and Universities.[4] | |
Degree programs offered under Ministerial Consent |
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Affiliated/federated schools |
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‡French-language institution; *bilingual institution (English/French).[5] |
Colleges of applied arts and technology | |
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Institutes of technology and advanced learning | |
Defunct | |
†Degree programs offered ‡French-language institution[5] |
Other recognized institutions | |
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Specialist institutions |
Aboriginal institutes | |
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References
- ^ "About Us," Council of Ontario Universities. URL: http://www.cou.ca/about/