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The Ontario Universities' Application Centre (OUAC) (French: Centre de demande d’admission aux universités de l’Ontario) is a non-profit organization based in Guelph that processes online applications for admission to universities in Ontario, Canada.
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.
OCAS Application Services, formerly known as the Ontario College Application Service (OCAS) is a non-profit corporation created in 1991 by the Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology and Institutes of Technology and Advanced Learning in the province of Ontario, Canada. [1] OCAS represents Ontario's 24 Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology (CAAT).
From a completely online curriculum, students learn how to create networks, and repair, build & format computers. This course was unique to Waterloo Collegiate Institute as it was the only location in southern Ontario to offer Cisco Certified courses, but the program was suddenly discontinued in the 2010-2011 year.
In October 2022, Jill Dunlop announced the approval of UNF and its initial program offerings. [4] [5] The university is located on 4342 Queen Street. In April 2024, the university started its inaugural term with sixty students in two graduate programs. [6] In September 2024, the university marked its official opening.
Georgian College offers academic upgrading, apprenticeship training, certificate, diploma, graduate certificate, college degree and university programs (including combined degree-diplomas) and part-time studies in such areas such as automotive business, business and management, community safety, computer studies, design and visual arts, engineering technology and environmental studies, health ...
The university made a formal request to the OGS program to cease using social insurance numbers (SINs) for program administration; [29] but no change was made. The university had also contacted Service Canada about granting affected students new SINs, which was denied because there was no documented fraud associated with the affected SINs. [29]
English is the language of instruction for the majority of programs at publicly funded colleges in Ontario, although some programs are taught in French. [11] There are 22 publicly funded colleges operating as English-language institutions and two as French-language institutions. [12] The following is a list of publicly funded colleges in Ontario: