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The Université de Moncton is a Canadian francophone university in New Brunswick. It includes campuses in Edmundston, Moncton, and Shippagan.. The university was founded in 1963 following the recommendations of the royal commission on higher education in New Brunswick.
This is a list of universities and colleges in New Brunswick, Canada: ... Université de Moncton; University of New Brunswick; Private chartered universities
University of New Brunswick - UNB Moncton consists of a small health sciences campus located next to the Moncton Hospital. Degree courses are available in Nursing and Medical X-ray Technology. [3] UNB's main campus is located in Fredericton, with another large campus in Saint John.
The public university full-time domestic tuition fees for 2011-2012 are $6,920 at Mount Allison University, $4,770 at St. Thomas University, $5,117 at Université de Moncton, and $5,682 at the University of New Brunswick.
The Faculty was established in 1978 in order to respond to the needs of the people of New Brunswick, as well as other Canadians preferring a francophone education in common law. As a bilingual province, both constitutionally and in practice, New Brunswick is home to a francophone population who follow the common law tradition, unlike Quebec ...
Croix-Bleue Medavie Stadium (French: Stade Croix-Bleue Medavie), formerly Moncton Stadium (French: Stade Moncton), is a track and field stadium on the campus of the Université de Moncton in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada, built to host the IAAF 2010 World Junior Championships in Athletics. [5] The $17 million venue opened in 2010.
The Simon-Larouche building at the Université de Moncton campus d'Edmundston. The Edmundston campus of the Université de Moncton is built on an elevated area of the downtown core, near the Trans-Canada Highway. It has four pavilions, a student center and a residence with the capacity to house nearly 90 students. It welcomes more than 375 ...
The University of St. Joseph's College was the leading Acadian cultural institution, an Acadian Catholic university in Memramcook, New Brunswick that closed in 1966, when it was forced to be amalgamated with two other Catholic Acadian colleges to form the secular Université de Moncton.