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Category for all universities and community colleges, and other recognized post-secondary institutions in Toronto, Ontario, Canada Wikimedia Commons has media related to Universities and colleges in Toronto .
A History of the University of Trinity College. Toronto: 1952. Melville, Henry. (1852). The Rise and Progress of Trinity College, Toronto; with a Sketch of the Life of the Lord Bishop of Toronto as Connected with Church Education in Canada. Toronto: Henry Roswell. Watson, Andrew. Trinity, 1852-1952. Toronto: Trinity Review, 1952. Sutton, Barbara.
Along with University College, they comprise the university's constituent colleges, which are established and funded by the central administration and are therefore financially dependent. [78] [79] Massey College was established in 1963 by the Massey Foundation as a college exclusively for graduate students. [80]
On 22 April 1853, University College was created as the Provincial College, and it retains that designation in the current University of Toronto Act. It was the first constituent college of the University of Toronto, inheriting the teaching functions and resources of the former King's College, while the university itself became an examination body.
The Centennial College of Applied Arts and Technology [2] [3] is a public college in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is the oldest publicly funded college in Ontario. [ 4 ] Its campuses are situated on the east side of the city, particularly in Scarborough , [ 4 ] with an aerospace center at Downsview Park in North York.
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It is also the newest of the colleges at the University of Toronto, created in 1974. Woodsworth College's arms and badge were registered with the Canadian Heraldic Authority on October 15, 2006. [1] The college was founded to serve part-time students exclusively, specifically adults pursuing studies in Arts and Sciences, and transfer students.
Upper Canada Academy in Cobourg, 1863 (Victoria University Archives). Victoria College was founded as the Upper Canada Academy by the Wesleyan Methodist Church.In 1831, a church committee decided to locate the academy on four acres (1.6 hectares) of land in Cobourg, Ontario, east of Toronto, because of its central location in a large town and access by land and water.