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The Canadian Engineering Accreditation Board is responsible for accrediting undergraduate aerospace engineering programs, [7] graduate study in aerospace engineering is also available at several Canadian post-secondary institutions, though Canadian post-graduate engineering programs do not require accreditation.
The Faculty of Engineering is one of six faculties at the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.It has 8,698 undergraduate students, 2176 graduate students, 334 faculty and 52,750 alumni [1] making it the largest engineering school in Canada [2] with external research funding from 195 Canadian and international partners exceeding $86.8 million. [3]
By 2012, the OUAC had processed more than 14 million applications, submitted by more than 4.5 million applicants. Starting in 1975, the OUAC began processing applications to professional programs, including medicine (1975), teacher education (1979), law (1997) and rehabilitation sciences (2000). Each program has its own application service.
Such scholastic divisions for engineering are generally referred to by several different names, the most common being College of Engineering or School of Engineering, and typically consist of several departments, each of which has its own faculty and teaches a certain branch of engineering.
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (ERAU) is a private university focused on aviation and aerospace programs based in Daytona Beach, Florida, and Prescott, Arizona, United States. It is the largest accredited university system specializing in aviation and aerospace. [ 7 ]
Canadore College is a college of applied arts and technology located in North Bay, Ontario, Canada, attended primarily by international students. [3] It was founded in 1967 as a campus of Sudbury 's Cambrian College , and became an independent institution in 1972.
Henri Ziegler, S-1931, father of the Airbus program. Guy du Merle, S-1932, first director-general of the École nationale de l'aviation civile (French civil aviation university). François Hussenot, S-1935, inventor of the "hussenographe" (an early form of Flight data recorder or "black box"); also involved in the creation of EPNER.
Programs are offered to graduating high school students through choice; however, students must maintain specific entering averages, which generally range from 65 to 85%, depending on criteria set by the chosen university. On campus residences are available at 95% of universities in Canada. [4]