Best Canadian Schools

I know the top 3 are McGill, University of Toronto and University of British Columbia. Which of the three is the best for a degree in Business? A degree in Biology?

Thank you.
(Canadian schools in case Trump gets elected.)

I’m just kidding about Trump. I am genuinely interested in foreign schools.

They are all excellent, and in such dramatically different locations that your choice should be made on those differences rather than the minor differences in academic quality. Be aware that U of Western Ontario is often mentioned.as.a top business school up north.

I’ve noticed that the 3 you mentioned are the only 3 Canadian schools that regularly get mentioned on College Confidential. How 'bout a little love for Queen’s, W. Ontario, McMaster, Alberta, Dalhousie, Calgary, York, New Brunswick, Ottawa, Carlton, et al ?

I would regard Mt. Allison and Acadia as two of the strongest schools in Canada. I do not know what they offer in terms of business degrees, however.

For commerce UT & UWO. UT is particularly strong and has many ties to Bay Street and the banks because of proximity and the large number of corporate HQ in GTA. It is similar to NYU in that regard. That won’t help you too much if you are not a Canadian citizen beyond your student years, but there is plenty of cross border business.

The best program IMO (perhaps later ) is the combined Kellogg/Schulich MBA which gets you degrees from both universities. That way you can access two strong alumni networks.

London is a lot smaller but still a very nice college town.

for business- undergrad, Queen’s, Western and U of T
for biology - U of T, McGill

@merc81

Be aware that Mount Allison University has a mediocre 56% 6 year graduation rate, comparable to third tier American schools. This is according to Macleans magazine.

http://www.macleans.ca/schools/mount-allison-university/

For business, definitely UWO in Canada.

UWO, Queen’s.
Waterloo has strong co-ops.
Dalhousie, Mount Allison, Concordia, Bishop’s (the last two in Quebec, so nice bilingual possibilities)
Simon Fraser as a possibility after UBC