Study finds students highly satisfied with northern Ontario colleges - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 03:39 AM | Calgary | -14.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
SudburyUpdated

Study finds students highly satisfied with northern Ontario colleges

Northern Ontario colleges rank high when it came to pleasing students and future employers, according to a new Colleges Ontario survey.
Recruiters from northern Ontario colleges are using results from a recent survey to entice southern students to their schools. (nerdmeister, Flickr cc)

Northern Ontario colleges rankhighwhen it cameto pleasing students and their future employers, according to anew survey byColleges Ontario.

Five of the six northern schools ranked in the top eight inOntario.

Confederation College in Thunder Bay,Sault College, Northern College in Timmins, CanadoreCollege in North Bayand College Boreal in Sudbury all scored above the provincial average of 76 per centin student satisfaction.

The surveyresults are good news forKatherineVilleneuve, a recruiter with the StudyNorth Initiative,because theycoverall aspects of college life.

"Things like teachers, programs, courses, environment, the facilities, residence ...[are]taken into account." she said.

A study by Colleges Ontario says five of the six colleges in northern Ontario rank high with student satisfaction. (Erik Hill/The Associated Press)

Come to the north, recruiter says

Villeneuvesaid the results from thesurvey are helpful toconvince southern students to come north.

Thegoal isto sign up 50students from southern Ontario,who wouldn't normally have come north for their educationsaid Villeneuve.

The deadline to enroll in acollege-level course is May 1.

"[The schools]have quite a few incentives for southern Ontario students,"said Villeneuve. Those includetravel and entrance incentives, forchoosinga college in the north.

The Study North Initiative is in itssecond of a three year project and is paid for by the Northern Ontario Heritage Fund and the colleges themselves.

With files from Kate Rutherford