Hi there, I've been offered acceptance at the schools in Canada I've applied to-hooray! I've narrowed it down to UBC and Carleton, mainly because of the research and opportunity available at UBC, their emphasis on sustainability and how close it is to my home of Alberta. Carleton, has a very new program and I don't know much about it, but they've offered me funding and a TA position off the bat. I guess any insight to either school and your experience would be great, I'm really torn because of how expensive UBC will be in comparison to Carleton..
Non Sequitur
Mar 15, 19 5:58 pm
both schools are comparable. Take the cheapest option.
How do you figure Carleton is new? Their March has been around for decades.
dezeener
Mar 15, 19 6:30 pm
Thanks for your answer! I think they rebranded or something as the Azraeli school of architecture that gave me that impression. I could be very wrong. Out east is foreign to me
Non Sequitur
Mar 15, 19 7:57 pm
They got a donation and renamed the school a long time ago.
workmorelivemore
Mar 15, 19 6:57 pm
Have you factored in the cost of flights back home if you were to go to Carleton? Because that might even things out for you.
saqibm7575
Mar 17, 19 9:27 pm
I think Non Sequitur is correct, the only major changed at Carleton is the addition of the "Studio One", which added a year to the M.Arch program (Total of 3 years) allowing students with non-architectural background to apply as well. Aside from that, I think I have read many many MANY posts about how Carleton M.Arch has been going downhill (Sorry I cannot recall the reasons). Personally, I would choice UBC; amazing city, love the curriculum, the school is recognized worldwide, tuition is VERY reasonable when comparing to other Canadian ivy architecture school like U of T, weather is amazing and for you... it is close to home. And I do not know if this matters much, but I think UBC's M.Arch is much more competitive then Caleton's in terms of getting accepted... CONGRATZ!!!!. That said, I do have a question for you, did you turn in your results of your GRE for UBC's application or applied without it?
Non Sequitur
Mar 17, 19 11:38 pm
there are no ivy schools in canada and even if there were, UofT would not be on that list. For what it's worth, I turned down a full-paid M.arch ride at Carleton to be wait-listed at UBC... to then ditch that when I was accepted to Waterloo. That was 13y ago.
saqibm7575
Mar 18, 19 12:10 am
True, sadly U of T, along with McGill, UBC, etc. are considered the "Top Universities"in Canada, i guess that is what i was referring to. Anyways, I would too turn down Carleton even if it came with fully paid tuition...however, I would do the same if Waterloo offered me that too. I guess what I'm getting at is that it depends on what is important to you. I been living in Toronto for 15 years, and I don
saqibm7575
Mar 18, 19 12:23 am
(cont. from previous comment) What is important to you: location, lifestyle, program curriculum, tuition, living cost, etc... I moved to Sudbury for B.Arch, and after living there for a week, I wanted to blow my brains out. I moved back to Toronto the week after. So, consider everything that will effect you for the time you going to spend there... I hope this helps you Dezeener! Best of Luck!
Non Sequitur
Mar 18, 19 6:00 am
Sudbury? Man, I can see that. Typically you’d think quality of education will compensate for a shitty location, but damn, Sudbury gets two Xs on that list.
dezeener
Mar 21, 19 10:05 am
This is quite helpful, to make a decision alone based on curriculum just won't be enough for me. And I left my GRE out of it-the more emphasis on my portfolio and not my average grades the better haha. Thank you for the insight!
Hi there,
I've been offered acceptance at the schools in Canada I've applied to-hooray! I've narrowed it down to UBC and Carleton, mainly because of the research and opportunity available at UBC, their emphasis on sustainability and how close it is to my home of Alberta. Carleton, has a very new program and I don't know much about it, but they've offered me funding and a TA position off the bat. I guess any insight to either school and your experience would be great, I'm really torn because of how expensive UBC will be in comparison to Carleton..
both schools are comparable. Take the cheapest option.
How do you figure Carleton is new? Their March has been around for decades.
Thanks for your answer! I think they rebranded or something as the Azraeli school of architecture that gave me that impression. I could be very wrong. Out east is foreign to me
They got a donation and renamed the school a long time ago.
Have you factored in the cost of flights back home if you were to go to Carleton? Because that might even things out for you.
I think Non Sequitur is correct, the only major changed at Carleton is the addition of the "Studio One", which added a year to the M.Arch program (Total of 3 years) allowing students with non-architectural background to apply as well. Aside from that, I think I have read many many MANY posts about how Carleton M.Arch has been going downhill (Sorry I cannot recall the reasons). Personally, I would choice UBC; amazing city, love the curriculum, the school is recognized worldwide, tuition is VERY reasonable when comparing to other Canadian ivy architecture school like U of T, weather is amazing and for you... it is close to home. And I do not know if this matters much, but I think UBC's M.Arch is much more competitive then Caleton's in terms of getting accepted... CONGRATZ!!!!. That said, I do have a question for you, did you turn in your results of your GRE for UBC's application or applied without it?
there are no ivy schools in canada and even if there were, UofT would not be on that list. For what it's worth, I turned down a full-paid M.arch ride at Carleton to be wait-listed at UBC... to then ditch that when I was accepted to Waterloo. That was 13y ago.
True, sadly U of T, along with McGill, UBC, etc. are considered the "Top Universities"in Canada, i guess that is what i was referring to. Anyways, I would too turn down Carleton even if it came with fully paid tuition...however, I would do the same if Waterloo offered me that too. I guess what I'm getting at is that it depends on what is important to you. I been living in Toronto for 15 years, and I don
(cont. from previous comment) What is important to you: location, lifestyle, program curriculum, tuition, living cost, etc... I moved to Sudbury for B.Arch, and after living there for a week, I wanted to blow my brains out. I moved back to Toronto the week after. So, consider everything that will effect you for the time you going to spend there... I hope this helps you Dezeener! Best of Luck!
Sudbury? Man, I can see that. Typically you’d think quality of education will compensate for a shitty location, but damn, Sudbury gets two Xs on that list.
This is quite helpful, to make a decision alone based on curriculum just won't be enough for me. And I left my GRE out of it-the more emphasis on my portfolio and not my average grades the better haha. Thank you for the insight!