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Thread: Make fun of me for I go to UOIT! (Uni of Ontario) (Its in Oshawa)
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Aug 15th, 2005 03:04 PM
#16
well
A degree is a degree, doesn't matter what school you get it from. Most employers see a degree as being able to think outside the box, they are usually not as concerned with where the degree came from. (I know there are exceptions to this in certain fields)
If you leave Ontario to get a job your degree is just as good as someone elses from a different school. It's mostly about what you know/who you know/previous experience. It doesn't matter if your degree is from UofT or Queens or from UOIT (in most fields).. As long as you know your ****, have good experience (internships etc) and you know someone to get you in, then your set.
Last edited by sephlod; Aug 15th, 2005 at 03:07 PM.
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Aug 15th, 2005 04:51 PM
#17

Originally Posted by
carabunny
level of education you get is great... perhaps... this statement would be backed up better if you went to another school and compared it? it just seems a bit vague
if they try their hardest to help students pass... it seems that they're adjusting grades or doing something regarding marks to help students pass....
sorry, i guess i'm a bit biased since its a new uni and all.
nope they arent adjusting grades, I didnt have a class where they bell curved yet, Chem 1 and 2 was hard, in chem 1 about 50% of the people failed, chem 2 about the same amount failed. The prof said she wouldnt bell curve cause some people just didnt try.
By helping people pass is that they have A LOT of on call staff to help the students, tutorial, lecturers always on call, most days until like 10 pm.
Ive spoken to my buddy at UofT and a couple of people at brock, they werent that impressed with their school's commitment (well brock was said to be better than UofT).
But that doesnt matter as someone posted, its all about connections after you get your degree or diploma.
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Aug 15th, 2005 09:54 PM
#18
Jr. Member

[QUOTE=x-batman]nope they arent adjusting grades, I didnt have a class where they bell curved yet, Chem 1 and 2 was hard, in chem 1 about 50% of the people failed, chem 2 about the same amount failed. The prof said she wouldnt bell curve cause some people just didnt try.
By helping people pass is that they have A LOT of on call staff to help the students, tutorial, lecturers always on call, most days until like 10 pm.
Ive spoken to my buddy at UofT and a couple of people at brock, they werent that impressed with their school's commitment (well brock was said to be better than UofT).
[QUOTE]
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LOL. Maybe it's not "hard" but because of the type of people that are enrolled there. If people had a choice between going to U of T or UOIT, I think I know which one they'd pick. Seriously. Maybe the staff ARE great, maybe you guys need the extra staff...
Studying should be up to YOU. You reap what you sow. In university it's time for one to be independent, rather than depend on your teachers like in highschool, which is quite reminiscent of elementary.
I know, I'm mean. 
(Your original post told people to make fun of you)
Last edited by tmx; Aug 15th, 2005 at 09:57 PM.
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Aug 15th, 2005 10:23 PM
#19
[QUOTE=tmx][QUOTE=x-batman]nope they arent adjusting grades, I didnt have a class where they bell curved yet, Chem 1 and 2 was hard, in chem 1 about 50% of the people failed, chem 2 about the same amount failed. The prof said she wouldnt bell curve cause some people just didnt try.
By helping people pass is that they have A LOT of on call staff to help the students, tutorial, lecturers always on call, most days until like 10 pm.
Ive spoken to my buddy at UofT and a couple of people at brock, they werent that impressed with their school's commitment (well brock was said to be better than UofT).
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LOL. Maybe it's not "hard" but because of the type of people that are enrolled there. If people had a choice between going to U of T or UOIT, I think I know which one they'd pick. Seriously. Maybe the staff ARE great, maybe you guys need the extra staff...
Studying should be up to YOU. You reap what you sow. In university it's time for one to be independent, rather than depend on your teachers like in highschool, which is quite reminiscent of elementary.
I know, I'm mean.
(Your original post told people to make fun of you)
You suck, cause you make no sense. First of all, Obviously no one would pick UOIT over UofT, UOIT is just beggining and needs to make a new for itself. Next, saying studying is up to us, OBVIOUSLY, NO **** SHIRLOCKS, studying is up to us DID I SAY THEY CHASE US AROUND ASKING IF WE NEED HELP? Think about the failiure rate in the first year at established schools, they need extra staff too to be there to answer questions, the best students are the students who ask and inquire, thats no matter where they go.
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Aug 15th, 2005 11:55 PM
#20
man... seriously... an undergrad degree is an undergrad degree... it is grad skool that you need to worry about!
For UOIT it is new so it has no reputation yet... so seriously there is no making fun... yet
For instance waterloo compared to U of T is young but it's reputation is great for math and eng.
And as far as I know U of T is ONLY good for their GRAD studies and their high first year failure rates.
and most people I know go to U of T is because they can take the bus there and save on the accomodations thru out the study term. Don't get me wrong I don't hate it U of T... if you can make it great!
remember getting into Uni is EASY... getting out with a degree... dats HARD!
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Aug 16th, 2005 02:20 AM
#21
If you know your stuff and have some sort of people skills then you'll be fine.
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Aug 16th, 2005 10:41 PM
#22

Originally Posted by
bmw_xperience
And as far as I know U of T is ONLY good for their GRAD studies and their high first year failure rates.
Don't get me wrong I don't hate it U of T... if you can make it great!
LOL at the failure rates. And I hate U of T! I went there and gave them
$20 000 for the privilege to do so!
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Aug 26th, 2005 07:38 AM
#23

Originally Posted by
x-batman
I truly have no complaints, the staff is always willing to help, nice small lecture sizes (250 students MAX), and the prof's doors are almost always open.
Interesting what you consider a "small" lecture size. I mean, sure 250 doesn't compare to UofT's 1000 student lectures, but its still pretty big.
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Aug 26th, 2005 05:47 PM
#24
As said before, UOIT is new and has no reputation... Wait till GM is done pumping money their into it, that should help out the Engineering Dept. a little bit
And how many schools have EVERY student hooked up with laptops for their classes?
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Aug 26th, 2005 07:20 PM
#25

Originally Posted by
RTC
As said before, UOIT is new and has no reputation... Wait till GM is done pumping money their into it, that should help out the Engineering Dept. a little bit
And how many schools have EVERY student hooked up with laptops for their classes?
The laptop thing may be true, but I for one am not looking forward to paying half the price of a laptop just to lease it for a year. Even so, thats likely where I'm going after taking this year off since its only 10min away.
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Aug 26th, 2005 07:40 PM
#26

Originally Posted by
vithushy
Hey, what year are u going for this fall, 2 or 3?
I'm frm UOIT

Nice, I'm actually in second year but transfered to commerce so now a first year (2nd year back) commerce student
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Sep 15th, 2005 02:31 PM
#27
A little late, but yes. I go to UOIT too. I'm in Commerce. I'm technically year 1.5, since I started in January 2005.
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