The undergraduate education system of the University of Toronto is divided into three-year system and four-year system.
The undergraduate education system of the University of Toronto is divided into three-year system and four-year system. A 3-year undergraduate degree is awarded to the General Bachelor Degree, and a 4-year undergraduate degree is awarded to the Honors Bachelor Degree.
The number of scientific research papers published by the University of Toronto every year is second only to Harvard University, and the number of paper citations ranks among the top five in the world. The University of Toronto is one of the 62 top North American research universities in association of american universities, only two of which are located outside the United States. It has the top three library systems in the world, and its collection is second only to Harvard and Yale. Its publishing system also has far-reaching influence in the world.
undergraduate major in Toronto
1. Architectural research
The architectural research project guides students to enter the discipline of architecture as an unparalleled lens to pursue liberal arts education. We are committed to making design thinking an important supplement to the humanities and science focus of the University of Toronto. The purpose of the program is to train a group of graduates with visual literacy and various key skills, so that they can pursue a variety of career paths and social backgrounds in the fields of architecture, landscape, urban design and our ever-changing other cultural enterprises.
2. visual research
the course of visual research focuses on critical understanding and creation of art. Visual research is set in a unique environment, focusing on the rigorous investigation of interdisciplinary and conceptual components inherent in contemporary art and curatorial practice, as well as literacy in critical writing, theory, art history, design and related fields that require a high degree of vision. This innovative study plan provides studio practice guidance through lectures, studio courses, seminars and field visits, combined with critical discourse involving all aspects of contemporary visual culture. Students who major in the course deliberately leave enough space during their study to pursue other academic interests at the University of Toronto.
3. Art management
Although most of the academic work of this project is based on the non-profit art model, the skills cultivated by UTSC art management students are transferable skills: critical thinking, organizational development, marketing, fund-raising, public relations and public policies can be applied to many fields, and graduates may eventually choose to work in commercial music, movies and television and other for-profit cultural industries, or even need similar ones.