Canada Study and Tour
Information
Canada is a wonderful country for international students and visitors who tour, study or
vacation in this open modern society. Canada is the world leader in education and
humanitarian peace keeping, medical and logistical aid to the entire world in times of
need.
There are several exciting study and tour programs available for international English
teachers and their students. The teacher tours and study tours programs are a wonderful
opportunity to see real Canadian wilderness and study in a living classroom.

Canadian City Guide
Calgary -
Charlottetown -
Edmonton -
Halifax -
Hamilton -
London -
Montreal -
Ottawa -
Regina -
Saint John NB -
St. John's NFLD -
Toronto -
Vancouver -
Victoria -
Winnipeg -
ESL in Canada Teacher and Study
Tours Programs
Teacher Tours are ideal for English
teachers who want to travel to Canada with their class.
The Study Tour program consists of
interchangeable tours, study programs and event attendance.
Canada FAQ's
The name “Canada” is believed to derive from an Iroquois term meaning village. Canada is
the worlds second-largest country, eclipsed only by Russia. Canada's north boundary is
the Arctic Ocean, the north-east boundary is Baffin Bay and Davis Strait, the east
boundary is the Atlantic Ocean, the west boundary is the Pacific Ocean and the south
borders the United States and Alaska to the north-west.
Canada contains an abundance of natural resources: timber, petroleum, natural gas,
metallic minerals, precious gems, industrial minerals and fisheries. Canada has large
areas of fertile, flat land across the Prairie provinces and surrounding the Great
Lakes and St Lawrence River basin. Only 5 per cent of Canada's land is suitable for
farming.
Farming employs about 3 per cent of the population with about 280,000 farms. Wheat is
the most important single crop, and Canada's produces about 16 per cent of the world's
supply. Forests cover about 49 per cent of Canada's land area, about 4.2 million
square km or 1.6 million square miles.
Canada contains more fresh water lakes and inland waters than any other country in the
world. In addition to the Great Lakes shared with the US, Canada has 31 lakes more
than 1,300 sq km (500 sq mi) in area. The are several great rivers in Canada. The St
Lawrence drains the Great Lakes and flows into the Gulf of St Lawrence. The
Saskatchewan flows into Lake Winnipeg and the Nelson flows from Lake Winnipeg into
Hudson Bay. The Athabascan, Peace, Slave, and Mackenzie Rivers merge and flow north
into the Arctic Ocean. The Fraser and the Columbia rivers both flow west into the
Pacific Ocean.
Tourism is one of the leading industries in Canada. Every year Canada is visited by
over 45 million tourists. About 730,000 square km or 282,000 square miles of scenic
areas have been preserved in the natural state for use as national, marine, and
provincial parks. The world-famous Jasper, Banff and Algonquin parks receives more
than 10 million visitors annually.
Canada's major cities are Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver,
and Ottawa. The major cities are distribution centers for exports and local
manufacturing.
Most of Canada’s inhabitants live in the southern part of the country, and vast areas
of the north are sparsely inhabited. The population of Canada is 32,507,874 (2004
estimate), compared with 27,296,859 during the 1991 census. The indigenous people of
Canada who are officially designated the First Nations, are divided into nearly 600
groups, or bands and make up nearly 2 per cent of Canada’s population. The racial
and ethnic make-up of the Canadian people is diverse with 34 per cent of the population
composed of people of British or part-British origin and 27 per cent French or
part-French origin, the Asian immigrants are 16 per cent, and the remainder of the
population is composed of people of various ethnic origins, such as German, Italian,
Ukrainian, Dutch, Scandinavian, Polish, Hungarian and Greek.
Education is compulsory for children from ages 6 to 16, and it is free until the
completion of secondary school studies. Canada has more than 16,000 elementary and
secondary schools, with a total enrollment of nearly 5.3 million pupils. Canada has
69 degree-granting universities and colleges with over 500,000 full-time students.
Canada's larger universities are: the University of Alberta, University of Calgary,
University of British Columbia, Simon Fraser University, University of Manitoba,
University of Moncton, University of New Brunswick, Memorial University, Acadia
University, Dalhousie University, Carleton University, McMaster University, University
of Ottawa, University of Toronto, University of Waterloo, York University, University
of Prince Edward Island, Concordia University, Laval University, McGill University,
University of Montreal, University of Quebec, and the University of Saskatchewan.
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