Browse "Educational Institutions"
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École de musique Jocelyne Laberge
École de musique Jocelyne Laberge. Music school founded in 1978 in Châteauguay, south of Montréal, by Jocelyne Laberge (born 9 May 1930 in Montréal, QC; died 25 November 2015 in Candiac, QC).
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École Nationale de l'Humour
The École Nationale de l'Humour (Québec comedy school) was founded by Gilbert Rozon in 1988.
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École normale de musique
École normale de musique. Conservatory and teacher-training institution founded in 1926. It formed part of the Institut pédagogique of Westmount (Montreal), run by the Sisters of the Congregation of Notre Dame.
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Emily Carr University of Art and Design
Emily Carr University of Art and Design is the only post-secondary institution in British Columbia offering a program of study that is focused exclusively on arts, media and design. Based in a custom-built campus in Vancouver that opened in 2017, Emily Carr University has been at the forefront of exploring the use of digital technologies in art and design in the 21st century.
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Encounters with Canada
Encounters with Canada (EWC), was the country’s largest youth forum, bringing up to 3,200 youth to Ottawa throughout the year for week-long sessions to learn about national history, culture and institutions. This bilingual program was created in 1982 to promote youth leadership and knowledge of Canada by visiting national capital institutions, participating in events and meeting with prominent guest speakers. As of 2006, EWC was managed by the not-for-profit heritage organization Historica Canada (formerly the Historica Foundation). When EWC closed in 2021 more than 113,000 young people had participated in the program.
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Fanshawe College
Fanshawe College of Applied Arts and Technology. Community college founded in London, Ont, in 1967. In 1964, the provincial government created Ontario Vocational Centres with a mandate of providing specialized training in technical, arts, and social science based fields.
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First Nations University of Canada
First established in 1976 as the Saskatchewan Indian Federated College, the First Nations University of Canada (FNUniv) is the only university-college in Canada controlled by First Nations.
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HEC Montréal
HEC Montréal (formerly École des hautes études commerciales de Montréal), Canada’s first business school, was founded in 1907. Today, the school welcomes over 13,000 students and trains more than 8,000 executives and managers every year.
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Jean Lyons School of Music
Jean Lyons School of Music. Teaching academy in piano and theory, established in Vancouver in 1963 by the pianist and teacher Jean Lyons.
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Khaki University
Khaki University (initially Khaki College), an educational institution set up and managed by the Canadian Army in Britain, 1917-19 and 1945-46. The program was rooted in the study groups of the Canadian YMCA and the chaplain services of the Canadian Army.
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Lakehead University
Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Ont, was founded in 1965. Its roots date back to 1946 when Lakehead Technical Institute was established. The name was changed to Lakehead College of Arts, Science and Technology in 1956, and in 1957 the city of Port Arthur donated the land for a new college campus.
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Laurentian University
Laurentian University, in Greater Sudbury, Ont, was founded in 1960; instruction is in both French and English. Laurentian University dates from 1913 when the Roman Catholic Collège du Sacré-Coeur was established in Sudbury. In 1957 it became the University of Sudbury.
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Manitoba Music Educators Association/Association manitobaine des éducateurs de musique
Manitoba Music Educators Association (MMEA) / Association manitobaine des éducateurs de musique (AMEM).
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Manitoba Registered Music Teachers' Association
Manitoba Registered Music Teachers' Association (MRMTA). Founded in 1919 as the Winnipeg Music Teachers' Association by some 80 teachers brought together by Eva Clare and Mrs R.D. Fletcher, then the president of the Women's Musical Club of Winnipeg. Rhys Thomas was elected the first president.
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