国际学生入学条件
Applicants are admitted under the General Regulations of the School of Graduate Studies. Applicants must also satisfy the Department of Italian Studies' additional admission requirements stated below.
Successful completion of 7.0 undergraduate full-course equivalents (FCEs) in Italian, including the following: 3.0 FCEs in Italian literature (students must have at least 0.5 FCE in each of three out of four different periods: medieval, Renaissance, seventeenth to eighteenth centuries, nineteenth to twenty-first centuries) and an appropriate upper-year 1.0 FCE in language.
Minimum B+ standing in their University of Toronto 300- and 400-series courses (or in equivalent courses).
The department will determine whether applicants need to complete prerequisite work in order to qualify for admission. Applicants will be advised accordingly.
Letter of Intent
Two letters of recommendation (preferably from instructors most familiar with the applicant's work)
Official transcripts
IELTS - Minimum required score 7.0 (Academic) with at least 6.5 for each component.
TOEFL IBT - Overall Score - 93, Writing and Speaking- 22, TOEFL Paper-based Test - Overall Score 580, TWE 5
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雅思考试总分
7.0
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雅思考试指南
- 雅思总分:7
- 托福网考总分:93
- 托福笔试总分:580
- 其他语言考试:Certificate of Proficiency in English (COPE) - Required score - 76 (with at least 22 in each component and 32 in the writing component)
CRICOS代码:
申请截止日期: 请与IDP顾问联系以获取详细信息。
课程简介
硕士课程的目标是双重的:在意大利研究的所有领域提供高级教育,以及
The Master of Arts program offers advanced education in all areas of Italian literature and provides training in research techniques. The Graduate Department of Italian Studies offers instruction leading to two degrees: Master of Arts (M.A.) (one-year program), Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D., four-year program). The M.A. program consists of 4.5 graduate courses and does include a thesis option. The Ph.D. program includes courses, general examinations, and a thesis. Programs in Italian were announced in the calendar of Upper Canada Academy (the forerunner of Victoria College, University of Toronto) in 1840 and were then formally introduced at the University of Toronto in 1853. In 1929 the first M.A. in Italian Studies was awarded and in 1932 the first Ph.D. for a thesis on the Italian Theatre of the Renaissance. The first person to earn both graduate degrees was Beatrice M. Corrigan, who became a renowned scholar and a professor in the Department.
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