Performance Relevance: Graduate Student Enrolment Expansion Graduate education is a distinctive feature of the University of and is a defining part of our vision. Graduate students are the life-blood of university research. Sustaining and expanding the current research effort is dependent on the availability of excellent graduate students. The percentage of graduate students in the student population is a rough indicator of the intensity of the research effort at the institution. Furthermore, graduate students are an essential component in linking research and teaching. As teaching assistants, graduate students make a valuable contribution to teaching. A larger number of graduate students increases our ability to match their skills and background to the needs of individual courses and student groups. In its 25 Budget, the Ontario Government introduced a new funding program to expand the number of domestic graduate spaces in the province.
Figure D-1-a Graduate Degree-Seeking Student Enrolment Fall 24 - Fall 213 The main chart below shows growth in enrolment of graduate students in degree programs over a 1-year period. The three smaller charts below the main chart show enrolment growth of graduate students by degree type during this period. Total Degree-Seeking Graduate Students Domestic International Percent international 18, 2 Enrolment 1 1 1 1, 8, 11,847 11,769 12,95 13% 14% 14% 14,283 14,443 14,788 13,287 13,72 13% 12% 12% 11% 11% 15,97 13% 15,712 14% Percent International 24 25 26 27 28 29 21 211 212 213 % 7, Masters - Professional Stream Programs 7, 2 Masters - Doctoral Stream Programs 7, 2 Doctoral Programs 2 5, 5, 5, 3, 3, 3, 1, 1, 1, 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 11 12 13 % 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 11 12 13 % 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 11 12 13 % 1. Degree-seeking students exclude special students, and students in graduate diploma programs.
Figure D-1-b Graduate Enrolment as a Percentage of Total Enrolment University of Compared to Canadian Peers, Fall 26 and Fall 212 and our AAU Peers Fall 26 The first two charts show the graduate student FTE as a percentage of total student FTE in 26 and 212 for University of compared to its Canadian Peers. The third chart shows the graduate student FTE as a percentage of total student FTE in 26 for University of compared to its AAU Peers. Unfortunately, the IPEDS reporting methodology has since changed so a more recent comparison of graduate enrolment share with AAU Peers is not available. Montréal Laval Dalhousie McGill British Colmbia Calgary Cdn Peer Mean TORONTO QUEEN'S WESTERN Alberta McMASTER WATERLOO OTTAWA Fall 26 Cdn Peers 25. 22.9% 22.4% 2.2% 18.2% 17.3% 16.9% 15.2% 15.1% 11.9% 11.4% 11.4% % 3% Fall 26 AAU Peers McGill Montréal Laval UBC TORONTO Dalhousie Calgary Cdn Peer Mean Alberta WESTERN QUEEN'S OTTAWA Saskatchewan McMASTER WATERLOO Manitoba Fall 212 Cdn Peers 24.2% 24.2% 23.1% 2.9% 19.6% 18.8% 18.1% 17.9% 17.7% 15.% 14.7% 14. 13.8% 12.4% % 3% 28.1% 25.2% 24.3% 23.7% 21.6% 21.3% 2. 19.8% 17.3% 16.8% 16.7% % 4% Starting in Fall 28, IPEDS reports aggregate Graduate Enrolment and First Professional Enrolment. As a result, we can not calculate the Graduate Enrolment to Total Enrolment Ratio for AAU Peers for Fall 212. 1. Source: U15 Data Exchange, IPEDS website. 2. Graduate enrolment to total enrolment ratio is calculated as [Graduate Enrolment FTE]/[Total Enrolment FTE]. FTE graduate enrolment and total enrolment are based on IPEDS methodology. Residents are excluded from enrolment. FTE is calculated as (Full-time Headcount * 1)+(Part-time Headcount *.3). 3. Cdn Peer mean and AAU Peer mean exclude. 4. Ontario peers are shown in capital letters.
Figure D-1-c Graduate Enrolment and First Professional Enrolment as a Percentage of Total Enrolment University of Compared to AAU Peers 26 Compared to 212 The chart to the left shows the graduate student and first professional FTE as a percentage of total student FTE in 26 for University of compared to its AAU Peers. The chart on the right shows the graduate student and first professional FTE to total enrolment FTE ratio in 212 for compared to its AAU peers. Fall 26 Fall 212 AAU Peers AAU Peers 34.7% 34. 32.2% 32. 29.4% 3.1% 28.7% 28.2% 28. 27.3% 27.% 26.8% 24.7% 26. 23.8% 24.8% 23.6% 23.% 22.9% 2. 21.6% 2.% 19.7% % 4% % 4% 1. Source: IPEDS website. 2. Graduate enrolment to total enrolment ratio is calculated as [Graduate Enrolment FTE]/[Total Enrolment FTE]. 3. FTE graduate enrolment, First Professional enrolment and total enrolment are based on IPEDS methodology. Residents are excluded from enrolment. FTE is calculated as (Full-time Headcount * 1)+(Part-time Headcount *.3). 4. AAU Peer mean excludes. 5. First-professional degrees include the following 1 fields: Chiropractic (D.C. or D.C.M.), Dentistry (D.D.S. or D.M.D.), Law (L.L.B., J.D.), Medicine (M.D.), Optometry (O.D.), Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.), Pharmacy (Pharm. D.), Podiatry (D.P.M., D.P., or Pod. D.), Theology (M.Div., M.H.L., B.D., or Ordination), Veterinary Medicine (D.V.M.). The use of this term was discontinued in IPEDS as of the 21-11 data collection (Fall 28 data). Students enrolled in these programs are now included in graduate enrolment.
Figure D-1-d Total Enrolment in Masters and Doctoral Programs at Ontario Universities University of 's Share of Enrolment in Masters Programs and Doctoral Programs Fall 22 to Fall 213 The bars below show total enrolment in graduate degree programs at Ontario universities (including ) each year since 22. The line above shows s share of enrolment in 2 nd stage doctoral programs for each year. The line below shows s share of enrolment in Masters and 1 st stage doctoral programs for each year. 7, Rest of Ontario Share - Masters, 1st Stage Doctoral Programs Share - 2nd Stage Doctoral Programs 5% Enrolment (Total Headcount) 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 37.6% 35. 34.3% 33.1% 32.1% 31.4% 3.8% 3.1% 29.6% 29.% 28.8% 29.% 24.3% 24.4% 24.1% 23.6% 23.% 22.7% 22.2% 21.6% 21.7% 21.3% 21.7% 4% 3% 's Share of Enrolment 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 21 211 212 213 % 1. Source: MTCU Enrolment data. 2. Masters, Qualifying Year Doctoral and Special students are included in Masters, 1 st Stage Doctoral Programs. 3. Total enrolment excludes graduate diploma programs. 4. data excludes School of Theology.