Group of Thirteen (Canadian universities)
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- This article is about the group of research intensive Canadian universities. For a type of marijuana, see G-13.
The Group of Thirteen, more commonly referred to as the G13 (or G-13), is a group of leading research-intensive universities in Canada. Formed over 10 years ago as an informal biannual meeting of university executive heads, the grouping is similar to the Australian Group of Eight, although it is not incorporated. The G13's primary activity is in joint research programmes. The chairmanship of the G13 rotates among the executive heads of the thirteen universities.
As of April of 2006, three universities were added to the group, expanding the group from ten universities (formerly the G10) to thirteen. The three universities added were the University of Calgary, Dalhousie University and the University of Ottawa.[1]
Contents |
[edit] Members
The members of the G13 are, in alphabetical order:
[edit] G10DE: Data Exchange
The G10 data exchange (G10DE), founded in 1999, is a data exchange consortium made to facilitate comparative analysis and benchmarking for Canada's top universities. Comprising the institutional research directors at each of the G10 institutions, the G10DE would, through the formal and informal exchange of datasets and information, support the Executive Heads in the development and enhancement of the distinctive mission of the institutions. The G10DE was modelled after a similar data exchange consortium of leading American research universities.[2][3]
With the expansion of the G10 in 2006 to include the University of Calgary, Dalhousie University and the University of Ottawa, they will be participating in future data exchanges in the G13.
[edit] Endowments
[edit] Total endowment wealth
The G13 schools have some of the highest financial endowments in Canada. Although they are substantially less than the wealthiest US universities, they are approximately on par with the wealthiest universities in Asia and Europe. Most of the G13 schools have endowments of over $100 million.
Rank | Institution | Endowment |
---|---|---|
1 | University of Toronto | $1.688 billion |
2 | McGill University | $794 million |
3 | University of British Columbia | $684.5 million |
4 | University of Alberta | $645 million |
5 | Queen's University | $516.8 million |
6 | McMaster University | $365 million |
7 | University of Calgary | $345 million |
8 | Dalhousie University | $321 million |
9 | University of Western Ontario | $218.8 million |
10 | University of Waterloo | $120 million |
11 | Université Laval | $105.3 million |
12 | Université de Montréal | $89.5 million |
13 | University of Ottawa | $87.0 million |
[edit] Endowment per student
Rank | Institution | Endowment per student |
---|---|---|
1 | Queen's University | $31,512 |
2 | McGill University | $25,675 |
3 | University of Toronto | $23,608 |
4 | Dalhousie University | $20,683 |
5 | University of Alberta | $18,209 |
6 | McMaster University | $14,762 |
7 | University of British Columbia | $14,720 |
8 | University of Calgary | $12,222 |
9 | University of Western Ontario | $5,843 |
10 | University of Waterloo | $4,643 |
11 | Université Laval | $2,801 |
12 | University of Ottawa | $2,591 |
13 | Université de Montreal | $1,643 |
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ [1]
- ^ University of Western Ontario: Annual Report to the Board of Governors (pg.3) [2] "In 1999 the executive heads of the G10, Canada’s ten most research-intensive universities (Laval, Montreal, McGill, Queen’s, Toronto, McMaster, Waterloo, Western, Alberta, and British Columbia) formed a data exchange consortium to facilitate comparative analysis and benchmarking. The G10 data exchange (G10DE) was modelled after a similar data exchange consortium of leading American research universities, and in a comparatively short period of time, the G10DE has produced a valuable set of comparative data. The scope of the G10DE continues to expand, and it holds promise for the development of additional benchmarking data in future."
- ^ 11th Annual Conference of the Canadian Institutional Research and Planning Association:The G10 Data Exchange – Developing a Consortium/Le G10 Data Exchange – Vers un consortium. [3] "In 1999, a voluntary and informal group of Executive Heads from 10 Canadian research universities agreed to create a data exchange consortium: the Group of Ten Data Exchange (G10DE). The G10DE, comprising the institutional research directors at each of the G10 institutions, would, through the formal and informal exchange of datasets and information, support Executive Heads in the development and enhancement of the distinctive mission of the institutions. Almost two years since its creation, the G10DE is well underway and has proven to be efficient in creating and maintaining the data resources necessary to construct interinstitutional and inter-jurisdictional comparisons. Included in this paper are topics related to the development of this consortium: the G10 background, the organization of the G10DE, the content of the exchange, the roles of the Data Exchange Coordinator and Chair, its current evaluation and finally, advice for starting a data exchange consortium."
[edit] See also
- List of Canadian universities by endowment
- List of universities in Canada
- Ivy League
- Russell Group (a network of leading British research universities)
- Group of Eight (a group of leading Australian universities)
- Coimbra Group (a network of leading European universities)
- Universitas 21 (a worldwide network of leading research universities)
- Public Ivy (a list of public universities in the United States on par with the Ivy League)
- 1994 Group (smaller research-led British universities, including York, Durham, and St Andrews)
- SKY (schools)(top 3 universities in Korea)
- Tokyo 6
G-13 Universities |
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Alberta | UBC | Calgary | Dalhousie | Laval | McGill | McMaster | Montréal | Ottawa | Queen's | Toronto | Waterloo | Western |