Canada's undergraduate course is the credit system. As long as you complete 40 courses, you can get an undergraduate degree. In fact, you can graduate as long as you have completed the credits, which means that students can choose to graduate in three or four years according to their learning ability and economic ability. However, the acquisition of credits depends on many factors, such as how many courses you choose in a semester, whether you pass the exam, whether you attend summer school, which university you go to, what major you study, and so on.
If you take more than six courses each semester and take classes in summer, you can graduate in three years as big as McGill, UBC and these famous universities. On the other hand, if you only take three courses each semester and don't attend classes in summer, an ordinary undergraduate university may not graduate in four years.
Canadian undergraduate education has a high gold content and ranks high in the world. Canadian universities pay attention to practical teaching and research, and graduates are welcomed by employers all over the world. In addition, the Canadian government attaches great importance to education and invests a lot of resources to improve the quality of education. Therefore, the gold content of Canadian undergraduate courses can be said to be very high.