Motto | « Le choix postsecondaire » |
---|---|
Type | Francophone college of applied arts and technology |
Established | 1995 |
President | Daniel Giroux |
Students | 9 155 in 2012–2013 |
Address |
21 Lasalle Boulevard, Northern and Central Southwestern Ontario, Ontario, Canada 46°31′02″N 80°59′36″W / 46.517228°N 80.9933°W |
Campus | Hearst, Kapuskasing, Témiskaming, Nipissing, Greater Sudbury, Timmins and Toronto |
Colours | Black & White |
Athletics | OCAA, CCAA |
Nickname | Vipères |
Affiliations | ACCC |
Website | www.collegeboreal.ca |
Coordinates: 46°31′2.02″N 80°59′35.88″W / 46.5172278°N 80.9933000°W
Collège Boréal is a francophone College of Applied Arts and Technology serving Northern and Central Southwestern Ontario. Youngest of the 24 Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology, Collège Boréal has for the 12th time in 13 years achieved the highest graduation rate and for the 9th time in 12 years, the highest graduate satisfaction rate among all the community colleges in Ontario. Based in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, Collège Boréal has a total of 42 access centres across 28 cities in the province, including main campuses in Hearst, Kapuskasing, Nipissing, Sudbury, Temiskaming Shores, Timmins and Toronto. Collège Boréal, which began operations in 1995, is a postsecondary institution in which students are offered technical programs helping them gain access to a bilingual labour market. In 2002, Collège Boréal opened a campus in Toronto, taking over the programs and services of the defunct Collège des Grands-Lacs. Inaugurated on September 27, 2012, the new Toronto campus is now located at One Yonge Street.
Pierre Riopel is the current president of the college. He succeeded Denis Hubert-Dutrisac, who retired in 2013. Hubert-Dutrisac had succeeded Gisèle Chrétien in 2006, when she was appointed president of the French-language television channel TFO.