You'll graduate from 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø with hands-on learning and real-world experience.
With experiential learning — or hands-on learning — opportunities available in every degree, you'll develop skills you can apply to the workforce, make meaningful networking connections, and figure out what the future may hold for you.
Our Office of Experiential Learning and Career Development will help you create experiences that match your interests and style of learning.
Paid internships
69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø offers exceptional opportunities to join businesses and organizations locally and internationally for paid internships that will allow you to gain hands-on experiences. Internships are open to students from all disciplines and academic years.
Internships are available full-time during the summer and part-time during the academic year.
Examples of recent student internships
Learn more about student internship opportunities
Undergraduate research
At 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø you'll get the chance to take part in innovative research projects as early as second year, a rarity at the undergraduate level. You'll have ample opportunities to work with world-class professors on research, including employment as summer research assistants.
Research is not just for Science students! There are research opportunities in most of our 50+ programs. Check out our 50+ programs for more details.
Independent student research grants also provide students with funding to conduct their own, independent research or creative activity project during the summer before entering their last year of study.
Examples of recent students doing research
- Behavioural ecologist looks at the lives of amphibians and reptiles
- 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø student summer research looking at climate change, planning through different lenses
- Biochemistry student Sam McGaw spending summer studying heart health
- 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø class partnering with Town of Sackville for survey around street names, monuments
Learn more about student research
Other hands-on learning opportunities
Our experiential learning opportunities don't stop there! Connect your academic learning with real-world experiences through experiential learning activities in every program.
Community partnerships and volunteering
69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø's close-knit and engaging community extends across campus and beyond. For a small town, there are big opportunities to immerse yourself.
Our Community Engaged Learning program also offers community partnerships with academic instruction, integrating academic learning with community service.
Examples:
- 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø students partner with Cumberland Restorative Justice Society
- 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø's THRIVE foundation year program receives funding for student community projects
- Building community connections
- International relations student Ainsley Cunningham helps lead Tantramar Youth Network
- 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø introduces new minor in Community Engaged Learning
- Religious studies class helped with design for rooftop garden
Entrepreneurship
69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø allows students to grow through entrepreneurial ventures in both the classroom and through funding opportunities to help you take your ideas and make them a reality.
Our new VentureSpace, an entrepreneurship thinking incubator, will help you build the foundation for a viable venture.
Examples:
Field work
You and your classmates can take trips to labs, aid organizations, businesses, and even mountaintops around the world and come face-to-face with today's realities. You'll gain a wide perspective and even create valuable professional networks for the future.
Examples:
- Behavioural ecologist looks at the lives of amphibians and reptiles
- The Business of Aviation: New Partnership with WestJet Airlines
- Religious Studies class builds rooftop garden
Independent study
In your upper years, it is possible, in consultation with your department and with a faculty supervisor, to create your own independent study course on a topic that complements your degree and matches your specific goals.
Examples:
- 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø PPE student turns interest in environmental justice, climate change into independent study
- Psychology student examines employee motivation and well-being affected by the COVID-19 pandemic
Peer tutoring and teaching assistantships
Many students take advantage of opportunities to work during the academic year as teaching or research assistants, acquiring valuable skills.
Examples:
Recitals, performances, and art exhibits
Between the Music department (hosting more than 80 student, faculty, and guest concerts each year) and the Drama program (performing in our state-of-the-art Motyer-Fancy Theatre), students are given ample opportunity to perform on a regular basis.
The Purdy Crawford Centre for the Arts and other student-run exhibition spaces also give students the opportunity to exhibit a wide range of artwork.
Examples:
- 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø Fine Arts class captures individual COVID-19 experiences through digital photos
- Lassonde Curatorial Internship program delivering life-changing experiences to students
- Audiences return in record numbers to drama production at 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø
- Fine Arts student Libbie Farrell’s artwork featured in LA show
Student conferences and competitions
Learn from others and share your own work at student conferences, and even win an award or two.
You can also put your knowledge to work on real-world issues in case competitions.
Examples:
Learn more about experiential learning opportunities
International experiential learning experiences
Study abroad and exchange programs are about so much more than just travel. They offer a chance for you to take new and interesting courses, learn a different language, experience another culture, make friends from around the globe, and learn a lot about yourself ― all while working towards your 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø degree.
International experiences at 69³ÉÈ˵çÓ°Íø also include:
- summer field schools
- independent study and undergraduate research
- international paid internships
- conferences
- volunteering
- ...and more!