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FIS200 - Aircraft: The Ups & the Downs

This course will equip students with the skills, attitudes, behaviours and knowledge necessary to ensure passenger safety and excellent In-flight service - a Flight Attendant's main responsibilities. Students will also review the most common aircraft used in industry today.

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FIS300 - Professional Airline Careers

This subject invites students to examine a selection of professional careers within the airline sector. Passenger Service Agent, Airline Call Centre Agent, and Pilot, are just some of the exciting career areas studied. Each airline employment area will be related to the Flight Attendant and the ever important element of Customer Service.

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FRN309 - French - Level III

FRN309 represents an integrated and balanced approach to language acquisition through communicative interactions which allow students to enhance their listening, reading, spoken interaction, spoken production and writing skills according to the CEFR (Common European Framework of Reference for Languages) guidelines. The course also uses the ACTFL (American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages) guidelines to test students' cultural awareness of French-speaking communities. This is the second of four courses and as a result, acquisition of the basic structures and vocabulary enabling students to communicate competently in a limited number of everyday and work-related situations is emphasized. Students are strongly urged and expected to converse in French, with required assistance.

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LTS307 - Leisure Travel Specialist

This course is designed to prepare you to effectively perform the functions of a leisure travel specialist. The areas that will be studied cover inclusive tour charters, insurance, car rentals, hotels, cruises,
foreign independent tours, rail, and travel documentation. You will learn how to interpret, apply, sell, book, compile and price travel components.

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TCS200 - Computer Essentials

This course is intended to extend your knowledge and skills in various computer software applications to an intermediate level. You will be taking other subjects in which you will make use of the computer as an administrative and communicative tool. Exercises and problems will be industry-related and typical of those encountered in a service delivery organization.

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TDC200 - World Destinations for Canadian Travellers

Study areas will include destinations for more experienced travellers such as Europe, Russia and Scandinavia; Long Haul Destinations such as China and Hong Kong; Historical Destinations such as Egypt and Israel; Romantic Destinations such as Fiji and Tahiti; Cultural Destinations such as Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand. Africa, Asia, Australia and New Zealand and Oceania will also be studied as culinary, adventure, exotic, and emerging destinations. This course is designed to provide students with a working knowledge of these areas of the world as a tourist destination for Canadian travellers. Research and assessment of destinations and various selling tools provide students with the critical skills needed to identify client MNE's, and how to sell these destinations to the client.

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THL100 - The Hotel Business

The goal of this course is to give students an insight into the workings of a hotel/motel and to provide students with the background to be employed in the accommodations industry. For students who wish to become travel agents, airline personnel, or employed by tour operators, the goal is to give a more integrate view of tourism as a whole, including the vast accommodations industry.

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GEN001 - General Education Option

According to the Ministry of Training, Colleges, and Universities, ?the purpose of General Education in the Ontario college system is to contribute to the development of citizens who are conscious of the diversity, complexity, and richness of the human experience; who are able to establish meaning through this consciousness; and, who, as a result, are able to contribute thoughtfully, creatively, and positively to the society in which they live and work. General Education strengthens students' generic skills, such as critical analysis, problem solving, and communication, in the context of an exploration of topics with broad-based personal and / or societal importance?. Please contact the School of English and Liberal Studies at your campus to find out more about the variety of General Education courses from which you can choose.

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