Video opens with a student Dua Sohail. She has glasses and long brown curly hair wearing a cream sweater and pink plaid scarf. She is sitting in front of a red wall in a gold chair. There is a photograph of the Gryphon statue to the right of Dua on the red wall and a shelf to her left with several decorative items. [Dua] “It's quite nerve-wracking thinking about university, and thinking after the four-five years, am I going to have a job? Am I going to have something to do? So I wanted a co-op option where I could get that work experience. I had heard great things about it, so that was the reason I picked it. My name is Dua Sohail. I am a fifth year student here at the Lang School of Business and Economics, in the Bachelor of Commerce program. And I am doing a major in accounting in the co-op stream. I remember visiting campus when I was touring all the other universities, and trying to decide where I wanted to go. And it was a sense of welcome-ness that I felt when I got to the University of Guelph campus, which instantly drew me to it. I was looking for a co-op program within the business stream. I wanted to get that work experience before I went into the industry.” [Dr. Kathleen Rodenberg, Professor, Lang School of Business and Economics] is sitting in a classroom in front of a white screen. She has light blond curly hair to her shoulders, wearing a grey blazer and grey collared shirt. “We teach a leading with purpose. You certainly can go anywhere with a Lang business degree, and not just in the private sector. There are so many amazing public sector opportunities, leadership and government, and Lang certainly provides the information, the understanding that you would need to be successful. Our vision, our mission is all about developing and inspiring leaders for a sustainable future. If you want a life of purpose and meaning, I strongly suggest a Lang as your choice.” [Dua] Our program does a really good job. Preparing the students for the future by incorporating real world cases into our courses. We will have case analysis. We will have presentations to really help prepare us for what we could be doing in the real world, or what careers we could have after graduation. If I had to give a piece of advice to any high school student into considering a program at U of G, I would say, find your fit. Look at what the program is offering you besides just the textbook knowledge. A lot of programs here have additional stuff whether that's a little case competition built into it and what careers you can get out of studying in that program.