There are differences between the environments of each of the services. For the most part, the majority, the primary reserve, trains to the same standard as the regular force. What differs may be where it is delivered. Certainly from the outset, the Royal Canadian Navy and Royal Canadian Air Force and health services all do the same basic training. The army has different models of delivery, but achieves the same standard for basic training of recruits, officers, and non-commissioned members.
As you progress through your trade, again sometimes it's delivered in the same schoolhouses as the regular force. Our leadership training is common across the Canadian Armed Forces. What varies is the occupational training. There are some reserve-specific courses and some reserve-specific training there, because we aren't required to train to the same depth and breadth as the regular force. I'll use the example of vehicle tech. Reserve vehicle techs would train to what was a known standard and be accredited across the Canadian Armed Forces but may not have to know how to do oil changes or tire changes on the entire fleet of Canadian Armed Forces vehicles; it would be specific to the reserve. There are also reserve-specific occupations. In the navy there are different types of engineers who work predominantly on the coastal defence vessels versus the frigates.
Again, training is comparable. It is to a standard that is equal across the Canadian Forces for common training.