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28 janvier 2018

Des enseignants irresponsables

Sur le blog "Histoires d'universités" de Pierre DuboisJe suis fort énervé en cette fin de matinée. Et pourtant la journée avait bien commencé : je me faisais un plaisir de suivre mon premier cours du second semestre au Palais universitaire de Strasbourg. 23 minutes de marche pour me rendre de chez moi à l’université. Sous une giboulée de mars… en janvier. Il n’y a plus de saison. Plus...

28 janvier 2018

Degrees that Matter

By Alex Usher. One of the huge – and insufficiently studied – differences between North America and European higher education is the way programs are structured, at least as far as Arts and Sciences go.  In most of Europe, entering a program in (say) history means you have to learn a set field of knowledge and skills.
By entering into a 90-credit program in a particular field, you have a fair idea of which courses you will be taking over the next three years because a large proportion of the courses are set.  North America used to be like that too – a century ago.  But then we started to diverge, mainly because of three events. More...

28 janvier 2018

A More Nuanced Look at Graduate Incomes

By Alex Usher. It’s all-Council-of-Ontario-Universities this week on the blog, but that’s because they’re the ones putting out the great data.  Today, it’s the annual survey on graduate outcomes which looks at how bachelor’s degree graduates are faring in the labour market.  Standard caveat: Ontario =/= Canada, but it produces nearly half the country’s bachelor degrees so it’s bound to be close to the national average and the trends you see here are unlikely to be much different that those you see anywhere else. More...

28 janvier 2018

Mind-blowing Ontario Academic Staffing Data (Part 2)

By Alex Usher. The report makes a distinction between tenure stream professors (42% of all instructors), full-time non-tenure stream (6%) and part-time instructors (52%). This mix varies quite a bit across faculties.  The proportions of FT to PT is highest in Engineering, and lowest in Law and Education.  The composition of PT faculty also varies substantially across fields of study. More...

28 janvier 2018

Mind-blowing Ontario Academic Staffing Data (Part 1)

By Alex Usher. Buckle up everyone. COU just did what universities have been telling everyone for years was impossible: publishing actual useful admin data on faculty workloads and sessionals from every university in Ontario bar the University of Toronto. More...

28 janvier 2018

Two Ways to Improve Student Government

By Alex Usher. It’s that time of year again, where across the country students become interested in student government.  Between now and the end of March (depending on your location) wannabe student leaders will be traipsing around campuses, giving 30-second class talks, putting up posters, and making promises of one sort or another. More...

28 janvier 2018

Canada’s Secret Weapon against Inequality

By Alex Usher. Inequality is perhaps the great political issue of the 21st century (so far anyway).  And while Canada isn’t exactly a world-beater on this score, we do show up a heck of a lot better than some of our peers – say in the UK, France or certainly the US.  Despite lots of great work by people like Miles Corak, there’s no real agreement as to why this is: is it more robust social programs?  A more powerful union movement?  Our immigration policies. More...

28 janvier 2018

So, that Finance Committee Report then

By Alex Usher. Today’s blog is a quick tour of the House of Commons Finance Committee report – released last month – as it relates to science and post-secondary education.
For the uninitiated, the Government of Canada’s budget process goes something like this: starting in late spring – maybe two months after the pervious budget – the political side of the Finance Department starts canvassing around government for big ideas. More...

28 janvier 2018

College Revenues versus University Revenues

By Alex Usher. As you all know, I spend a lot of time analyzing university finances, mainly because the data is easy to get and is quite detailed (Canadian higher education statistics are disastrous in many ways, but one area where our stats are better than almost anywhere else in the world is our institutional financial reporting – the FIUC Survey is genuinely world-class). More...

28 janvier 2018

Distance education on a roll in the USA

http://www.tonybates.ca/wp-content/uploads/asssociates.jpgBy . This report indicates the value of an openly accessible national system of tracking online and distance education enrolments. Institutions must provide the data, especially as it influences federal state aid to students. Once such data are made publicly available, there are opportunities for all kinds of analyses to be made. The value though is that this is just part of a national program of data collection on higher education enrolments. We are nowhere close to matching this in Canada. More...
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