
Églises romanes en Périgord noir

1518. La fièvre de la danse

Saint-Geniès en Périgord Noir

Accéder à la tour des Savoirs

Strasbourg, novembre 1918

Didascalicon, les 7 arts mécaniques

A Short History of Federal PSE Transfers
By . Transfers for PSE began in 1951 when the Government of Canada decided to devote 50 cents per capita to the task ($7.1 million in 1951 dollars, or about $65 million in today’s money). This was not a transfer to provinces because Quebec Premier Duplessis – quite rightly – told the feds that the idea of tied transfers was a constitutional non-starter. So to get around this problem, the National Conference of Canadian Universities (i.e Universities Canada, two name-changes ago) set up a shell organization called the Canadian Universities Fund, which took money from the feds and distributed it to universities directly, except in Quebec where Duplessis told institutions he’d cut their budgets dollar for dollar if they accepted the money. More...
History of PSE in Canada Part VIII: What it All Means
By . Thanks for sticking with me through my highly unofficial and deeply idiosyncratic history of Canadian PSE. I suppose if it doesn’t meet standards of historical inquiry, at least you all now have a pretty good sense of my priorities when it comes to understanding developments in Canadian higher education.
Looking back at the full sweep of Canadian PSE’s history, it’s worth thinking about the paths we didn’t take. From the first, we didn’t take the English route of having just a few elite residential colleges and three year degrees. At Confederation, there were already more universities in Canada than in England and by and large they were on the Scottish model not the English one. More...
History of PSE in Canada Part VII – The here and now (since 2003).
By . The current era of PSE in Canada essentially took shape at the end of the Chretien Era. There has been a little bit of evolution in institutional forms (this is the era in which “polytechnics” arrive and applied research becomes a thing at the college level, and several colleges were converted into universities) but really no change in system architecture. There are certainly budget changes – rapidly increasing in the period to about 2009, and then levelling off with international student fees replacing government grants thereafter – but they have been slow and incremental. More...
History of Canadian PSE Part VI (to 2003)
By . The Chretien era – roughly 1994 to 2003 – deserves to be remembered as a time of tremendous change in Canadian post-secondary education. Or, as an enormous, stomach-churning, roller-coaster. And though it is mighty odd that a federal politician defined an era in a field of what is essentially provincial, the record is clear. More...