Canada’s International Education Strategy – How Did It Get So Bad?

When our Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development (DFATD – not DFAIT as I said a few days ago; sorry) delivers something as bad as our new International Education Strategy, an inquest is in order.  But since self-reflection isn’t exactly an abundant resource in Ottawa at the best of times, it’s an inquest we’re going to have to undertake ourselves.

Let’s start with the document’s basic failures:

  • It talks about increasing enrolment without assessing capacity constraints;
  • It shows no obvious signs of being conversant with international education markets, how students choose their destination countries, or how students subsequently choose a country of residence;
  • It spends an inordinate amount of time talking about discussions with the rarely-before heard-of “Canadian Consortium for  International Education”, which is made up mostly of Ottawa-based industry groups (e.g. AUCC, ACCC, CBIE) who – surprise, surprise – reciprocated by praising the document to the skies, despite its evident thinness.

What, you might wonder, links these points?

It seems clear that the document’s authors valued pleasing the Minister and Ottawa-based education groups more than they valued functioning relationships with provinces and institutions.  That’s a fairly common Ottawa problem.  It’s much easier to work with tame, de-fanged Ottawa interest groups, who will always say “thank you” for a new government policy no matter how silly it is, than to deal with provinces who keep rudely reminding you that education is in fact their jurisdiction.

But that’s too easy an “out”.  Lots of federal departments still talk to their provincial counterparts in a constructive way over areas of shared jurisdiction.  The Canada Student Loans Program, for instance, manages to do this reasonably well – why can’t DFATD do so?

I see three possible reasons.  The first is that the people asked to run with this file were junior, and didn’t know any better.  The second, more likely reason is that Foreign Affairs is too sniffy to talk to mere provinces (“I joined the service to go to Rome, not Regina!”).  But most likely of all is simply that the government just doesn’t care enough about this file to do a good job on it.  Partly, that’s due to the regime, but the culture at DFATD is a culprit, too.  My sense is that international education is a bit of a backwater there; people on the rise don’t stay very long.  Actually doing a good job would require lots of tedious consultation with provinces and institutions.  By the time the file actually achieved something that could be thrown on your CV, you’ve already moved on to your next rotation, so why bother?  Better to dash off something quick for an “announceable” than to do the hard work for which someone else will inevitably take credit.

If that’s true, then the problem runs deeper than a single, deeply flawed report; there’s a whole institutional culture that stand between us and good policy-making.  And the Ottawa NGOs’ habit of thanking the government any time it announces something, regardless of how inane, far from making things better is just enabling the dysfunction.  We need to deal with this.  Soon.

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5 responses to “Canada’s International Education Strategy – How Did It Get So Bad?

  1. Hello Alex,

    We think Government is moving in the right direction to establish a goal doubling international student enrolment at Canada’s colleges and universities. We also think it is great that Government is increasing its funding of the Imagine in/au Canada brand. This has been necessary for a long time and I would want to applaud Government for taking this action.

    Of course, there is much to do. We need to think about increasing the CIC infrastructure so that student visa’s can be processed in a more timely way. We also need to give more thought to how to fund the international student recruitment strategy and support students once they arrive on campus.

    But this is a good start.

    Dr. Clayton Smith
    Vice-Provost, Students & International
    University of Windsor

  2. Although I agree with your general point, Federal policy in education generally is a disaster. It’s probably only in Ontario or Quebec that anyone bothers with trying to get the Federal government to understand the need for national strategies.
    I was once told when I complained about lack of transparency on CIDA grants that I needed to ‘hang around Ottawa’ or hire a local consultant who specialises in CIDA grants if I wanted to stand a chance of getting a CIDA grant, even when I had a foreign national government and the local Canadian Embassy cultural attaché supporting a proposal that met all CIDA’s criteria, with funding supposedly not yet allocated.
    I don’t think anyone in Ottawa understands that it’s cheaper for me to fly to Asia than to Ottawa from here in BC.
    In my own area, online learning, we have no national data about its extent or its effectiveness, because no-one federally is interested. We struggle to provide a coherent picture even in the PISA ratings because each province collects its own data.
    My conclusion in the end is that despite all the drawbacks, we are probably better off with the Feds keeping out of education altogether, because whenever they intervene they seem to get it wrong.

    1. Good points in the article and in the response from Tony Bates.

      The article fails to recognize the attraction of Canadian institutions and contexts to foreign students, and the excess capacity that will likely soon be the lot of universities in different parts of Canada (as a result of basic demographics). If you were from Saudi, would you want to go to a university Florida or Alabama?

      Strangely, there is no mention here or in the original government strategy document (to my knowledge) of actually having academic and other services in place for these students.

      Maybe the feds haven’t done much that’s helpful for education in Canada (when they do try), but that doesn’t mean that it couldn’t be done (think of the UK).

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