Author: Alex Usher

Goodbye 2021 Hello, 2022

Ok, a few last words before we all take off for Christmas.  This blog is going on break and will return on January 10th.  This was a hard year.  In some ways harder than 2020 because Jumping Jesus on a Pogo Stick this pandemic just doesn’t end, and even if vaccines have attenuated its impact quite a bit, certain governments in particular – Alberta and Ontario, I am looking at you – spent a large part of the year actively making things

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No Competition

Lately, I’ve been wondering whether we have reached some kind of dead-end in the history of universities.  Specifically, whether because of a combination of increasing regulatory control, professional conformity and institutional mission creep, we have got to a point where it has actually become impossible to imagine alternatives to the modern research university as a way of organizing post-18 education. If you look back at the history of universities, you see periodic reinventions of the form.  There was the original

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Smash the Calendar

The north side of Edmonton’s downtown is maybe the most amazing couple of square miles in Canadian post-secondary education.  You’ve got Norquest College (15,000 students) on 102nd.  There’s MacEwan University (another 15,000) between 104th and 105th, and then starting around 115th you’ve got the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology (NAIT), which adds another 20,000 students or so.  That’s a lot of teaching and learning. So why isn’t it better known?  I’d say the concentration doesn’t get the love/notice it should because there

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Ignoring Naylor

Cast your mind back to 2017 – 2018, when, in theory, everybody agreed that Canada’s Fundamental Science Review – aka the Naylor Review – was a Good Thing That Must Be Implemented.  And so we got the 2018 Budget, which dispensed billions of dollars, mostly back-ended, over six years and which was touted as the Greatest Research Budget Ever (via some competitive counting of the sort I described last week) even though in total it amounted to about a 14% real increase over

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Book of the Year

Normally, I end the year with a “Higher Education Book of the Year” recommendation.  It’s not quite the end of the blogging year – that’ll be a week today –  but a) I’m barely reading anymore because of how busy things are at HESA Towers (we’re hiring new management positions, do check out the posting here) and b) I just finished what is evidently gong to be book of the year, so no reason to keep looking.  So here we are. (Quick reminder

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