Author: Alex Usher

The Ontario Funding Announcement

Hi all. Today’s post is on last week’s announcement of a support package for post-secondary education by the Government of Ontario. I’ll be as descriptive as possible; more on the actual distributional impacts will follow. (For a longer version of all this, you may want to check into Monday night’s edition of The Agenda, in which I expound on this stuff along with Mike Schreiner, Peggy Sattler, and Shamji Adil. Fun times. Thanks to Steve Paikin for inviting me on.)

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Growth and Cutbacks

As we all start to contemplate what life might look like in the “leaner” universities that will begin to emerge, I thought it was worth re-visiting data on institutional expenditures over time to see where institutions have grown the most and the least, and from that data deduce where institutions might prune. Ideally, for this analysis, we’d have data on employment by function. But this is Canada so of course such data does not exist. What we do have, courtesy

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Nova Scotia and the Politics of Listening

I know, I know, you all want more on the ongoing omnishambles that is Ontario. You’re going to have to wait. What’s happening in Nova Scotia is probably more important in the long term (yes, really) and institutions across the country need to pay attention. Normally, Nova Scotia universities are funded through a series of Memorandums of Understanding signed every three or four years or so. Objectives are agreed, and the universities get some planning certainty. This year, very suddenly

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Taiwanese Higher Education

Taiwanese Higher Education occupies a liminal space in global academia, in much the same way it does in geopolitics. Yes, it’s a Chinese-speaking, Confucian country and so its national academic carries with it a great deal of DNA that is common to the region. At the same time, for obvious reasons, it is much less China-focused, and has much closer relations with American and other non-Asian academic cultures than the average Asian system. The result is a national educational culture

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Faculty Salary Data 2022-23

Nota bene: There will be a podcast tomorrow, but the blog will be off all next week. Regular service resumes March 4. Everyone seemed to enjoy the look at Presidential salaries a few weeks ago. And, since we haven’t done faculty salaries in awhile, today seems like a good day to do that. Let’s start with average salaries by rank. Figure 1 shows current averages by rank along with (inflation-adjusted) comparisons with 5-, 10-, and 20-years previously. Current faculty salaries

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