Author: Alex Usher

Listening to Young Graduates

Canadian universities struggle to convert young alumni into positive assets.  And the reasons for this are gatekeeping and territoriality. Prior to graduation, student contact data is in the hands of departments who, for the most part, report to the Provost/VP Academic (primarily Registrars and/or Institutional Research Offices).  While they are students, universities ask students a lot of questions.  They get surveyed so frequently that survey fatigue and response rates are a major issue. The thing is, though, that asking students

Read More »

Important But Not Worth It? Some Thoughts

Last month, my colleague Andrew Parkin at the Environics Institute published a fascinating little piece entitled Is Post-secondary Education is a Waste of Time?, which looks at Canadians’ evolving views on the worth of higher education (Andrew is a former Director General of the Council of Ministers of Education, Canada, so we can safely infer that this is not an expression of his own feelings) Environics asked two questions: “these days, a young person in Canada can’t expect to get

Read More »

OECD and the Geography of Higher Education

Back in the beginning, all higher education institutions were either professional schools or “ivory towers”. Town-gown relations were mostly about who had the right to punish students, and under what conditions landlords could charge students for lodging. The idea of the university as a national asset dates back only about two centuries, and as an industrial partner even more recently than that. Both of those ideas came from Germany. But the idea of a university as an engine of regional

Read More »

Steeples of Excellence and How to Achieve Them

Every so often, terms crop up and it seems like no one knows where they came from.  One of my favourites is “Steeples of Excellence”.  Except that this one actually has a known origin: the Stanford of the 1950s and its provost, Frederick Terman. The term “steeples of excellence” tends to imply some focus on certain fields of study.  It’s a handy complement to the oft heard “we can’t be everything to everybody” (possibly the most overused phrase in higher

Read More »

Canada’s First National Minister of Higher Education

Last Friday’s, Marc Miller, the Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Canadian Citizenship (IRCC), announced three changes to the International Student Visa program (link here).  You may have seen a small news alert about it (see here or here).  But it seems that almost nobody caught the full import of the announcement.  The announcement started out ok, with Miller again swatting down rumours of a cap on international student visas and comparing the idea to “performing surgery with a hammer”.  Miller

Read More »