Category: Government

Whales

One of the weirdest thing about Canadian tech policy (insofar as we have one) is the obsession with Canadian “champions”.   Whenever a promising company – say Verafin, or Element AI – gets sold to a foreign (mainly American) buyer, there is always much wailing and gnashing of teeth about Canada being “unable to compete”.    The idea seems to be that unless we have big behemoth players striding the globe, we are not a serious tech country.  It’s not entirely clear why competitiveness should

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Freedom of Speech

You may remember that one of the Ford government’s first acts on taking office was to order institutions to develop Freedom of Speech policies based on University of Chicago principles, and ask the Higher Education Quality Council of Ontario to research and evaluate how free speech is addressed by postsecondary institutions and produce reports thereon.  Their second annual report came out last month and is worth a read (it’s short) HEQCO’s reports focus on two things: events on campus which are cancelled for reasons

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Ontario’s PBF System: Odds, Ends and Contradictions

Yesterday, we looked at some of the math behind Ontario’s new funding system, and how a system which is allegedly “60% performance-based funding” will at most result in about $15 million, or 0.4%, of funding re-allocated in some way.  But there are still more oddities to explore. One of my favourite foibles about this funding system is how it seems to have been constructed one element at a time, with no overall strategic intent.  For instance: the main goal of the enrolment-based

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Ontario’s PBF System: Much Ado About Nothing

Morning all.  Last week, the Government of Ontario published all the new Strategic Mandate Agreements (SMAs) that it signed with the province’s 40-odd universities and colleges.  Included in each of these documents were key information around the “Revolutionary” Performance-Based Funding system announced in April 2019.  This was important first because it confirmed the indicators in use (in the entire 20 months since the PBF was announced, the government never publicly stated what the indicators would be: appallingly, everything we have known about

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That Future Skills Council Paper

Last week, the Future Skills Council released a document called “Canada – A Learning Nation: A Skilled, Agile Workforce Ready to Shape the Future”.  I thought we should delve into it early in the week before we all get too tired.  So here goes: For starters, we should be clear about who is releasing this.  This is the Future Skills Council (a group of worthies from across the country who advise the Minister of Employment and Social Development on…things…) and not the Future Skills Centre (the

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