Category: History Lesson

Letter from Samarkand

I spent last week in Uzbekistan attending a conference and seeing some sights.  I’ll talk about the conference tomorrow.  What I want to do today is talk a little bit about higher education in Uzbekistan, which is a pretty fascinating story. In terms of its “modern” higher education, the system is your basic post-Soviet story: not a lot of comprehensive universities, but an awful lot of specialized technical institutes, such as the Tashkent Institute of Irrigation and Agricultural Mechanization Engineers,

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Historical Higher Education Data-Palooza Part 3

So it seems a lot of you were pretty interested in last week’s data fest and in particular this graph (of which I am inordinately proud, ‘cos damn it took some work). Figure 1: Total Government Transfers to Institutions by Source and Type, Canada, 1955-56 to 2020-21, in millions of $2022. The big story here is that institutional income in post-secondary education has grown much faster from 1999 onwards than it did at any time in the preceding 30 years. 

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Historical Higher Ed Data-Palooza Part 2

Today’s discussion might be a little less exciting than yesterday because although I now have all this cool data on finances going back to 1920, holy hell are there some difficulties coming up with way to provide a unified data series through that period.  So, apologies, but you’re in for some long parenthetical statements on methodology. The main reason I was looking for historical data in the first place was that I was trying to resolve a long-standing puzzle around

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Historical Higher Ed Data-Palooza (Part 1)

I found some great data yesterday! It turns out that when Statscan murders a data series, it sometimes leaves traces of the old corpse on its website.  Not anywhere you can find it through normal keyword searches or anything, but if you can find yourself an old CANSIM table number (ask your stat nerd grandparents, kids) you might just be able to dig up some truly interesting data.  Yesterday I managed to find so much historical data on Canadian higher

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Instrumentality

This week’s guest on The World of Higher Education Podcast is Ethan Schrum, Associate Professor of history at Asuza Pacific University in California. Ethan is the author of a very nice work called The Instrumental University: Education in the Service of the National Agenda Since World War II which puts into perspective a very important piece of the history of higher education in North America. We’re used to universities making big claims about being “essential” societal institutions, valuable tools, “instruments” for the state

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