Category: Universities

Assessment and Accountability in the Network Era

Just a brief thought today on how the increasing interconnectedness of research efforts is making evaluation of institutional outputs harder. One of the things about academia that governments have a hard time conceptualizing is that “universities,” as a singular entity, are to some extent a fiction.  Governments treat them as discrete entities that have some agency of their own.  What is never very well understood is the extent to which university agency is restricted by the professional norms of its

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The University of Calgary’s New Strategic Plan

Back to Alberta.  I know, some of you may be sick of me talking about Alberta, but a) it’s the most interesting policy scene in Canada right now and b) this is how the rest of the country feels when I talk about Ontario, so fair’s fair.  Back, specifically, to the University of Calgary, which has – in response to significant government cutbacks and government complaints about the province’s universities being unresponsive to changing economic priorities, more or less decided

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Disciplines vs. Domains

One of my current projects has me thinking a lot about the university of the year 2040.  And my conclusion right now is that universities, as institutions, may be up for as big a re-think as anything they’ve faced in the last hundred years.  Specifically, there is probably going to be a need to re-think the role of disciplines in organizing higher learning. Disciplines and institutions sit uneasily against one another.  The original universities might have had individuals who might

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Institutional Economic Impact Statements: The Basics

For all sorts of reasons, higher education institutions find the need to “show value”.  One of the ways they do this is through economic impact statements.  My HESA Towers colleague Michael Savage has been doing a review of these across Canada and in a couple of other countries and has come up with a really simple framework for thinking about them. Today and tomorrow we’ll be taking an in-depth look at what these documents can and cannot actually explain. Ready? 

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U of T, Soft Landings, and the Nuclear Option

I know you’ve all been very busy, so you may not have kept up with the to and fro of the University of Toronto’s law school lately.  Let me fill you in. A little over a month ago, the Globe and Mail revealed (over a number of articles, most notably these two: here and here) that the University of Toronto law school had run into some trouble in filling the job of Director of its International Human Rights Law program.  Over the summer,

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