Tag: Faculty

Indigenous Identity

The issue of identity – specifically, the identity of scholars claiming to be Indigenous – is one of increasing importance in Canadian universities.  The recent resignations of Mary-Ellen Turpel-Lafond and Carrie Bourassa from UBC and the University of Saskatchewan, respectively, have had an enormous impact on those campuses.  Every campus needs to pay very careful attention to what as gone on at these institutions and adjust their policies accordingly. With respect to the case of Mary-Ellen Turpel-Lafond, a legal scholar

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Tracing Laurentian’s Path Part 3 : 2020/21

Laurentian was the first public university in Canada to close its campus in reaction to COVID.  On March 11, after the first case was identified, the institution decided to move to teaching at a distance.  Almost immediately, the consequences of COVID came into view.  The university had anticipated going into the new fiscal year with a combined $40 million in net deficits, line of credit owing, and “internal borrowing”, and now it was $45 million, with projected losses (at the

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The Canadian Professoriate: The Long View

Recently, I noticed that Statistics Canada has data on the Canadian professoriate dating back to 1970-71.  I don’t know if this is a recent addition to the free data scheme or if it’s been there all along and I have never noticed it, but it’s certainly worth a peek. Figure 1 is the simple picture, just total numbers.  It’s a pretty simple story: long-term, Canadian higher education has expanded by about 460 full-time academics per year every year since 1970. 

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Faculty Salary Data, 2020-21

We haven’t looked at faculty salaries in awhile, so let’s do that. Getting a handle on recent faculty salary data is easy: it’s the one thing that Statscan does both rapidly and well in the higher education field.  It may take them 30 months to produce student enrolment data, and they collect no data at all about college tuition or non-academic staff, but by gum they can process university salary data in under 12 months! (Yes, this does tell you

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Problems in Writing the History of Academia

All my historian readers seemed to enjoy last Thursday’s piece about writing campus histories, so I thought I would do a quick follow-up on things that drive me spare about the state of the art in writing about academia.  To my mind, there is a single serious problem, and it is this: institutional histories are everywhere, but they are almost all rooted in local and national histories whereas academia is global.  As a result, most institutional histories are limited when it comes to

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