Tag: covid19

Post-Covid Fiscal Rebalancing

One of the weirder things about the present crisis is that we seem to be re-writing all the rules of federalism without even noticing it.  This will significantly affect the future of higher education. The most important changes have been with respect to the Canada Emergency Relief Benefit (CERB) and the Canada Emergency Student Benefit (CESB).  Though there have been ebbs and flows over the history of confederation, income support for the under-65s, absent a strong link to the labour force (i.e.

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Time to Talk Workloads

No one wants to be the first one to say it, so I will.  Regular academic workloads are going to have to be re-arranged for the Summer and Fall Terms.  In most cases drastically. This is simple math.  Providing quality teaching in the fall is going to require – in part – significantly smaller classes.  This will not only be true if the fall is fully online.  It will also be true if – as the currently fashionable musing has

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Coronavirus (20) – So, that Student Support Package

If there is one thing that unites the higher education community right now, it is the fact that we are all so, so, tired.  One thing after another.  And yesterday, just as I was thinking about what nice non-coronavirus story I could tell you, the feds dropped a $9 billion program to support students through COVID.  So naturally, this here is your explainer. The comms on this are a bit of a mess, but basically, this initiative has four pillars,

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Coronavirus (18…or so) – Positioned to Pivot

So, last week I suggested that the Fall term was likely both to start and finish online because of practical difficulties in pivoting halfway though in most institutions.  There are many reasons for this, but the main one is that most pivot scenarios assume that students who will start off learning at home are able to drop everything and find local accommodations with very short notice, and not all students are in a position to do that.  This would leave institutions either

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Coronavirus (16) – Shared Sacrifice

Lots of people are gaming out what post-Corona looks like economically.  Increasingly, we seem to have consensus that 2020 will be the worst year for the global economy since the early 1930s, with GDP drops for the year landing somewhere between 5-10%.  There is considerable debate about the speed of the bounce-back, with people talking about recoveries that V-shaped (i.e. quick), U-shaped (not so quick), or bathtub-shaped. We could be in this a long time: no one really knows the

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