Archive for the ‘Education Debates’ Category

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Loyola’s good fight

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Jun. 28, 2010
In 2008, the Quebec government introduced a grade-school course titled “Ethics and Religious Culture” (ECR), to replace the religion courses previously offered by the province’s schools. Compulsory in all public and private institutions, ECR presents all religions on a morally relativistic footing, and devotes considerable weight to the history of liberal social movements. The introduction of ECR generated opposition among parents who saw it as an exercise in social engineering.

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Ontario reveals schools that will receive second wave of all-day kindergarten

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Jun. 15, 2010
The program will be introduced this fall in nearly 600 schools, and by September of 2011, with the additional 200 schools the full-day option will be available to about 50,000 students across the province. “What we’re hearing from school boards is there has been a very healthy response to this initiative, parents are voting with their feet on this one,” said Minister of Education Leona Dombrowsky… All-day kindergarten will be available everywhere in the province by 2015.

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Native counsellors vital to student success

Sunday, June 6th, 2010

June 5, 2010
The Ontario Native Education Counselling Association (ONECA) has released Walk In Our Moccasins: A Comprehensive Study of Aboriginal Education Counsellors in Ontario… The report addresses many of the challenges facing native students in post-secondary institutions and confirms the necessity of culturally validated curriculum. It also presents the need for parental and community involvement, academic readiness, social services, and the native counsellors to advocate on behalf of, and provide guidance to, First Nations students.

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Investment is great, but what about people?

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

June 2, 2010
… making low tuition fees a cornerstone of post-secondary education policy would make it impossible to properly balance costs between individual students and the broader society… I think income-contingent loans, along the lines of what’s offered in Australia, are also well worth considering… The income contingent system has been criticized as being unduly costly for graduates who don’t make big salaries and therefore take a long time to repay. But this could be solved with something as simple as a cap on eventual repayment costs.

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Today’s college kids are 40-per-cent less empathetic, study finds

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Jun. 01, 2010
Mary Gordon, the Toronto founder and president of Roots of Empathy, also blames a “poverty of time” in families. “You have to experience empathy to continue to develop it. If children don’t have enough opportunity and parents don’t have enough time to be with their children, it’s really difficult,” she said. The non-profit organization offers an experiential learning program to students from kindergarten to Grade 8 to help beef up children’s “emotional literacy.” School officials typically call the organization after they’ve seen a spike in bullying.

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Top grades for Canada’s new research program

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

May 26, 2010
The $190-million is stretched over seven years, and therefore will cost Ottawa a little more than $25-million a year. That investment has already sparked millions more from private sources and provincial governments… In the United States, a program like this might not be necessary, because private universities are so well endowed, and so much private and foundation money is available to recruit the world’s best. And success feeds on success, so the top U.S. universities are automatic magnets for talent.

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Fewer than 3% undergraduates opting to study abroad, study finds

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

May. 26, 2010
At a time when politicians are extolling the virtues of attracting more foreign students to Canada, a new study shows our own undergraduates are homebodies. Less than 3 per cent ventured to a foreign country as part of their studies, even though most say they are interested in global issues and are attracted to the idea of studying abroad. Money, difficulty in meeting degree requirements and lack of awareness of opportunities are all contributing to the low showing, the study finds.

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Awarding of research chairs ‘brain coup’ or brain cramp?

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

May 25 2010
This year’s federal budget provided only a modest increase for Canada’s research granting councils, hardly equal to inflation and certainly not enough to offset the nearly $148 million in cuts announced last year. As a result, labs are being shut, important research projects are being shelved, and some are looking at a future outside of Canada. That context helps explain why many researchers are shaking their heads in disbelief as universities lucky enough to scoop a CERC chair now say they’re on the hook to cover significant new costs associated with the program.

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Learning curve flat for Canadian cities

Friday, May 21st, 2010

May. 20, 2010
The Canadian Council on Learning has measured the know-how of communities for the past five years, ranking them based on a basket of measures. Some, such as high-school dropout rates and reading and math scores, are straightforward. Others, such as spending on museums and reading material and average travel time to religious institutions, try to capture difficult-to-measure factors like exposure to media and access to community institutions.

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Canada’s $200-million lure pulls in 19 big-name researchers

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

May. 18, 2010
The researchers – half recruited from the United States, with four from Britain and the rest from Germany, France and Brazil – will each receive $10-million over seven years as the first group of Canada Excellence Research Chairs. They represent Ottawa’s most forceful effort yet to signal its commitment to big science, something critics say has been badly lacking… In all, 13 universities will welcome these scientists to their campuses, most with colleagues and graduate students in tow.

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