The support and academic bargaining units of OPSEU
thank you Minister Cunningham and staff for the opportunity to provide
you with feedback on your document, "Increasing Degree
Opportunities for Ontarians."
First, we will respond to your questions, and then we
will make some general remarks about the direction that we think the
province should take in order to provide high quality education that
gives students the best chance of success and which ensures the needs
of the Ontario economy are best met.
QUALITY ASSESSMENT BOARD
The Board and its Chair should all be academics, those
who are actively involved in teaching. There should be a permanent
core of three with an additional four members who are expert academics
in the particular field or discipline that is being assessed or
reviewed. Principles of equity should be observed when setting up the
Board.
A Chair of a college Advisory Board from the
appropriate applied discipline, a member of the appropriate
professional group, a librarian, a co-op education consultant and an
employer should participate as resources to the Board.
Since the mandate of the Board is to assess quality
and advise the minister, we believe that educators are best suited to
the mandate you have already decided upon. This collegial governance
model is based on collegial models used in degree granting
institutions throughout the Western world.
Conflict of interest should cause only those with
opportunity for direct pecuniary gain to be excluded.
The Board should be empowered to call upon services
such as University of Toronto based Comparative Education Services
on an as-needed basis to assist in appraisal processes.
The academic standards should include:
We would not support an appeals process. Rather, the
Board should be required to provide detailed reasons for the denial,
with directions for success. The applicant should be allowed to
reapply in three years. An appeals process creates unnecessary and
expensive bureaucracy.
There should be a reasonable time period for
approvals. No regular review process is necessary because of the
current Advisory Committee structure but there must be a review
process to respond to complaints about a program.
APPLIED DEGREE PILOT PROJECTS
The Board should review the standards set at Ryerson
for degrees offered in applied disciplines as well as elsewhere across
Canada. However, having said that, we believe that there should be an
absolute standard, not a relative standard set. We say this as a
result of our concern with declining standards imposed by underfunding
of the system for so many years. We would recommend that the CSAC
documents be consulted in setting a standard that will guarantee
quality and reflect economic needs of industry.
As well as the standards set out in the section above,
we would hope that the Board reviews the quality of existing graduates
in the program field, the historical record of the institution, the
links that the institution has to the community. As a matter of public
policy, we would recommend that the Board give priority consideration
to the Northern colleges and that a fair share of the pilots be placed
in Francophone colleges. Further, pilots from communities without
universities should receive priority consideration.
It is difficult to answer the question of whether the
standards should be the same for new institutions when we do not know
what standards will ultimately be selected, but in a general response,
we would say yes.
In determining if there is an economic need for
graduates from the program, the Board should analysis need first
within the community, then within the region, then within the
province, then within Canada and finally in the world.
In most circumstances, we would not recommend a work
component but we do advocate for fully integrated applied elements
within every course. Whether this takes the form of labs or fieldwork,
the student must be in a position to receive feedback from the
professor so that the experience is a genuine learning experience
rather than a source of cheap labour. We recommend 8 semesters of 17
weeks with 25-28 hours per week of instruction per week by qualified
faculty.
We strongly recommend that there be a diploma exit
option since it protects the investment of student, the college and
especially the taxpayer. We also recommend one year post graduate
degrees. In order that previous college graduates or graduates from
regions without an applied degree to have access, we recommend a
bridging or make-up program be developed in conjunction with the
applied degree to allow these students to upgrade.
No change is necessary to admission standards.
PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS
We must respectfully disagree with the position taken
by the ministry in its statement of intention to allow private
institutions to offer degrees. It is our judgement based on our
experience with privates offering diplomas that this decision would do
harm to the universities, to students and to the Ontario taxpayer and
economy. These institutions because they charge more, add to the
increasing problem of student debt and attrition.
The student default rate from private institutions is
highest. In our experience the curriculum is either
"borrowed" from the colleges or it is inferior, causing
their diplomas not to be able to pass challenge exams to have their
credits recognized. They do not have an infrastructure of their own,
and as a result, advise their students to use CAAT libraries putting
an additional strain on a heavily used service. For the most part,
their faculty are not qualified and are more transient than the
faculty in public institutions.
It is not sufficient to merely deny them capital and
operating grants to protect students. We recommend they not have
access to any public funds, whether in the form of tax breaks to them
directly or tax breaks to their charitable benefactors or monies
through OSAP.
PROTECTION MEASURES
The best protection for students is the development
and proper funding of a public system of universities and community
colleges. However, that being said we would answer in the affirmative
to questions 2&3 as long it is fully funded by the private
institutions themselves. This should apply to institutions offering
diplomas as well as degrees.
To provide protection to students, it will be
necessary to modify the Privacy Act or to write in a section in a new
act or regulations which bars violating the privacy rights of students
and which imposes progressive consequences for those institutions that
do. Under such a plan, it would be necessary to set up a central
registry. This central registry is additional bureaucracy best avoided
by a full and complete commitment to ensuring a comprehensive,
adequately funded public system of community colleges and
universities.
Simply and concisely put, we advocate public funds
should only be available to public institutions.
CONCLUSION
The vast majority of Ontarians are committed to two
public services that touch their lives directly: medicare and public
education. They are in agreement that these services are a priority
for their tax dollars.
What we have come to know as medicare is a system
based on five principles enshrined in the Canada Health Act. We have
learned lessons from this system and from the forces which threaten
it.
Just as the Canada Health Act enshrined principles for
medicare, we would ask you to adopt principles that would produce and
enshrine an education system that meets the needs of students, their
families, the taxpayers and the economy of Ontario.
We recommend the adoption of the following principles
to education:
UNIVERSALITY
Post-secondary education should be available to students who
qualify and desire the opportunity.
PORTABILITY
The diplomas and degrees earned should be of such a standard and
reputation that they are accepted and recognized throughout Canada
and the world. Students should be able to start a program at one
institution in Canada and complete it elsewhere if their
circumstances are changed.
COMPREHENSIVENESS
Education would involve sufficient resources to ensure adequate
hours of instruction and adequate infrastructure to meet the goal of
portability.
ADMINISTRATION
This should be a publicly run, publicly funded system.
ACCESSIBILITY
No student should be denied access because of poverty, family
circumstances, language, or disability. The strategy of keeping the
colleges and the programs community based is key to this objective.
These principles have guided us in our analysis of
what would make the Ontario post secondary system best for the
stakeholders.
Respectfully submitted on behalf of the academic and
support OPSEU members who are committed to achieving the best quality
system for students and residents of Ontario,