vicente
New Member
We could also place a new university in a small town in the middle of nowhere so that we create a college town.
How about Tillsonburg, or Chatham, or Port Colborne?
How about Tillsonburg, or Chatham, or Port Colborne?
Honest Ed's?
A 70 storey tower in the heart of the Annex, within a 10 minute walk of Jane Jacobs' house. Yeah, right...
Who said it was a realistic idea.![]()
An email from historian Jack Granatstein:
"'Not enough Canadians are getting into universites. Not enough profs are there to greet them. Not enough ideas get out of labs into the market, and not enough of what goes on in our universities is remotely close to the best in the world.'
"You said this in your post. May I disagree with some of it?
"I took early retirement from York in 1995, and I left in substantial part because I thought standards had sunk dramatically. Everything I hear today suggests matters are worse there—and everywhere. I have taught one undergrad and one grad course since then at two different universities. I was not impressed with the quality of many students. There is no shortage of brains; there may, however, be too many drones stifling the best students.
"Is it not possible that too many students who should NOT be in university are going, rather than too few? Is it not possible that tenure allows many profs who do little to remain in front of classes while new—maybe better—faculty cannot get hired? Your last sentence above directly relates in my view to the points I have just made.
"What we most need is a powerful independent commission to look at what is happening in our universities and to recommend what steps need to be taken to meet our 21st century needs as a nation."
We could also place a new university in a small town in the middle of nowhere so that we create a college town.
How about Tillsonburg, or Chatham, or Port Colborne?
I was told in a class this year that Trent was planning on opening a satelite campus on the Toronto Waterfront. I don't know how much truth there is to that, but just throwing it out there.
Port Colborne is poor. But, I guess the Niagara Region could desperately use some new jobs.
But a town of 15,000 or so can't support a university.
I'm on the other side of the coin. When my family immigrated (or is that emigrated?) to Canada my Dad had only a high school education, but was already a senior sales and marketing man with an international firm. I went to university myself, as do many kids of immigrants, in my case an arts degree, then followed by a stint in business at GB college, before landing my career in international business.in a lot of immigrant/minority families colleges are looked down upon very harshly by thier parents and university is seen as the only way to go.
That is how it was for me and for a lot of people i know.
"Son, you better be going to university or else THAT RESP IS USELESS!!"




