In my opinion
Owning the ambition to reach non-specialist readers is the first step in making it happen.
A response to Peter MacKinnon’s excerpt on university governance and collective bargaining.
A theory of the ‘clever sillies’.
Is your university making full use of its campus radio?
Recent international rankings of universities seem to show that Canada’s major universities are slipping. But looking closer, we’re in fact not doing badly.
Students deserve to have reliable information when making choices about what to study.
It involves more than recruiting international students to solve domestic economic concerns.
Teaching about what we know feels less risky than putting our ideas ‘out there’ for criticism.
Je suis Charlie.
University leaders require support to deliver antiracist education.
Entrepreneurship and innovation, while important and necessary, remain insufficient educational goals for Canada’s universities.
How to thrive in a time of limited financial resources.
By encouraging researchers to publish in international journals, we may be steering their work in the wrong direction.
The root of the problem is that too much government funding is going to those who don’t teach.
When it comes to public talk of rankings, it’s a matter of playing at games to gain reputation and engage in advocacy.
In the humanities, the student audience is the scholar’s largest and most important.
Why special collections can be transformative to the student.
A new form of collaboration is evident in applied research institutes in Ontario.
The upcoming program reform represents an immense opportunity for those who are still reeling from SSHRC’s 2009 decision to carve out new success at CIHR.
While digitization changes the role of libraries and perhaps of scholars’ relations with text, is has so far not changed the way people learn.