And from a national perspective, there’s a case here too – rhetorically, at least. It is, frankly, somewhat ludicrous that Canada isn’t a world leader in distance education. Just look at a map, for God’s sake. Yet, Ontario’s universities and colleges have repeatedly joined forces to ensure the province has nothing more serious in this area than Contact North, BC folded its Open University into a mainstream institution, Alberta is allowing Athabasca to flirt with bankruptcy, and TELUQ is…better now, I guess, now that it has been de-merged from UQAM again but it’s not a world-leader by any means. One could argue that this is a function (or dysfunction) of federalism: there’s a national need and market for this stuff but no single province has a big enough market to do it well.
The problem is when you get into specifics.
On a similar logic to our legendary Superclusters, Bates sees this as a national project which needs must be conducted on regional lines. We therefore need five of them – one each for the Maritimes, Quebec, Ontario, the West and (somewhat differently) the North. And once we head down the regional politics rabbit-hole, we start talking about “local conditions” and “building on existing strengths”, so the Quebec one is aerospace focused, the BC one is digital/design focused maybe built around Emily Carr. And, of course the whole thing to be funded jointly by Ottawa and the provinces.
So, this is never going to happen. Quebec is never going to accept federal dollars in this manner and neither I suspect would Alberta or several other provinces. Even if they did, joint campuses in the west and the Atlantic would almost certainly fail over squabbles about location and shares of payment. And building around strengths of existing universities and colleges is probably the wrong way to go if you want something actually innovative: the partner institutions will tend to blunt its distinctive edges.
That said, a Northern institution is an intriguing angle, if only because the federal government actually has jurisdiction up in the Territories. The Feds could set up something that way and if it is successful, existing northern-serving institutions (like University College of the North in Manitoba, for instance, or Northern Lights College in BC) might eventually buy in to some of the innovations. It might also make for an interesting test-case in terms of partnering with another new set of organizations – the
Indigenous PSE institutions that are heading towards official status – and who certainly could use a partner with some advanced tech and thinking about distance education.
In other words, Bates’ idea is great in principle and if you had a magic wand to conjure it into existence, it would be a Good Thing. The problem is it’s not obvious there’s a way to get there short of magic.
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