Saturday, November 3, 2018

Northern Ontario Youth less likely to pursue University

According to a paper published in the June issue of Rural Sociology, young people from remote northern regions of Canadian provinces are significantly less likely than those in southern urban areas to attend post-secondary school.

Examining Access to Post-secondary Education among Youth in Canada's Provincial North

Some social groups continue to face significant barriers and encounter difficulties making the transition. . Drawing on cycles 1 to 4 of Statistics Canada's Youth in Transition Survey (YITS−Cohort A), research reveals that individuals from the northernmost parts of Canadian provinces do experience difficulties accessing University.  Results suggest that much of these location effects are attributable to not only economic differences in terms of parental income but also cultural and dispositional differences related to parental education and their aspirations for their children's education.

Low income is a barrier to university education, and the parents of northern Ontario students earn less money on average than parents in southern urban Ontario regions.

Stats Canada Ontario and Northeast Economic region


Post-secondary institutions in northern Ontario are taking steps to attract students from within the region and beyond. Two northern colleges and three northern universities for this story; all have Indigenous outreach programs that seek out students in remote First Nations, and all offer distance- and online-education options, in part to provide access to those who can’t leave home. For additional article info:

TVO: Why so many students in the north aren’t going to college or university

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Saturday, June 16, 2018

2 of Canada’s Universities INCREASED their QS Rank Globally

Canadian academics are falling behind on getting published and being cited by other academics these are two key areas linked to reputation therefore 24 of 26 Canadian universities saw their rankings fall in the "academic reputation" category.  Only 2 of Canada’s Universities INCREASED their QS Rank Globally.


Canadian schools have increasingly turned to international students who pay higher tuition fees than domestic students. Canada's best performance in this year's rankings came in the "international student ratio" category, with 13 of 26 schools showing a higher relative score than last year.
But this focus on international students may be harming Canadian universities' performance in some ways as the influx of foreign students in recent years has resulted in larger class sizes, to the detriment of all students.
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List of education blogs below the posts.