Exploring the potential contribution of college bachelor degree programs in Ontario to reducing social inequality

M. Skolnik, Leesa Wheelahan, Gavin Moodie, Qin Liu, Edmund Adam, D. Simpson
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

ABSTRACT During the past two decades community colleges and technical institutes in several jurisdictions, including parts of Canada, the United States and Australia, have been given the authority to award bachelor degrees. One of the motivations for this addition to the mandate of these institutions is to improve opportunities for bachelor degree attainment among groups that historically have been underserved by universities. This article addresses the equity implications of extending the authority to award baccalaureate degrees to an additional class of institutions in Canada’s largest province, Ontario. The article identifies the conditions that need to be met for reforms of this type to impact positively on social mobility and inequality, and it describes the kinds of data that are necessary to determine the extent to which those conditions are met. Based on interviews with students, faculty, and college leaders, it was found that regulatory restrictions on intra-college transfer from sub-baccalaureate to baccalaureate programs and lack of public awareness of a new type of bachelor degree may be limiting the social impact of this reform.
探索安大略省大学学士学位课程对减少社会不平等的潜在贡献
在过去的二十年中,包括加拿大、美国和澳大利亚部分地区在内的一些司法管辖区的社区学院和技术学院被授予授予学士学位的权力。增加这些机构的任务的动机之一是,在历史上一直没有得到大学服务的群体中,增加获得学士学位的机会。本文讨论了将授予学士学位的权力扩展到加拿大最大的省份安大略省的另一类机构的公平影响。本文确定了这种类型的改革需要满足的条件,以对社会流动性和不平等产生积极影响,并描述了确定满足这些条件的程度所必需的各种数据。通过对学生、教师和学院领导的访谈,我们发现,对学院内部从副学士学位转到学士学位课程的监管限制以及公众对新型学士学位的缺乏认识可能限制了这一改革的社会影响。
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