Monthly Archives: April 2010

Posted by on 29 April

Ivy League university faces lawsuit over handling of sexual assault allegations

Brown University is facing a lawsuit stemming from a rape allegation in 2006. The Associated Press reports is available online.

Depending what occurs as the lawsuit moves forward, the case could result in changes to how universities deal with serious criminal accusations within their campuses.

Many universities, including in Canada, have internal processes with lower standards of proof and less protections for the accused than available in the common law justice system which applies equally to criminal acts both on and off the properties of universities.

If this lawsuit is successful, it will force American universities to review how they handle accusations of criminal activity. While we’re not aware of the details of the Brown University situation, it is very concerning that the accusation of sexual assault was not criminally prosecuted or, at the very least, plea bargained within the criminal justice system.

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Posted by on 26 April

Email server problems – again

I’m having difficulties with my email server again today and I’m trying to resolve them. At the present time, some emails have been delayed up to four hours getting to me.

I probably should’ve invested in a better web hosting service.

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Posted by on 23 April

CAUT lifts censure of FNUC

The Canadian Association of University Teachers (CAUT) has voted unanimously to lift its censure of the First Nations University of Canada (FNUC) in response to governance changes the University implemented in February.

The changes were finally begun after both the provincial and federal governments cut funding to the institutions following years of financial mismanagement and poor governance.

CAUT censured FNUC in late 2008 citing serious governance problems at Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations owned institution.

CAUT is calling on the federal government to restore full funding to the institution. The federal government restored partial funding to CAUT with restrictions preventing the limited funds from being used to cover losses stemming from previous mismanagement.

“Back in 2008 we took that very serious step hoping that it would help encourage change, and that change has come,” said CAUT Executive Director James Turk stated in the news release. “We were once one of the loudest voices in the country when it came to demanding changes at the institution – those changes have been made, so we’ve lifted censure, and it is time for the federal government to do its part.”

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Posted by on 21 April

Maclean’s Urback is wrong to attack Queen’s president

In her last commentary for Maclean’s OnCampus, Robyn Urback goes after Queen’s University president Daniel Wolfe.” Urback writes “‘paternalism’ is the new “freedom of thought’” at Queen’s.

What grave offence against civilization has Dr. Wolfe committed to earn the scorn of Maclean’s star blogger?

He announced a five year phase-out of bottled water sales at the Kingston, Ontario university. Ms. Urback equates the end of bottled water sales to be an attack on freedom of choice and a ‘paternalistic’ action by Dr. Wolfe.

She is wrong in her attack (and it is an attack), there is no “ban” on bottled water. Students will be able to consume bottled water, they just won’t be able to purchase bottled water on campus.

Provided Queen’s installs a series of reusable bottle filling stations, the phase-out of bottled water sales will be of benefit to the overall student body.

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Posted by on 11 April

Reading my archives…

I’m reading the archives of my blog today as I prepare an application for a summer position I’m applying to. Sigh, a lot of things I wish I never wrote in the early days of the blog and other things I now laugh about.

This line really jumped out at me: “Does not mean that I am a fan of the Opera or anything all of the sudden….”

My resistance to the opera is something I laugh about now that I’m a major fan of the artform.

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Posted by on 09 April

What should government info cost?

Janet Steffenhagen, the education reporter for The Vancouver Sun, notes a report by the B.C. School Trustees’ Association calling for more leeway to charge Freedom-of-Information applicants for the full costs of their requests.

My response to the report is simple: start making raw data available on the Internet and the cost of administering information will go down.

Ms. Steffenhagen’s blog is unique among “old-school” education journalists in Canada. It is updated daily and a wealth of information. If you follow this blog because you are interested in education policy generally, you definitely want to follow her blog: http://communities.canada.com/VANCOUVERSUN/blogs/reportcard/

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Posted by on 07 April

Another resignation, another round of questions

University of Calgary Graduate Students’ Association president Veronique Dorais-Ram resigned last week, soon after a successful referendum to leave the Canadian Federation of Students.

No reasons have been publicly stated for the resignation which was submitted during an in-camera meeting of the GSA council. There are questions surrounding GSA finances and – in the vacuum – the comments section of The Gauntlet website already has the question asked “What are they trying to hide?”

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Posted by on 07 April

Thoughts on the CFS referendum at uGuelph

Students at the University of Guelph will vote starting later today on their membership in the Canadian Federation of Students. The vote follows a court order which was required after the Canadian Federation of Students stonewalled students at Guelph in order to prevent the vote from occurring.

A couple of things jump out at me about this vote and the precedents they set in CFS referendums.

1) The vote is being held, as per the court order, over three days.

This overrides the CFS preference for two days of voting and is advantageous towards the NO (non-CFS) side in the vote. The CFS has a virtually unlimited budget and parachutes full-time campaigners into local referendums, whereas the non-CFS side must rely on grassroots students to volunteerarly man their campaign. With dozens of full-time non-student campaigners, the CFS is being able to mobilize their votes in a short period of time whereas the grassroots campaign must content with volunteers unable to skip academic requirements to mobilize votes. The more time the volunteers have to spread their message, the more likely they will fully mobilize their voters.

The fact the court ordered a three-day campaign sets a precedent which can be used against the CFS in the future.

2) Online voting

A major issue in the Canadian Federation of Students referendum at the University of Saskatchewan was online voting. The Canadian Federation of Students would not allow an online voting option for students at USask. Online voting at USask is primarily used by professional programs such as nursing and engineering. Students in these programs are often attending off-campus placements and unable to vote on-campus.

With an entire court-ordered vote being conducted using online voting, the CFS is unlikely to be able to stop future online voting from occurring in a manner determined by local need.

3) The court order itself

The courts are clearly willing to step in to ensure fairness in the process of CFS referendums and have ignored CFS bylaw six. Case law is being built that clearly favours the rights of students to conduct votes on CFS membership provided they follow the concepts of natural justice.

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Posted by on 07 April

Stern Iron Man pinball

Stern’s next pinball machine is Iron Man and there is a video of a final product now on the Tubes:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Md3U4EP3I3A

It looks like it will be an enjoyable game, much like Spiderman was. I’m excited by the raising target feature.

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