
| Volume 13, Issue 4 ![]()
COVER PAGE PRACTICAL INFORMATION REGIONAL NEWS FEATURE Masthead: Learn more about eWENR and its editorial staff. Subscriptions: Don't miss future issues of eWENR. Workshops: See a listing of upcoming workshops sponsored by WES. Search or Browse WENR Archives: View back issues of this newsletter or search for specific words or terms. Useful Links: See a list of Web sites that may be helpful to eWENR readers. | Regional News
Although the move elicited cries of protest from professors, teachers and students alike, the Ontario government feels that this is one way to cope with the anticipated 20 percent increase in undergraduate enrollment during the next decade. Ontario has indicated that the new private institutions will not be eligible for funding from the provincial government. Supporters of this "sink-or-swim" approach argue that increased competition for students will create superior models of higher education. Others contend that it is impossible for the government to completely refrain from funding non-public colleges and universities. They fear that if private institutions do in fact become approved for government loans and research grants, there will be less money for the state-run universities. Times Higher Educational Supplement Students currently enrolled in the three-year baccalaureate program at all three campuses will be allowed to complete their degrees. Many students are protesting the decision, arguing that gutting the three-year program will serve to exclude students who cannot afford a four-year, 20-credit undergraduate degree. However, university officials say the move is necessary to guarantee the integrity of a University of Toronto degree, ensuring that students are given adequate time to develop critical thinking, writing and analytical skills. At present, about 40 percent of University of Toronto students opt for the three-year, 15-credit degree. Roughly half that number return to school to complete another year of undergraduate school or to attend a professional school in fields such as medicine or law. Most other Toronto universities say they plan on keeping the three-year degree option. However, Lakehead University in Thunder Bay is also considering doing away with it. Toronto Star
The university will begin by offering programs in environmental studies, education and engineering. It will also house the Natural Resources and Environmental Research Institute. The university is expecting to enroll approximately 600 students by March 2001. Government officials are concerned that the new university will not have the resources or funds to attract topnotch academics. Tenured professors at public universities in Peru generally earn only $1,000 a month. However, officials are hoping the proximity of the new institution to rare plant and animal life will attract support and talent from outside of Peru. The Chronicle of Higher Education
Each year colleges and universities compete to get their names on the Yahoo! Internet Life's list of 100 most wired schools. The following universities made the top-ten in the 2000 ranking: Carnegie Mellon, University of Delaware, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Indiana University, Dartmouth, MIT, Rensselear Polytechnic, University of Virginia, Washington State and UCLA. The top-10 colleges were Williams, Colgate, Bates, Occidental, Oberlin, Sweet Briar, Albion, Illinois Wesleyan, Smith & Trinity. Thirteen of the nation's top schools, including Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Stanford, Duke, Michigan and the University of Chicago, boycotted the survey that was conducted for this year's ranking. None of them made the top 20 in last year's rankings. College Bound The office, which works with six American higher-education associations and the U.S. Agency for International Development to create partnerships with institutions overseas, recently set up a Web site called CUPID (Colleges and Universities Partnering for International Development). The new site enables institutions based in the United States and abroad to exchange information about themselves and to search for institutions with similar interests in order to form joint programs. Additional information about existing international links between colleges can be found at: www.aascu.org/alo/ihelp. Chronicle of Higher Education
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