Trends & Challenges in Canadian Graduate Education

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Trends & Challenges in Canadian Graduate Education **** Britta Baron, University of Alberta TRANS-DOC Closing Seminar: Transferability Across the Atlantic Brussels October 2012

Canadian Context Approximately 100 recognized degree granting institutions in Canada $30B enterprise in Canada; $10B in research activities 1.2M students (undergraduate + graduate) 73 institutions have graduate programs (only 36 offering doctoral) 160,000 students enrolled in graduate programs

U15 Universities Dalhousie University Université Laval Université de Montréal McGill University University of Ottawa Queen s University University of Toronto University of Waterloo Western University University of Manitoba University of Saskatchewan University of Calgary University of Alberta University of British Columbia U15 universities account for more than 55% of all Canada s graduate students

Key issues for Graduate Education in Canada 1) Supply & Demand 2) Graduate Funding 3) Length & Completion Rate 4) Transferrable Skills 5) Internationalization 6) A Global Perspective

1) Supply & Demand 1990s World labor markets generated a growing demand for postgraduate degrees Canadian numbers trailing behind many industrialized countries > Canadian universities trying to expand PhD numbers, turning to international markets Enrolment has increased substantially > International students now contribute $6.5B annually to Canadian economy

Canada s Graduate Enrolment

Canada s International Enrolment

Canada s International Enrolment by Country

1) Supply & Demand Current State Demand for PhD graduates still exists worldwide > Developing regions (Latin America and Africa) seeking PhD academics for growing higher education systems The more the better? Still true; but are we producing the type of grads society needs? > Limited positions in academia: o PhD students who end up doing research: 30-50% o Changing demographics have student intake on downward trajectory = fewer profs required > Many unemployed and over-qualified PhD graduates; bachelor and master s grads competing for the same jobs and getting them But: What kind of PhDs? Challenge: Is the classical PhD helping students achieve in labor sectors beyond academia?

2) Graduate Funding Graduate students do quite well during the early years of program: University of Alberta Virtually all PhD students funded at average rate of $22,000 per year University of Calgary Average support of $19,600/year in 2009-10 University of Calgary Source of Graduate Funding

2) Graduate Funding (cont) Nationally approximately $20,000+ in early years but trails off in latter years U15 Universities: Graduate Student Support by Year of Study 2009-10 National support from Canada s research councils decreases dramatically (eg. 2011 NSERC down by approx 25%) Challenge: Not enough money nationally to maintain traditional levels of funding for expanded number of students

3) Length & Completion Rate Time to completion: > Canada: Average time to completion for PhD is 5.9 years > US: Data suggests up to 8-9 years > Europe: Bologna process has reduced time to completion, but still approx 5 years (3 years PhD, built upon 2 years master s) Completion rates = 45-50% for Social Sciences and Humanities 75% for Other Disciplines (Canadian Association Graduate Studies survey, 2005) Challenge: Are we efficient enough?

4) Transferrable Skills Labor markets are requiring skill-sets not directly produced by traditional PhD, also in academia Interdisciplinary and internationalization in demand Broadening the curriculum and reinventing the PhD are required to produce trans-disciplinary skills that are increasingly sought after, such as: > Managerial Expertise > Project and Time Management Abilities > Communication & Interpersonal Relations

4) Transferrable Skills (cont) Canada: MITACS Industry Internships International Doctoral Schools NSERC Create-DFG Model co-financing of projects where graduate students are taught as team and directly linked to another country University of Ottawa Business School providing career development programming to PhD students Challenge: Transferrable skills training often ad hoc, not mandatory and not systematic

5) Internationalization Recruitment > Not if but how many and from where? Scholarship Programming > Fragmented both nationally and institutionally, eg. Vanier and Banting Programs > August 2012 Government of Canada Advisory Panel on International Education Call for a unified flagship scholarship program that is recognized the world over and better alignment of international research grants through tri-council s with an emphasis on small number of priority countries

5) Internationalization (cont) National Recruitment Strategy > Decentralized model in Canada has hindered international recruitment > Recent success: Brazil s Science without Borders Canada has attracted over800 students Challenge: Coordinated, targeted national strategy, and internationalizing experiences for Canadian students (joint and dual degree programs)

6) A Global Perspective Canada has openly embraced international students and created mechanisms for work in Canada after graduation: > CIC post graduate work permit program allows working in Canada for up to 3 years Could a distribution of labor be considered around the world? Is Brain Drain an obsolete concept? Is over-production of PhD graduates an obsolete concept in a globalized labor market?

Thank you! Britta Baron Vice-Provost & Associate Vice-President (International) britta.baron@ualberta.ca