• Pennomi@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Good. Access to technology should be dramatically reducing the cost of education, not increasing it.

    • ninja@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Technology still costs money. Instead of an instructor with a chalkboard every classroom now has a computer and projector with ongoing costs associated with them. A 100 year old chalk board works just fine, but a 5 year old computer needs replaced. Every institution now has to have a web site and every student, faculty, and staff member has to have e-mail; every office has computers and printers; every building has wifi; every paper process now has a digital equivalent; and every one of those things have to have staff to support them. Technology gets very expensive very fast.

      Technology has increased the availability of and decreased the cost of gaining knowledge. Wikipedia is at our fingertips and youtube has scores of free, topic specific learning videos. Technology has not decreased the cost of running a University.

      • howrar
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        4 months ago

        Then the university should get more money. But in this case, they’re getting less. The government is mandating that they increase tuition so that the extra money can be funneled to other schools.

      • Maalus@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Yeaaah, no. You are overblowing the costs. And it has absolutely decreased the cost of running a university.

        • S_204@lemm.ee
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          4 months ago

          I’ve got a family member who’s a level 2 Canada research chair and professor. During COVID I was asking about the move to virtual learning and how they were set up for it, they were telling me that a much larger portion of her grant money who’s going to technology then before and it had started a few years earlier.

          Now this prof does some crazy stuff with brain scanning and virtual reality which takes some horsepower and probably needs more upgrades than your typical university computer lab. But the point remains their budgets were being strained 5 plus years ago because of the technology that’s been incorporated into teaching.

          I’m inclined to believe that the relative costs of operating a university theatre have risen rather than dropped since I graduated 20 years ago.

      • Nik282000
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        4 months ago

        5 year old computer needs replaced

        You might be on the wrong website, buddy.

    • ahal
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      4 months ago

      This has nothing to do with technology, it’s just petty politics. Legault thinks this will play well with voters in strategic ridings, and that’s all this is about.

  • Poutinetown
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    4 months ago

    No mention of other schools. Shouldn’t they be protesting in solidarity with their fellow students? Pretty sure ROC students protested the tuition hikes in 2012 too even though the main targets were QC students.

  • deeferg@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    With the amount of international students being brought in, I thought this was to be expected? Unless they cut the bloat in their systems (which I feel is the least likely it has seemed) then tuition of local students will have to be increased to make up for that lost income.

    • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      The Quebec government is increasing costs for domestic students, independent of the announced changes for international students.

    • Poutinetown
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      4 months ago

      They can’t increase local tuition since it’s set by the government.

      • deeferg@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I guess what I’m trying to say is that the government would see this need for more income through local students/the set of international students they have coming in, so they’d have to raise it for the schools themselves.

        It’s more just a money in/money out comment. Not sure I said it was the universities increasing the tuition themselves.

      • howrar
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        4 months ago

        The government also sets the out-of-province and international tuition.