Academic Qualifications DePrioritized at Canadian Universities
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"In other words, 98 percent of academic postings ... directly or indirectly discriminated against non-minorities."
"Only two percent of vacancy postings did not contain any form of DEI [diversity, equity and inclusion] ideology."
"Our
index measures the prevalence of exclusionary potential, but it does
not prove for certain if discrimination has technically occurred."
"Should Canadian taxpayers fund public institutions that claim to serve the public interest but favour one race over another?"
Aristotle Foundation report
What
is scholarship all about? To favour the advance of the academically
gifted, to credit their brilliance and bring a light to the world of
knowledge? That, without doubt, speaks to the origins of institutes of
higher learning; their original authentic search for the questing minds,
to nurture and imbue them with the exposure their minds flourish within
to the greater benefit of humanity in their natural inclination to
guide the world to a better, more informed and empathetic place of
civilized harmony under the canopy of refined intelligence.
So,
then, how to explain, how to justify shutting the most qualified and
academically gifted out with the contentious movement of racist
empowerment in academia?
Receiving
applicants who aspire yet lack the intellectual wherewithal to reach
the heights of knowledge available to those whose thinking prowess is
far superior, yet deliberately overlooked and shunned because they may
belong to the perceived entitled class, to an ethnic/cultural grouping
known for their logical and interpretive curiosity in the gaining of
knowledge. Favouring instead those whose tradition, culture, heritage
and genetic endowments are less generous in the learning virtues of
academic inspiration.
A
report has just been issued based on a study whose purpose was to
define how many universities in Canada advertise employment in a number
of categories which seek to fulfill 'diversity' quotas with the
intention of bypassing the convention of hiring the most qualified
candidates to fill advertised positions. Aristotle Foundation
researchers selected 489 job positions posted by ten of Canada's
universities. Of the total postings a mere dozen failed to contain some
element of the search prioritizing candidates based on race, gender or
sexual identity.
Since
2017, it appears that an acceleration of the prioritized diversity
sought in faculty and staff has assumed greater emphasis with the policy
more explicit; identity quotas established in all zones, from student
admissions to hiring, to the granting of awards. Each and every
applicant to University of Toronto, from maintenance technician to
academic positions must complete a "diversity survey" to be considered.
Race and "ethnocultural identities, gender identity, visible and invisible disabilities and sexual orientation", all under critical consideration.
Universities
have taken to restricting positions to specific identity groups; a 2024
computer science position, as example, at the University of Waterloo
was open specifically to candidates "of a racialized minority".
Following the guidance, as it were, of federal mandates under the
Trudeau Liberal government which mandates federally funded Canada
Research Chairs subject to stern identity quotas: 22 percent of
positions must be chosen from among visible minorities; 50.9 percent
must select scholars identifying as women, while 7.5 percent must go to
candidates with disabilities.
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Samples
for the research were based on ten Canadian universities, one
representing each of the provinces. From 2023 forward, 50 sequential job
postings from each institute resulted in 489 job posts -- from a health
sciences librarian at University of Saskatchewan, to an assistant
professor of economics at University of Toronto. Some area of the
posting making reference to "diversity, equity and inclusion" was universal. Some of the university postings had minimal such requirements.
On the other hand, each posting by the University of Manitoba included the school's commitment "to
the principles of equity, diversity & inclusion and to promoting
opportunities in hiring, promotion and tenure for systemically
marginalized groups". In other postings applicants
were required to fill out a diversity survey explicitly stating that
diversity characteristics were an "asset", or requiring an essay
outlining the candidate's commitment to DEI.
Four
universities posted at least one job making no mention of DEI;
University of British Columbia, Memorial University of Newfoundland,
Dalhousie University (Nova Scotia) and the University of Prince Edward Island. The report by the Aristotle Foundation spoke of the findings as a "reality check" on Canadian universities, with the warning that DEI policies were harming "individual merit, academic freedom and equality of opportunity".
"The problem with diversity, equity, and inclusion, and this attempt to make everything exactly equal at the end and discriminate at the front end to do that, is you’re not looking at merit and qualifications the way that universities claim they are. Instead, you’re basically banning people from the position who don’t fit some irrelevant, non-changeable category.""Now, 100 years ago, there was systemic racism. If you were Chinese, for example, you could not get into a white hospital. They had to set up their own hospital. The same with Jewish people in Toronto, which is why Mount Sinai Hospital was set up. But that was 100 years ago. Systemic racism has been outlawed in Canada since the 1950s. You still find individual cases of prejudice, but systemic racism as a policy, as a law, began to be abolished in places like Ontario in the early 1950s".Mark Milke, founder/president, Aristotle Foundation on Public Policy
Labels: Academic Qualifications Second to Race, Canadian Universities, Gender, Identity Group, Invested in DEI
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