Carleton University is promising to infuse 鈥淚ndigenous knowledge鈥 throughout its departments and to require that all students be taught Indigenous culture as part of Canada鈥檚 national reconciliation process.
The , part of Canadian higher education鈥檚 response to the nation鈥檚 2015 , also offer Indigenous students dedicated housing and gathering opportunities, special courses, physical protection and representation on university governing panels.
鈥淲e have a responsibility to ensure that the education being provided for students including Indigenous knowledge, perspectives and pedagogies,鈥 said Benny Michaud, assistant director of Carleton鈥檚 department of equity services.
For some Canadian academics, however, the idea of politically motivated shifts in graduation requirements and assessment processes 鈭 occurring at Carleton institutions 鈭 has been taking reconciliation ideals too far.
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Such changes amount to 鈥渁ttacking the academic mission of the university鈥, said Frances Widdowson, an associate professor of political science at Mount Royal University.
Academic culture should mean constantly challenging claims and arguments, said Mark Mercer, a professor of philosophy at Saint Mary鈥檚 University. 鈥淚ndigenisation initiatives often seek to replace cultures of disputation with cultures of celebration,鈥 he said.
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The Canadian government created the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 2008 as part of a court-approved settlement over the nation鈥檚 long history of extensive of Indigenous children in residential schools.
Although that did not directly concern universities, many institutions the commission鈥檚 call in its 2015 report to protect the languages and cultures of Indigenous people and to improve their educational opportunities.
The University of Toronto, in its to the report, said that while it did not operate any residential schools, it had 鈥渆ducated generations of political leaders, policymakers, teachers, civil servants and many others who were part of the system that created and ran鈥 them.
The , like many others adopted by Canadian institutions, pledges extensive efforts to help Indigenous students gain admission and succeed academically, with new courses and experiences designed to their community preferences.
The is among a subset promising more expansive ambitions. by the institution鈥檚 president, Benoit-Antoine Bacon, it calls for 鈥渆very student graduating from Carleton University鈥 to achieve 鈥渂asic learning outcomes with regards to Indigenous history and culture鈥.
It also describes infusing Indigenous teaching approaches throughout the college, including placing 鈥淚ndigenous Knowledge Keepers鈥 who lack traditional academic credentials directly into graduate and doctoral assessment processes.
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鈥淎t Carleton University,鈥 said Ms Michaud, one of three co-chairs of the the plan, 鈥渨e believe that every student has a right to know how this country came to be, and at what cost to Indigenous people.鈥
Ms Michaud said she did not regard the requirements in the plan as representing instructional and assessment mandates. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not telling anybody how to teach,鈥 said Ms Michaud, whose family is of M茅tis heritage. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e doing is we鈥檙e offering supports for those who would like to include these perspectives in the classroom, so that they feel empowered to do聽so.鈥
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Such matters have been politically tense, with advocates on both sides feeling overreach by the other. Several academics seeking bigger roles for Indigenous thought in their institutions have quit or been forced out in recent years, complaining of intolerance. Other departures have involved non-Indigenous instructors citing complaints that they had topics that concern Indigenous matters.
Professor Widdowson said she recognised that Canada鈥檚 Indigenous population had truly been suffering from discrimination and economic disadvantages. But many of the steps that Carleton and other universities see as corrective, she said, amount to protections for staff and beliefs that could not otherwise survive normal academic scrutiny.
Some, Professor Widdowson continued, such as the special rooms built for the Indigenous smoke ceremonies , amount to academic . Universities instead should pursue more substantial steps to help Indigenous communities with their educational and economic challenges, she said.
One leading expert in Canadian higher education, Alex Usher, the president of Higher Education Strategy Associates, said many institutions do appear to have gone beyond the Truth and Reconciliation Commission report鈥檚 call for students to better understand Aboriginal conditions.
Some of the more controversial requirements, however, are not likely to translate into meaningful differences in teaching at Carleton or elsewhere, he said.
A spokeswoman for Dr Bacon, asked to clarify, said Carleton does not expect every student to take an Indigenous course before graduating, but does plan to 鈥渆nsure that Indigenous content is added to each programme鈥. The goal, the university said in the statement, is 鈥渢o make certain that all Carleton graduates are socially responsible citizens who can become ethical and informed future leaders鈥.
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