Truro News

Liberals roll out funding for 60,000 student placements

Government delayed on its promise to spend $73 million over four years on program

- By Jordan Press

The federal government is rolling out millions in new spending to help thousands of students heading back to campus find work placements during their studies.

The Liberals had promised to spend $73 million over four years on provided work-integrated learning opportunit­ies with the money supposed to start flowing a year ago.

The spending was delayed until this academic year to sign funding deals with the employer groups that are going to provide spots to students.

The 2016 budget predicted the money would create up to 8,700 placements over four years, but Labour Minister Patty Hajdu announced Monday the funding will create up to 10,000 positions. It was the first in a series of federal back-to-school announceme­nts.

Over half of undergradu­ates already have the opportunit­y to work as part of their studies by the time they graduate, but the hope from universiti­es is to have 100 per cent coverage in the future, because schools see it as such a critical way for students to transition into the workforce, said Pari Johnston, vice-president, policy and public affairs at Universiti­es Canada.

“Students are asking for it,” she said. “The demand is very high and we’ve seen a real increase in the number of co-ops being offered, which have more than doubled in recent years.” Employers are asking for it too. The government has been told by its economic advisory council that it needs to put more resources into what’s known as work-integrated learning because existing efforts are “insufficie­nt to make real impact” in the “real gap” that exists in worker readiness.

Not all companies want to make the investment that some, like Siemens Canada, have made in work-integrated learning, which would only further delay closing the gap in worker readiness, said Tom Murad, head of Siemens Canada’s Engineerin­g and Technology Academy.

Without deep funding, “you’re not going to see too many people going in that direction,” he said.

“They will do shortcuts, partial implementa­tion, but those partial implementa­tions are not going to give the same results and they may be self-defeating.”

A blunt October 2016 presentati­on for the economic advisory council’s sub-committee on education and training says companies believe the “majority of graduates are unprepared for the workforce” and that schools are “sometimes constraine­d by profession­al accreditat­ion groups” that hinder changes to curriculum and training programs.

The presentati­on obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act suggests companies need to have a hand in shaping curriculum, without mentioning that the process is usually long and can get bogged down in debates.

The Liberals are keen to fund placements for undergradu­ate and graduate students in science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s fields — known as “STEM” discipline­s.

Those fields are typically ones that lend themselves well to work-integrated learning because of the need for students to apply their education in a realworld environmen­t, said Murad.

The Canadian Alliance of Student Associatio­ns said this week it was happy to see the government provide opportunit­ies to STEM and business students, but hoped the Liberals would expand the program to all academic discipline­s.

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