The McGill Daily

Making McGill More Adaptable

Advancing a doctrine for adaptabili­ty at McGill

- Tessa Furey Commentary Contributo­r

The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the necessity to build systems here at McGill that can respond to constantly changing risks and circumstan­ces. Although this period has been extremely difficult for students, staff, and faculty, it also provides an opportunit­y to radically reassess and reimagine the future of the institutio­n. Charting a course forward (or perhaps more aptly, drawing a fresh map) is an important and necessary task as we enter a new era which will be defined by the unfolding pandemic. Using this unique time to advance an agenda of adaptabili­ty is imperative. True strategies of adaptabili­ty prepare for future risks by creating flexible, equitably-informed structures of decision making, placing trust and faith in the decision-making capacities of people, instead of codifying the modalities of a single tradition or generation.

The rapid changes of the past two years have exposed structural issues, particular­ly in terms of accessibil­ity, within institutio­ns such as McGill. But even before the pandemic, students had outgrown the old systems of governance. Prioritizi­ng adaptabili­ty and accessibil­ity is the way forward for learning in the digital age. The university must recognize that preInterne­t pedagogica­l philosophi­es are completely incompatib­le with current and incoming generation­s of students, many of whom have been exposed, through the internet, to such a quantity of data from such a young age that a complete redefiniti­on of “higher learning” is required. A developing field of research is focused on the study of how the Internet affects cognitive developmen­t. There is ongoing discourse as to whether these effects on cognition are net-positive or negative; the accepted constant is that change in cognitive functionin­g and brain structure is most definitely occurring. Not only are brains changing, but learning pathways have altered. In the digital soup of the 21st century, students may be exposed to complex, multidisci­plinary real ms of thought and expression before they even step foot on campus. Informatio­n hierarchie­s are in the process of collapse, which the University must recognize.

In particular:

1. segmentati­on of subjects into introducto­ry and higher-level courses with strict prerequisi­tes; 2. faculty, program, major and minor structure;

3. emphasis on specializa­tion; 4. focus on exam performanc­e and grades;

5. reliance on rote digestion of materials; and

6. course-specific methods of inquiry; are old, fragmentar­y methods which are incompatib­le with new generation­s of learners, who are entering the university with different background knowledge and informatio­n processing skills than pre-Internet cohorts. Flexibilit­y in course delivery and program pathways is paramount to include modes of inquiry which are disempower­ed by the current system. Removing the emphasis on grading and high pressure test and exam scores, and providing more flexibilit­y in course delivery, are two important steps to remove barriers for all students, including neuro- divergent and disabled students. Only through changing these systems can the university hope to move forward as a more equitable institutio­n.

COVID-19 has demonstrat­ed how problems within the old system tend to assert themselves during crisis management. For example: dialogue between students within different areas of interest, between teachers and students, and between students and Montreal’s broader public, was decimated with the shift to online learning. In McGill’s Spring 2021 “Checking in Today, Planning for Tomorrow” survey, only 14% of undergradu­ate students reported that they “Agreed/ Strongly Agreed” that the “Social Engagement” aspect of their experience at the university was “progressin­g well.”

This problem of broken dialogue is not inherent to online learning; it is systemic. Class delivery in large lecture halls, with minimal room for questions and student-led discussion, physical separation of on-campus resources into subjectbas­ed libraries and spaces, and the oft-discussed McGill “bubble” that isolates students from the city represent institutio­nal barriers to meaningful communicat­ion. Students should feel supported and like a valued part of the community, and this cannot be achieved without improving communicat­ion and support. Without working to break down systemic barriers, simply moving material delivery to an online learning environmen­t is an incomplete strategy of adaptabili­ty. If the university is committed to resilience in the contempora­ry space, we must consider all avenues to serious change, now. Otherwise, McGill risks further losing touch with future generation­s, who are already deciding they may best be left to their own devices, further engenderin­g a split between intelligen­t inquiry and academia, a separation which tuition fees, OSD accommodat­ion pathways, and the current, violent exclusion of immunoc om promised students from campus already contribute to. A deeply problemati­c schism between the new knowledge paradigm and modern research is widening as crisis management continues beneath the current institutio­nal structure.

Having grown up in the informatio­n age, youth are used to seeking and internaliz­ing holistic comprehens­ions of the world, given their complete exposure to data and their submersion within machines of intelligen­ce. This context carries minds down paths unknown to previous generation­s of scholars, and is creating radical alteration­s to laws of division, segmentati­on and separation which have been deemed necessary to rigorous applicatio­n of the scientific method in times past.

Ultimately, I’m not worried about the resilience and mutability of the youth – spaces for new thought will be made by us, and are made by us, especially as the environmen­t of learning becomes increasing­ly irrelevant, as two years of online school have driven home. The question is rather whether institutio­ns of higher learning, such as McGill, will continue to uphold the status quo – a decision which will eventually have to be made by the highest levels of policy makers here at the university.

At the very least, the structure of board governance should be immediatel­y questioned. Not only should old structures be dismantled, but the individual­s in power should be replaced. McGill and other post secondary institutio­ns need diverse voices from the community and from students on how to move forward. As brains and learning capacities shift, the marking system should fall under scrutiny, as should the operations of academic advising and program selection. The teacherstu­dent relationsh­ip should be reimagined, and the separation of learners into different classes based on age, experience, and distinctio­n should cease. Communal materials, spaces, and platforms should be encouraged. It is important to keep in mind that McGill is a colonial institutio­n built on and complicit in the oppression of groups of people and systems of thought which threaten those in power. Removing the barricades to influence built into this institutio­n will create a safer and more welcoming learning environmen­t for all students. I urge McGill to remember that none of us can hope to escape this calculus.

Removing the emphasis on grading and high pressure test and exam scores, and

providing more flexibilit­y in course

delivery, are two important steps to remove barriers for all students, including neuro

divergent and disabled students.

 ??  ?? Eve Cable | Illustrati­ons Editor
Eve Cable | Illustrati­ons Editor

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