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U.S. college bribery scandal unlikely in Canada, but inequality persists

canada-man

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Jun 16, 2007
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The college bribery scandal is spurring discussion about the ways in which money greases the wheels of the U.S. admissions process – and while most acknowledge there are fewer shortcuts to securing a spot in Canadian schools, advocates say the system is slanted to give well-off students a leg up.

American authorities have accused dozens of people of taking part in a $25-million bribery scheme in which parents allegedly paid to ensure their children’s enrolment in elite schools. Among the parents charged are Vancouver businessman David Sidoo, who has pleaded not guilty, and TV actresses Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin.

The selection process at Canadian schools is heavily weighted towards high school report cards, leaving less wiggle room for the sort of chicanery being alleged in the U.S., an admissions consultant says.

“The competitive landscape is very different in the United States,” said Robert Astroff, president of Astroff Consultants, which helps students prepare for their post-secondary studies. “There’s much less opportunity to game the system in Canada.”

Canada doesn’t have standardized admissions tests like the SAT or ACT, which some of those charged in the U.S. are accused of falsifying, said Astroff.

Prosecutors also allege that parents bribed college coaches to recruit their children. In the U.S., varsity sports are highly monetized, Astroff said, so more emphasis is placed on athletics than in Canada.

There are several other factors that can contribute to a student’s chances of getting into a U.S. school, he said: personal essays, letters of reference, class rankings and relationships with alumni.

In Canada, the admissions criteria are less subjective, he said, and an applicant’s acceptance often comes down to whether their high school grades meet the minimum requirements.

U.S. schools are sorted into a “tiered” system in which there’s a vast gulf between going to an Ivy League university and a community college, Astroff noted. There’s far less differentiation among Canadian universities, so the selection process is not nearly as cutthroat, he said.

Admissions officials at Canadian universities also stressed these cross-border distinctions.

Curtis Michaelis, admissions and recruitment co-ordinator at Mount Allison University in Sackville, N.B., said the U.S. students he works with are often shocked at how “transparent” the Canadian system is.

Richard Levin, executive director of enrolment services and registrar at the University of Toronto, said most programs accept 50 to 60 per cent of applicants, while acceptance rates at prestigious U.S. schools can be as low as five or six per cent.

“It reflects the fact that we have larger public universities with a big breadth of programs that are generally pretty accessible,” he said.

According to a 2017 report by Statistics Canada, the post-secondary enrolment rate of 19-year-old Canadians increased from 52.6 per cent in 2001 to 63.8 per cent in 2014 – with the largest gains being made among youth from lower-income families.

But Eloise Tan, research program director of Ontario-based advocacy group People for Education, said schools and policy-makers shouldn’t be so quick to pat themselves on the back.

“It’s not just about explicit paying or bribery to get your kid into school,” said Tan. “There’s other benefits to having a higher income, that the data shows those students are just more likely to go to school.”

Tan pointed to a report released earlier this month by the provincially funded Higher Education Quality Council of Ontario suggesting that high school students who come from families where neither parent has a post-secondary degree are 33 per cent less likely to earn one themselves compared to peers whose parents completed a university or college program.

Students from lower-income families were also less likely to pursue higher education than peers from more privileged backgrounds, the report found.

https://www.680news.com/2019/03/17/...unlikely-in-canada-but-inequality-persists-2/
 

TeeJay

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Jun 20, 2011
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They seem to have left out the fact most Universities allow a third (or more) of applications from foreign citizens
Mainly because they pay way more tuition than a Canadian student
Anyone who accepts highschool grades from certain countries is either delusional or paid off
 

Smallcock

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Jun 5, 2009
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I don't know if there is a backdoor to getting into university in Canada, but I do know many people cheat on exams and essays by buying exams and paying for other people to write essays for them. I didn't do either, but only because I had no money at the time.
 

danmand

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Nov 28, 2003
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Of course there are inequalities, when tuition for law school is $26,000 per year.
 

lomotil

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Mar 14, 2004
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Because the colleges and universities in Canada are for the most part government and not private as opposed toning America, the resulting transparency here makes the US scenario impossible. There are Ontario high schools that inflate academic scores though but Canadian parents do not have any leverage on the post secondary schools here as parents in America do with bribes, legacies and lobbying.

As an aside, I know of two civilian mothers who parted their legs to get their kids into private K-12 schools right here in Toronto. I know another now retired pro who financed her daughter's tuition Grade 6-12 at one of the all girl's private schools right again in Toronto.
 

Big Sleazy

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Sep 13, 2004
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Isn't allowing foreign students access to Canadian Universities if they pay more just another pay to play scandal ? And if anyone thinks getting into a prestigious University in Canada who's parents are wealthy alumni isn't pay to play. Your parents must have paid to get you into University.
 
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