From Fraser Institute <[email protected]>
Subject University education in Canada, and Foreign students
Date September 6, 2025 5:00 PM
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Having trouble viewing? Try the web version [link removed] of this email. Latest Research Approximately 1-in-3 Canadian university students fear formal consequences for expressing honest viewpoints in class [[link removed]]

Canadian Students Are Getting a One-Sided University Education is a study based on the results of a new Leger poll, commissioned for the Fraser Institute, which shows 37 per cent of self-described right-leaning university students and even 30 per cent of self-described left-leaning students fear formal consequences—including having their grades lowered—if they express a viewpoint in class that conflicts with what is considered the “safe” stance on controversial topics.

Read More [[link removed]] Benefits of admitting more international students—particularly those in STEM and other high-quality programs—outweigh often-exaggerated negatives [[link removed]]

Foreign Students: Should We Restrict or Encourage Them? is a new study by UofT Prof. Morley Gunderson that finds the benefits of admitting high-quality international students to Canadian universities and colleges outweigh the perceived negatives, which are often exaggerated and misguided. In fact, where there are concerns surrounding international students, they can be mitigated by government immigration policy changes.

Read More [[link removed]] Commentary and Blog Posts Carney engaging in Orwellian doublethink with federal budget rhetoric [[link removed]] by Jake Fuss

The Carney government plans to borrow $224.8 billion—$93.4 billion more than Trudeau planned to borrow.

B.C. Aboriginal agreements empower soft tyranny of legal incoherence [[link removed]] (Appeared in the Financial Post) by Bruce Pardy

Around 5,000 people live on Haida Gwaii, about half Haida.

Canadians don’t just feel worse off—they actually are [[link removed]] by Tegan Hill and Grady Munro

Combined federal and provincial net debt will reach a projected $2.30 trillion as of 2024/25.

Evidence does not support ‘climate crisis’ claims [[link removed]] (Appeared in the Ottawa Sun) by Matthew Lau

As of 2022, Canada accounted for only 1.4 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions.

Teacher strikes should never happen in Alberta [[link removed]] (Appeared in the Calgary Herald) by Michael Zwaagstra

Binding arbitration is a widely accepted way to settle labour disputes.

Nova Scotia test scores plummet despite spending increases [[link removed]] (Appeared in the Halifax Chronicle Herald) by Michael Zwaagstra

Curriculum guides should prioritize knowledge and skill development.

Fracking a win-win for workers and the environment in New Brunswick [[link removed]] (Appeared in The New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal) By: Alex Whalen

Wayne Long, MP for Saint John-Kennebecasis, waded into the long-standing debate on natural gas development in New Brunswick recently, bluntly telling Brunswick News "we need to frack."

New Brunswick government sets course for ‘transformational change’ that will hurt the province [[link removed]] (Appeared in the Fredericton Daily Gleaner) by Alex Whalen

The province's deficit will reach a projected $668 million in 2025/26.

Smith government should create stricter rules for Heritage Fund to ensure annual deposits [[link removed]] by Tegan Hill

The government now projects budget deficits from 2025/26 to 2027/28.

Canada’s economy teeming with troubling stats [[link removed]] (Appeared in the Calgary Sun) By: Jock Finlayson

Total employment in July was scarcely higher than it was in January (measured on a seasonally adjusted basis). Manufacturing and construction are among the industries that have posted sizable job declines so far in 2025.

Schools should keep AI in its proper place [[link removed]] (Appeared in the Epoch Times) by Michael Zwaagstra

If tests are written with pen and paper under a teacher’s supervision, students will be unable to use AI to formulate answers.

A tax lesson from Scandinavia [[link removed]] (Appeared in DC Journal) by Matthew D. Mitchell and Steven Globerman

The tax histories of Sweden and Denmark show the limits of tax progressivity.

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