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Universities blindsided as Quebec set to double non-French fees

McGill and province鈥檚 other English-language universities see dire threats to their finances and diversity

Published on
October 19, 2023
Last updated
October 23, 2023
Tourists wait in line outside the Notre-Dame Basilica in Montreal, Quebec, Canada to illustrate Universities blindsided as Quebec set to double non-
Source: Getty Images

Quebec鈥檚 perpetual language battle is聽now creating a聽major threat for McGill University and other English-language institutions, with the government showing no聽willingness to聽even debate a聽plan to聽nearly double tuition fees for many non-French speakers.

The government of Quebec premier Fran莽ois Legault, after a聽surprise loss in a聽local election, responded with a聽series of聽ideas to聽ramp聽up its pro-French agenda, including for Canadian students from outside Quebec who study in聽English.

It would mean tuition fees for such students jumping from nearly C$9,000 (拢5,400) to about C$17,000, with a five-year protection for current students. International students, who already pay about C$20,000, would also face increases, government officials said.

鈥淭hese measures, if implemented, would have serious consequences,鈥 McGill鈥檚 vice-chancellor, Deep Saini, said in a response to the government announcement.

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The province鈥檚 other major English-speaking institution, Concordia University, said it was especially alarmed that the Legault administration acted without even consulting its higher education leaders 鈥 even as Concordia had been in the middle of talks with government officials about ways to help more non-Quebec students learn French.

鈥淭hese issues were never discussed with us, are not based on data, and clearly do not understand the national and global market of universities,鈥 Concordia officials told Times Higher Education.

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The tuition hike was initially described by the province鈥檚 minister of higher education, Pascale D茅ry, as a way to save more than C$100 million per year that she regards as needlessly spent on such students.

鈥淨uebeckers will no longer pay for the training of English-speaking Canadian students, most of whom return to their province after graduation,鈥 Ms D茅ry said.

But Mr Legault later acknowledged at a news briefing that the central motivation for Canada鈥檚 French-speaking province was the fear of losing ground to English speakers. 鈥淭his is to protect French,鈥 he said. The province鈥檚 minister of the French language, Jean-Fran莽ois Roberge, spoke of the need for 鈥渞ebalancing university networks鈥 to help limit the loss of French.

Universities were joined in their appeals by the Chamber of Commerce of Metropolitan Montreal, which warned the city would suffer reputational damage and worsening labour shortages if Mr Legault enacts his plan.

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McGill gets about 20 per cent of its nearly 40,000 students from Canadian provinces outside Quebec, and another 30 per cent of its students from abroad. Concordia gets nearly 10 per cent of its Canadian students from outside the province, while Quebec鈥檚 other English-language campus, Bishop鈥檚 University, draws about 30 per cent of its classes from non-Quebec Canadians. With only about 2,600 students, Bishop鈥檚 officials suggested that the tuition hike could threaten the institution鈥檚 survival.

Quebec has long barred the children of immigrants and French-speaking families from attending English-language primary and secondary schools, making its English-language universities especially dependent on students from outside the province.

Professor Saini told the McGill community that university officials would keep trying to explain to the Legault administration the damage its plan would cause, calling it a matter of both finances and diversity.

鈥淲e are concerned that, in the government鈥檚 announcement, prospective students from outside Quebec may hear the message that they are not welcome,鈥 Professor Saini said.

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paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

Politicising language is never a good look, says a Welsh/English bilingual speaker. It does a disservice to both French and English speakers and in particular those lucky enough to speak both. A few years ago I participated in a course taught by the Open Polytechnic of New Zealand (now, there's distance learning for you!) on which one of the students was from Quebec. The course was taught in English and the poor dear was soon floundering and got by because I also speak French and coached him in the bits he couldn't understand. Being so aggressively Francophone is doing the citizens of Quebec a disservice and should be dismissed out of hand.

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