This article isn't news per se, rather an editorial piece.
Reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from today’s Ottawa Sun
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Many students need help
By KERRY THOMPSON, Sun Media
Last Updated: 2nd July 2009, 6:41pm
A new scholarship program for children of fallen Canadian soldiers might recognize the sacrifice these military members made, but it makes one wonder if the children of soldiers killed in the line of duty should be any more entitled to free university tuition than students who lose parents in other ways?
Project Hero will soon launch at a number of Canadian universities, including the University of Ottawa, offering free tuition for four years and free residence for one year to children of military members killed in active duty.
Financial assistance for children of fallen soldiers, however, would be better administered by the Canadian Forces — many businesses offer scholarships to children of employees — and not by universities, where any number of students can face the same financial and emotional hardships Project Hero aims to recognize. The Department of National Defence already offers some financial assistance for post-secondary education for the children of military members.
Students who have lost a military parent undoubtedly go through a tough time and might face financial issues. But so do many other students who lose a parent.
University of Calgary Vice-Provost Ann Tierney told one media outlet this week the scholarships would hopefully allow students to fulfil their dreams “by making a university education possible after suffering such a loss.”
Of course military members make a great contribution. And while this will affect a very small number of students — something for which we should be grateful; the less students affected the less military members who have died — universities need to make sure that all students who suffer losses, and perhaps even greater financial hardships than students from military families, are treated in the same compassionate manner.
Of course there is national sadness when we hear a Canadian soldier has been lost. And you can argue the students impacted by this new program are the children of people who lost their lives serving our country. But no student should be made to feel the parent they lost made any less of a contribution, nor that they’re less deserving of help from their university, because of what that parent did for a living.
— Kerry Thompson
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That is the full article and it is available at:
http://www.ottawasun.com/comment/editorial/2009/07/02/10006821.html
if you wish to cut and paste it into your browser to link to it.
It mildly annoyed me, but that is because I don't get the point. Aren't scholarships by their very nature somewhat exclusionary, be it academically, financially or otherwise? Is it a problem that the universities themselves are offering the scholarship?