University of Alberta international students call out 'unfair' exclusion from awards
CBC
At the start of his petroleum engineering degree at the University of Alberta, Tomiwa Brown's goal was to graduate as valedictorian, just like he did in high school.
After realizing the university did not have valedictorians, Brown decided to work hard regardless to achieve the highest academic recognition he could. He found a hands-on learning style that worked for him, and along with some "grit and determination" achieved a 4.0 GPA in the last two years of his degree.
Then Brown learned about another award — the APEGA Past Presidents' Medal — through watching a video of a past convocation ceremony.
At first, he thought that this could be the prize he had been working toward. But after digging deeper he discovered there was no way he could win it, because as an international student he wasn't even eligible.
"Being a Canadian citizen is not one of the things that I could just decide to easily fulfil unfortunately," said Brown.
Sponsored by the Association of Professional Engineers and Geo-scientists of Alberta (APEGA) the Past Presidents' Medal is given "to the convocating student who is a Canadian citizen or permanent resident with the highest academic standing … on the basis of the third and fourth year [GPA] combined, which must be no less than 3.5," according the the University of Alberta's website.
The medal is awarded to a student with the best grades from different engineering departments at the university. Similar medals are awarded at the University of Calgary with the same restrictions on international students.
The University of Alberta explained in a statement that "the terms of endowed awards such as this one are driven by the gift's steward. Although currently the case for this medal, residency requirements are not a common criteria for convocating awards and medals."
"The faculty's most prestigious medal (Dean's Medal in Engineering) goes to the top convocating engineering student; that medal does not have any residency requirements," said the statement.
About 20 per cent of engineering students at the University of Alberta are international students, said a spokesperson for the University.
Brown said its unfair for an award recognizing academic achievement to cut out so many, especially if it means the medal is awarded to a student with a lower GPA than international students.
"At the end of the day, we do the same classes, we write the same exams, we spend the same amount of effort studying. It doesn't make sense when it's time to recognize academic excellence to then discriminate," said Brown.
Vice president of the University of Alberta's International Students' Association, Jashan Mahal, said the issue is bigger than one medal or department.
"It's the case of all faculties, whether it's engineering or arts. The amount of scholarships we [international students] have access to is [lower]," she said.