Ontario's recent announcement of a tuition increase and major changes to grant and loan structures have prompted student protests at the provincial legislature.
The province has said the changes are required for sustainability.
But changes to financial aid will have significant implications for many students who rely on grants and loans. As The Toronto Star reports, the reforms have almost reversed the ratio of non-repayable grants and loans students can access.
Education is a pillar of "social reproduction," meaning it's a social service necessary for maintaining daily life now and for future generations. When governments alter access to education and the way they deliver it, they shape everyday lives today and beyond.
Since legal and regulatory changes shape how society is reproduced, it is possible to draw from these changes some ideas about the government's social values. From this perspective, Ontario's Doug Ford government is sending the message that education is about generating private wealth and social order.









