Canadian colleges are practical, with field experience and paraphrasing by instructors to provide a broad understanding of intricate concepts.
University is wordy and largely impractical. We debate the roles of the oppressor and the oppressed. We consider our roles in society and how our innermost throughts are damaging to society as a whole and other SJW whatnots.
It's very wordy, and in many cases, very "stupidly-smart."
I'd like to share with you all some examples of this as I come across them in my studies. If you're currently in school like I am, please share your 'wtf is this bitch even trying to say' quotes with me. I am genuinely curious if all textbook authors have their smug heads up their asses, or if it's just in the social service fields. This sort of exclusionary language is all throughout university textbooks, and sometimes I wonder if the people writing these things even proof-read before pressing these things. If your goal is to educate people at the entry level, don't speak like you're trying to hide your ideas from the reader.
Some recent examples:
Also, this is the opening sentence of a PDF that I am expected to read:
The mission of this chapter, to borrow from Rose (1999, 20), is a “matter
of introducing a critical attitude toward those things that are given to our
present [African] experience as if they were timeless, natural, unquestionable:
to stand against the maxims of one’s time, against the spirit of one’s
age, against the current of received wisdom.”