Well, in looking at Wikipedia and what (or how much) they have to say about
various Canadian Universities, I have come up with the following:

York University:        50,000 students - 3,436 words - ratio word/student:
.068
Bishops:                2,188 students  - 420 words   - ratio word/student:
.192
McGill:         30,925 students - 3,504 words - ration word/student: .113

Harvard (US):   19,650 students - 6,111 words - ratio word/student: .311


So, should we conclude anything by this? For Canada, it appears that the
larger the institution, the lower the word/student ratio on Wikipedia. Does
it mean one gets a better bang for the buck at smaller institutions?

On the other hand, in the US, things may be different. But I'll let you guys
figure that one out.  I guess one way to change this is by all going to your
respective institution's Wikipedia site and add information!

So far, with a very small, non-random sample, Bishop's is the Canadian
winner! Go Bishop's! (ok, I'm biased, as I went there...)

Cheers!

JM





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