DutchNews, August 26, 2016
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| Not all lecturers are fluent in English. Photo: Depositphotos.com |
More than half of Dutch university
courses are taught entirely in English, the Volkskrant said on Friday.
The
paper looked at 1,632 different degree courses at the country’s 13 universities
and found 60% are now in English. When it comes to master’s degrees, just 30%
are taught in Dutch and three universities only offer master’s degrees in
English.
Universities introduce English-language degrees to compete with other
academic institutions and to reflect the internationalisation of education in
general, the Volkskrant said. English courses also act as a draw to foreign
students.
‘We are convinced that this will lead to better education and more
opportunities for students in the international jobs market,’ Bastiaan Verweij
of the Dutch university association VSNU told the paper. ‘Offering English
education is part of this.’
Criticism
Nevertheless, the shift is not without
its critics among both students and academics. In particular, students complain
about the poor quality of the English used by lecturers.
At the end of last
year, almost 60% of students in a poll by students union LSVB said they had
been confronted with incomprehensible lecturers.
Latin professor Piet Gerbrandy
told the paper that his lectures lose subtlety and humour when given in English
and that this applies to most non-native speakers. ‘By giving English such a
prominent role at university, you remove the academic subtlety, the passion and
the inspiration. And that is a shame.’
Nor are students, whether Dutch or
foreign, always good enough at English to write and express themselves properly
and without mistakes, he said.
Money
In
a column in the Volkskrant earlier this month, Martin Sommer pointed out that
in Leiden, all faculty meetings are held in English, even when there are only
Dutch people present.
Campaigners for Dutch higher education are giving up hope
because the bottom line is all about money, he said. Fewer Dutch students are
going to university and that means attracting more foreigners with English
courses, or face cuts.
Education minister Jet Bussemaker is also a supporter of
English language degrees but not if the only aim is to bring in more foreign
students. ‘I do not accept the fact that universities give lessons in English
purely for commercial reasons,’ she told the paper. ‘The last word has not been
said on this.’
The number of foreign students studying in the Netherlands rose
by 20% to some 36,000 at the start of the last academic year. Most come
from Germany, China, Italy, Greece and Britain.

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