糖心Vlog

A bridge too far? Europe mulls growth of English-language courses

The rising tide of degree courses offered in English has sparked a backlash as some communities fear their young people and their mother tongues will be squeezed out

Published on
October 7, 2018
Last updated
October 10, 2018
Bridge open

It is rare that a debate about university teaching makes national headlines. But this past year, Dutch newspapers have printed countless column inches about a聽subject that touches on national culture, profit, immigration and globalisation: whether too many of the country鈥檚 degree courses are in English.

In June, after years of rumbling discontent from critics who felt that universities were chasing international student fees rather than serving their local population, the Association of Universities in the Netherlands put out a plan to cap English-language student numbers to prevent Dutch speakers being squeezed out of dual programmes.

That the issue erupted in the Netherlands is less surprising when you look at the statistics. The country went further than any other European nation in offering higher education in English: three-quarters of master鈥檚 programmes at research universities are English-only. The Netherlands also offers 317 English-taught bachelor鈥檚 programmes, according to a聽report last year from Study Portals and the European Association for International Education, English-taught Bachelor鈥檚 Programmes 鈥 more than any other country except Turkey.

Spain and Germany are not far behind. Each offers more than 200 English bachelor鈥檚 programmes, while Denmark and Greece offer more than 150. Continent-wide, numbers have grown more than fiftyfold since 2009 to nearly 3,000 last year, going from 鈥渘ovelty to normal鈥, as聽the report puts it, in less than a decade.

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Outside the Netherlands, the English question is still more of an academic matter than a front-page debate. But it is beginning to enter political discourse in some countries, and it is unclear if and when further growth could trigger a Dutch-style backlash.

What makes the issue more acute is that national identity and culture are once again key issues in European politics, stirred in part by the arrival of millions of聽migrants since 2015 and the rise of nationalist parties in practically every corner of the continent.

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University leaders are taking notice of the Dutch backlash against English, said Anna-Malin Sandstr枚m, a policy officer at the聽EAIE and a co-author of the report, which drew on anonymous interviews with university leaders. 鈥淚n international education, people look at each other and learn from each other.鈥

She said that universities are now no longer offering courses in English simply 鈥渂ecause that鈥檚 what you鈥檙e supposed to聽do鈥. Instead, they are being far more 鈥渟trategic and selective鈥 and 鈥渢hought through鈥 with their language choices.

Over the border in the northern, Dutch-speaking part of Belgium, universities have taken heed of what has happened in the Netherlands, but still think there is room for sensible growth, said Peter Lievens, vice-rector for international policy at KU Leuven. The country has not taken the same road as its neighbour, he said, which developed 鈥渁n imbalance that you would not like to聽have鈥 鈥 with no Dutch courses at bachelor鈥檚 level in some areas.

At KU Leuven, just four of 78 bachelor鈥檚 courses are taught in English, although many Dutch programmes contain English modules. The feeling in Belgium is that teaching in English should increase, not decrease, Professor Lievens said, although current regulations make that difficult. Teaching in Dutch 鈥渓imits our international possibilities鈥 in terms of attracting overseas students, he added. 鈥淲e certainly do not want all higher education聽to be in English, but a little bit more flexibility would be good.鈥

In Denmark, meanwhile, the government has said that it would cut between 1,000 and 1,200 English-language places at universities next year because too many international students leave the country after they graduate. A report from the Ministry of 糖心Vlog calculated that only a third of international students made a 鈥減ositive contribution鈥 to Danish public finances over their lifetime, despite paying between 鈧6,000 (拢5,340) and 鈧18,000 a year in fees.

The problem facing universities in smaller countries and regions such as Flanders, the Netherlands and Denmark is that they use a language that is little spoken abroad: international students are unlikely to know the local language to begin with, or to want to learn it to improve their future job prospects. This is one reason that universities have turned to English courses, both for the extra fees international students can bring, and to foster an 鈥渋nternational campus鈥 that they hope creates cultural exchange.

The situation is different in Wallonia, a聽French-speaking region of Belgium where universities can draw on students from the huge francophone world. 鈥淵ou can realise an international classroom easily in French, and this is what our Wallonian colleagues are doing,鈥 Professor Lievens said. 鈥淭his is an advantage that large language groups have.鈥


Takeover: global lingo

Graph: global lingo


The same is true for Spanish univer颅sities. Spanish university leaders who spoke to Ms Sandstr枚m were keen to teach local and international students partly in Spanish and partly in English, giving Spanish native speakers the chance to learn a second global language 鈥 English 鈥 in a comfortable environment. 鈥淲hat came up in the Spanish countries was that bilingual education was a part of the national strategy,鈥 she explained. 鈥淪panish is already a globally strong language, so perhaps it鈥檚 hard to feel a threat to it.鈥

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German lies somewhere between the two: it is not a global language like French or Spanish, but is still far more prevalent 鈥 and therefore more useful in the job market 鈥 than Dutch or Danish. A聽sizeable proportion of foreign students in Germany are from eastern Europe and are keen to learn German, said Marijke Wahlers, head of international affairs at the German Rectors鈥 Conference, so 鈥渢hey would be a bit disappointed if they had to study in English鈥.

Beyond聽the impact on students, language policy also has major implications for research academics. If you do not publish in English, 鈥測ou don鈥檛 count鈥 because 鈥渘o American will ever read a聽Dutch paper,鈥 Professor Lievens pointed out. It is, therefore, crucial that students in subjects such as biomedical science and engineering 鈥 where English is used across borders 鈥 have a firm grasp of the language, he聽added.

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Teaching in English also enables universities to recruit from 鈥渢he biggest pool available鈥 when hiring lecturers, Ms Sandstr枚m pointed out.

And yet the fear is that unless there is a聽German, Dutch or Danish vocabulary for cutting-edge research, these languages will become functionally useless at a high level and will serve only for everyday activities.

鈥淭hat is certainly an important issue, and we have to be careful not to go too far,鈥 Professor Lievens said. 鈥淚聽think we are all very aware of this risk in the science disciplines, so we will not let it happen, at least not in Flanders.鈥 It would be a danger if all undergraduate courses started in English. 鈥淭his was where some of the Dutch universities were moving to 鈥 and I聽think probably went a bit too far,鈥 he added.

In Germany, 鈥渋n the natural sciences it鈥檚 very natural to hear everything in English, but less so in the social sciences or humanities鈥, explained Ms Wahlers. The English-language debate in German universities is 鈥渘ot a discussion about the threat to [national] culture, it鈥檚 more about academic language鈥.

One group in Germany, the Task Force for German as a Research Language, is adamant that 鈥渁lmost everything鈥 in academia should be conducted in German, explained Ms Wahlers. And yet proponents for the use of English are equally vociferous on the other side, she added.

The risk of a backlash against English in universities also depends on whether it is seen as a threat to national language and culture in wider society. In Sweden, there is little sense that English is a danger to Swedish, explained Marita Hilliges, secretary general of the Association of Swedish 糖心Vlog. The country has accepted that 鈥渨e need English to get by in the world鈥ost children know English by the time they start school鈥.

The question instead is whether Swedish lecturers are good enough at English to teach in the language, she explained. This was also a concern in the Netherlands, with students complaining of incomprehensible lecturers. Yet, in Sweden, there has been little sign of the intense public debate that has erupted in the Netherlands and Denmark. Even the Swedish Democrats, an anti-immigration party which won 13 per cent of the vote in last month鈥檚 election, have not raised the issue, she said.

On the whole, Europe鈥檚 new nationalist parties have largely ignored the issue of English in universities. In the Netherlands, arguably the most tenacious campaigners on the issue were not politicians but Better Education Netherlands, a group of聽lecturers and teachers concerned about teaching quality, who unsuccessfully took two Dutch universities to court.

Only in Germany has a nationalist party taken an interest in English courses, and a passing one at most: the Alternative for Germany, which finished third in last year鈥檚 election, said in its manifesto that German should remain the language of teaching and research in universities.

There has also been some discussion about the alleged 鈥減arallel societies鈥 of English speakers in German cities: the conservative politician Jens Spahn complained last year that he could not order in German in cafes in some of the trendier parts of Berlin. 鈥淚t might happen in Berlin, it might happen in Frankfurt,鈥 said Ms Wahlers. But 鈥渋t鈥檚 not a widespread topic鈥 of concern for the German public, she聽believed.

Attitudes towards international students, national culture and English are so diverse across Europe that trying to predict if and when another Netherlands-style controversy could spring up is difficult, if not impossible. It is not the case that a backlash occurs automatically if English-language courses reach Dutch levels, Ms Sandstr枚m pointed out. After all, Switzerland has an even higher proportion of institutions offering bachelor鈥檚 degrees in English, but with little negative reaction. 鈥淥ne could assume that it has to do with the fact that it鈥檚 a multilingual country,鈥 she speculated.

Amid the controversy, it is easy to forget that across most of the continent, only a聽tiny 鈥 if rapidly increasing 鈥 fraction of students are taught in English: 1.3聽per cent continent-wide, according to one 2014 estimate, rising to 2.2聽per cent in聽Austria, Belgium, Switzerland, Germany and the Netherlands,聽and 5.3聽per cent in the Nordic countries.

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鈥淭he reality is that in some countries, there is enormous room for growth,鈥 Ms Sandstr枚m said. Whether growth will happen is 鈥渁聽question of student demand, demand聽from employers [and] national regulations鈥.

david.matthews@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:聽Unease over growth of English-language courses in Europe

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