糖心Vlog

Compulsory Dutch looms for foreign students in the Netherlands

Universities, already facing upheaval on several other fronts, fear imminent plans could make it far harder to recruit students

Published on
August 8, 2019
Last updated
August 8, 2019
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Universities in the Netherlands fear the government may force international students to do part of their degrees in Dutch, potentially decimating recruitment from outside the country.

Several sources have told 糖心Vlog that this is one of the ideas being considered by the country鈥檚 Ministry of Education, Culture and Science ahead of a policy announcement expected next month.

This would be the most drastic option to curb perceived problems arising from the growth of foreign student numbers, blamed for precipitating a switch to English language instruction at the expense of Dutch, crowding out local students and putting pressures on housing.

Other possibilities thought to be on the table include making Dutch lessons compulsory, forcing universities to justify teaching in English, and drawing up tailored plans with universities to increase a focus on Dutch.

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Whatever the ministry decides to do, some critics see the overall policy direction as a major reversal. 鈥淚鈥檓 deeply disturbed by the developments in the Netherlands because they are putting the clock backwards,鈥 said Jo Ritzen, a former minister of education, culture and science for the Labour Party. The move grew out of 鈥渘ationalistic鈥 sentiments and a 鈥渓ack of long-term thinking鈥, he said.

Concerns about English pushing out Dutch have existed for years in the Netherlands, where three-quarters of master鈥檚 programmes at research universities are in English only. At bachelor鈥檚 level, the proportion is about a quarter.

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Campaigners against this trend worry that it weakens Dutch culture if local students no longer use their mother tongue at university. They also have concerns about lecturers using poor English.

鈥淭o some extent, universities have brought it on themselves鈥 by failing to think through the consequences of the switch to English, said Professor Ritzen, now a professorial fellow at Maastricht University. There was 鈥渟ome truth鈥 to the accusation that they had swapped language simply to attract more students, he said.

But the Dutch system is 鈥渢he only one [in continental Europe] that is competitive with the US, Australia, the UK, in terms of attracting foreign students from outside Europe,鈥 Professor Ritzen pointed out. It had achieved this 鈥渂y accepting that English is the language of instruction鈥, and if this was reversed, 鈥渋t will be a loss for Europe鈥, he added.

The ministry has already announced cuts effective from 2021 to Nuffic, a body that runs a 10-strong global network of offices which helps to recruit students to Dutch universities. The cuts will mean that the organisation has to 鈥渟cale back鈥ctivities drastically鈥, it last month.

Last year, in response to concerns about the declining use of Dutch, the Association of Universities in the Netherlands asked the government for more powers to cap non-European Union student numbers to help deal with the inflow.

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But universities fear that instead of number caps, the ministry favours some form of compulsory Dutch. 鈥淪ome element of Dutch will be part of the curriculum, but we don鈥檛 know how big it will be,鈥 said Jos Beelen, professor of global learning at The Hague University of Applied Sciences.

Foreign students might be required to learn a 鈥渢okenistic鈥 level 鈥 like how to order things in shops 鈥 or forced to gain at least an intermediate proficiency, which may put off all but German students, he said.

Dutch universities have struggled to achieve a 鈥渂alanced classroom鈥, he said, where foreign students come from a range of countries, not just Germany or China, for example.

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鈥淟anguage policy is used to control numbers, but it still doesn鈥檛 give you any control over the composition of the classroom,鈥 Professor Beelen warned.

Robert-Jan Smits, president of Eindhoven University of Technology, where all courses are in English, said that the language allowed the university to attract the best students globally, and meant that Dutch graduates were better placed to pursue an international career.

But the university aimed to have at most one-third of its students from abroad, he said, and wanted to avoid 鈥渢he situation which I have seen at several UK universities, where mostly for budgetary reasons, in certain departments, 90 per cent of the students are Chinese. These universities are no longer British or international, they are Chinese.鈥

This is not the only area in which the Netherlands is moving against trends聽that once seemed inevitable in global higher education. It is looking to replace some grant funding for academics with direct payments to universities 鈥 as competition for money is seen as having gone too far 鈥 and to rely less on citation metrics when judging researchers鈥 work. Plans are also afoot to make admissions more selective, chipping away at a long-standing taboo.

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The ministry, which declined to comment, would have to win approval for any language-related proposals from Dutch lawmakers.

david.matthews@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Study here, learn Dutch, Netherlands may propose

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Reader's comments (3)

Make Dutch optional with extra credit for those who take the option. Briefly, what % of research papers are available in Dutch and how many international scholars can read them?
I obtained my doctorate degree in Leiden and would support a little training in Dutch. However, using Dutch training to close the door on foreign students is not wise. It will not only kill growth, but also set Dutch institutions backward. This proposal needs to be thought thru carefully. Don't set my Netherlands backward, please. The best country in the world.
I obtained my doctorate degree in Leiden and would support a little training in Dutch. However, using Dutch training to close the door on foreign students is not wise. It will not only kill growth, but also set Dutch institutions backward. This proposal needs to be thought thru carefully. Don't set my Netherlands backward, please. The best country in the world.

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