糖心Vlog

Language barrier holds back international academics in Germany

Xenophobia and complex career paths also dissuade researchers from pursuing professorships, study finds

Published on
December 1, 2023
Last updated
December 1, 2023
German police guards secure an access road to illustrate Language barrier holds back international academics in Germany
Source: Getty images

Insufficient German language skills are the primary hurdle for international academics targeting long-term careers in Germany,聽.

The German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) interviewed international postdocs, new professors and members of university management for the study, concluding that while research funding opportunities and early career promotions attract academics to Germany, international researchers have less confidence in their long-term career prospects.

Study respondents also cited the complexity of career paths in Germany, experiences of xenophobia and exclusion and issues with the visa system as obstacles dissuading them from pursuing professorships in the country.

Jan Kercher, a senior researcher at DAAD, noted that while international researchers comprise almost 14 per cent of academic staff in Germany, they make up about 7 per cent of professors. 鈥淭here is a kind of 鈥榣eaky pipeline鈥 on the path of international researchers from doctorate to professorship in Germany,鈥 he told聽糖心Vlog.

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Of the academics surveyed, almost 70 per cent said German language skills were relevant or highly relevant for their careers. A lack of fluency inhibited their daily collaboration with colleagues, their inclusion in faculty meetings and their teaching capacity, they said.

Study participants were also worried about 鈥渦nclear鈥 career paths. 鈥淔rom the perspective of international academics, academic career paths in Germany are not only lengthy, but often also complicated and opaque,鈥 Dr Kercher said, citing 鈥渄eficits in the information infrastructure鈥 alongside 鈥渜ualification paths that deviate from international standards and unknown or inaccessible career opportunities outside the universities鈥.

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Several respondents shared experiences of xenophobia and racism in Germany, with one describing a sense of 鈥渉ostility鈥 from the general public and another citing a 鈥渃losed鈥 German culture. Others discussed expensive, competitive housing markets, with one sharing a belief that they paid more for accommodation than their German counterparts.

German visa laws, which link residence permits to employment, concerned study participants from outside the European Union. 鈥淚n addition, the international academics and researchers surveyed reported a lack of multilingualism and service orientation in the immigration authorities,鈥 Dr Kercher said.

DAAD president Joybrato Mukherjee stressed the importance of plugging the 鈥渓eaky pipeline鈥. 鈥淕ermany is a highly attractive host country for international academics and researchers,鈥 said Professor Mukherjee, president of the University of Giessen. 鈥淥n this basis, we should be even more successful in the future in supporting international talent on their path to a professorship.鈥

To retain international talent, DAAD suggests, universities should alleviate language barriers by offering German language courses tailored to academia. 鈥淚t is also desirable to increase the multilingualism and intercultural competence of employees in the immigration authorities and to expand digitalisation,鈥 Dr Kercher said.

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Universities should provide more information and advice on the paths to professorship, while 鈥渢he qualification paths and career opportunities in the German higher education and science system could also be adapted more closely to international standards, for example through tenure-track options and a more flexible teaching load鈥, he added.

emily.dixon@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

鈥淭o retain international talent, DAAD suggests, universities should alleviate language barriers by offering German language courses tailored to academia.鈥 There鈥檚 already plenty of support for this. Also, as a very busy person, do you really want to sink 1000 hours to become fluent (and you still will have great difficulty understanding many emails and administrative texts since the German style is to write with formal, obtuse language in those) just to increase your chances in a country with a minuscule number of open professorship positions, and double the teaching load than in counties like the US? Additionally everything is understaffed so everything takes forever to get done and the staff is very unpleasant to work with (potentially, because they are very stressed out). Top that all off with the fact that foreigners generally find life very depressing in Germany: https://www.thelocal.de/20230711/foreigners-in-germany-among-the-unhappiest-and-loneliest-worldwide Some of the other points from DAAD are sensical but the cultural inertia Germany is unreal (鈥渢his is just how we鈥檝e always done it鈥) so it will take a long time for anything to change. For example, was a software subscription that many academics in my field use and is not very expensive. Virtually everyone in my dept expressed a desire for it, but it still takes 2 years for the dept to formalize paying for the 100鈧 / year dept liscence.

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