Alemania: Student protests continue
Students are continuing their education strike campaign against
implementation of the Bologna reforms, introduction of tuition fees and
insufficient financial support. Lecture halls have been occupied at 80
universities throughout the country. In some cases the student demands have been
backed by university heads while in Bonn the City Council has demonstrated its
sympathy with the campaigns.
Student protest is above all levelled at the implementation of the Bologna
process.
Critics claim the new bachelor and master's programmes, now introduced in the
majority of subjects, have resulted in courses being too rigid, excessive
examination pressure, severe overcrowding of lecture halls and seminar rooms,
and mobility across faculties being restricted rather than facilitated. They say
old curricula have not undergone a thorough reform but have been randomly
streamlined and squeezed into a six and eight-semester timeframe without giving
the contents due consideration. Students also want to have more say in the
reform process.
On the topic of federal student grants, Education Minister Annette Schavan
announced that increases would be introduced but tuition fees are quite another
matter. With state governments responsible in this area, left-wing governments
have tended to reject them although new centre-right administrations have also
voiced doubts about them.
But now, with a financial squeeze looming because of the ruling federal
Conservative-Liberal Coalition intending to introduce tax cuts, sentiments could
change. The Conference of Cultural Affairs Ministers, representing education
policy at state level, is to meet in Bonn to discuss the issues.
Around 80 students stormed a meeting of Bonn's City Council to voice their
protest. While they were denied the right to speak, Lord Mayor Jürgen Nimptsch
agreed to have education put on the meeting's agenda. A motion tabled by the
left-wing Die Linke party to support the student demands gained a majority,
which was welcomed with loud cheers by the students.
The council called on the rectors to do away with social disadvantaging in
education and demanded that tuition fees be scrapped and the new study courses
reformed. Bonn University's 'Rektorat' or vice-chancellor's office was told to
refrain from any repressive measures against the protesting students.
Undaunted by these developments, Rector Jürgen Fohrmann called the police to
drive students out of a lecture hall that they had turned into a Bildungsstreik
camp with an information stand and coffee bar. The hall has since been
reoccupied.
Fohrmann, however, refused to negotiate with the students. "We will be
continuing with our present activities at least up to the KMK meeting,"
Bildungsstreik representative Anna Brüggemann said. "Then we will form a
permanent group to deal with the strike issues."
University World News, 20/12/09
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