{"id":1625,"date":"2012-01-25T14:27:15","date_gmt":"2012-01-25T14:27:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/site.aegee.org\/?p=1625"},"modified":"2013-01-15T18:57:03","modified_gmt":"2013-01-15T18:57:03","slug":"bildungsstreik-just-a-german-issue","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/site.aegee.org\/bildungsstreik-just-a-german-issue\/","title":{"rendered":"“Bildungsstreik” – just a German issue?"},"content":{"rendered":"
17th November, 2009.<\/em> In many German cities simultaneously, colourful alliances of university students, high school students, apprentices, interested citizens and even some disguised professors march against recent developments in education policy.<\/em><\/em><\/p>\n What is planned as a peaceful protest to raise public and governmental awareness soon develops a dynamic of its own. On the same afternoon, in many places, students take the auditories and other main university facilities and refuse to leave. Within a few days, 62 universities in Germany are occupied, partly or entirely, by ten thousands of students condemning the “neoliberal” tendencies in education policies.<\/p>\n 17th November, 2011.<\/em> Coincidence? Again, a nation-wide alliance of the most different groups is calling for a global “Bildungsstreik”, a so-called educational strike, collectively staying away from class to make a clear statement against current education policies. The date is symbolic – the organisers certainly hope for an impact similar to the 2009 protests that caught major public attention and arguably led to the abolishment of the newly established tuition fees in some of the German Bundesl\u00e4nder (federal states). But what is the point this time, what is the context – and what are the prospects?<\/em><\/em><\/p>\n In fact, the agenda has not substantially changed since 2009:
\n– There are still tuition fees up and running that are considered to be discriminative, favouring the rich, and ignoring the (postulated) principle of free education.
\n– In certain Bundesl\u00e4nder (education is a regional competence in Germany), university management has been taken over by something called a “university council” that is composed of a few professors and representatives of external sponsors, replacing the traditional senate as the supreme authority (which includes, for instance, the competence to appoint\/discharge the university rector) and being accountable only to the ministry, which deprives students of any influence whatsoever and is seen by many as undermining the democratic principles of university administration.
\n– The Bologna Process, which has caused the German academic world a major trauma by replacing the traditional Diploma\/Magister curriculum with Bachelor\/Master courses, has brought not only formal changes, but the occasion of the reform was used to implement a rigid system of “graduate production”, streamlining the substance of university education to serve the bare necessities of the labour market, putting great pressure on students to finish their studies in time, and in most cases leaving no space whatsoever for extracurricular activities.<\/p>\n