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Education in Germany

Education in Germany is primarily the responsibility of individual German states (Länder), with the federal government only playing a minor role.

Sign of different coexisting school types on a school complex in Germany

While kindergarten (nursery school) is optional, formal education is compulsory for all children ages 6 to 18.[1] Students can complete three types of school leaving qualifications, ranging from the more vocational Hauptschulabschluss and Mittlere Reife over to the more academic Abitur. The latter permits students to apply to study at university level.

Higher education in Germany usually begins with a bachelor’s degree and is commonly followed up with a master's degree, with 45% of all undergraduates proceeding to postgraduate studies within 1.5 years of graduating.[2] While rules vary (see → § Tuition fees) from Land (state) to Land, German public universities generally don't charge tuition fees.

Germany is well-known internationally for its vocational training model,[3][4][5] the Ausbildung (apprenticeship), with about 50 per cent of all school leavers entering vocational training.[6]

Secondary school forms edit

Germany's secondary education is separated into two parts, lower and upper. Lower-secondary education in Germany is meant to teach individuals basic general education and gets them ready to enter upper-secondary education. In the upper secondary level Germany has a vast variety of vocational programs. German secondary education includes five types of school.

One, the Gymnasium, is designed to prepare pupils for higher education and finishes with the final examination, Abitur, after grade 12 or 13. From 2005 to 2018 a school reform known as G8 provided the Abitur in 8 school years. The reform failed due to high demands on learning levels for the children and were turned to G9 in 2019. Only a few Gymnasiums stay with the G8 model. Children usually attend Gymnasium from 10 to 18 years.

The Realschule has a range of emphasis for intermediate pupils and finishes with the final examination Mittlere Reife, after grade 10; the Hauptschule prepares pupils for vocational education and finishes with the final examination Hauptschulabschluss, after grade 9 and the Realschulabschluss after grade 10. There are two types of grade 10: one is the higher level called type 10b and the lower level is called type 10a; only the higher-level type 10b can lead to the Realschule and this finishes with the final examination Mittlere Reife after grade 10b. This new path of achieving the Realschulabschluss at a vocationally-oriented secondary school was changed by the statutory school regulations in 1981—with a one-year qualifying period. During the one-year qualifying period of the change to the new regulations, pupils could continue with class 10 to fulfil the statutory period of education. After 1982, the new path was compulsory, as explained above..[7]

A less common[8] secondary school alternative is the so-called Gesamtschule, i.e. comprehensive school. There are two main types of Gesamtschule, namely integriert (≈integrated) or kooperativ (≈collaborative [translation note]).

There are also Förder- or Sonderschulen, schools for students with special educational needs. One in 21 pupils attends a Förderschule.[9][10] Nevertheless, the Förder- or Sonderschulen can also lead, in special circumstances, to a Hauptschulabschluss of both type 10a or type 10b, the latter of which is the Realschulabschluss. The amount of extracurricular activity is determined individually by each school and varies greatly. With the 2015 school reform the German government has tried to push more of those pupils into other schools, which is known as Inklusion. A special system of apprenticeship called Duale Ausbildung (the dual education system) allows pupils in vocational courses to do in-service training in a company as well as at a state school.[10]

Students in Germany scored above the OECD average in reading (498 score points), mathematics (500) and science (503) in PISA 2018.[11] Average reading performance in 2018 returned to levels that were last observed in 2009, reversing most gains up to 2012. In science, mean performance was below 2006 levels; while in mathematics PISA 2018 results lay significantly below those of the 2012 study.[11][12][13] The Human Rights Measurement Initiative finds that Germany is achieving 75.4% of what should be possible for the right to education, at their level of income.[14][15]


History edit

Prussian edit

Historically, Lutheranism had a strong influence on German culture, including its education. Martin Luther advocated compulsory schooling so that all people would independently be able to read and interpret the Bible. This concept became a model for schools throughout Germany. German public schools generally have religious education provided by the churches in cooperation with the state ever since.

During the 18th century, the Kingdom of Prussia was among the first countries in the world to introduce free and generally compulsory primary education, consisting of an eight-year course of basic education,Volksschule. It provided not only the skills needed in an early industrialized world (reading, writing, and arithmetic) but also a strict education in ethics, duty, discipline and obedience. Children of affluent parents often went on to attend preparatory private schools for an additional four years, but the general population had virtually no access to secondary education and universities.

In 1810, during the Napoleonic Wars, Prussia introduced state certification requirements for teachers, which significantly raised the standard of teaching. The final examination, Abitur, was introduced in 1788, implemented in all Prussian secondary schools by 1812 and extended to all of Germany in 1871. The state also established teacher training colleges for prospective teachers in the common or elementary grades.

German Empire edit

When the German Empire was formed in 1871, the school system became more centralized. In 1872, Prussia recognized the first separate secondary schools for females. As learned professions demanded well-educated young people, more secondary schools were established, and the state claimed the sole right to set standards and to supervise the newly established schools.

Four different types of secondary schools developed:

  • A nine-year classical Gymnasium (including study of Latin and Classical Greek or Hebrew, plus one modern language);
  • A nine-year Realgymnasium (focusing on Latin, modern languages, science and mathematics);
  • A six-year Realschule (without university entrance qualification, but with the option of becoming a trainee in one of the modern industrial, office or technical jobs); and
  • A nine-year Oberrealschule (focusing on modern languages, science and mathematics).

By the turn of the 20th century, the four types of schools had achieved equal rank and privilege, although they did not have equal prestige.[16]

Weimar Republic edit

 
Classroom furniture from 1900 (left) to 1985 (right)

After 1919, the Weimar Republic established a free, universal four-year elementary school (Grundschule). Most pupils continued at these schools for another four-year course. Those who were able to pay a small fee went on to a Mittelschule that provided a more challenging curriculum for an additional one or two years. Upon passing a rigorous entrance exam after year four, pupils could also enter one of the four types of secondary school.

Nazi Germany edit

During the Nazi era (1933–1945), though the curriculum was reshaped to teach the beliefs of the regime,[17] the basic structure of the education system remained unchanged.

East Germany edit

The German Democratic Republic (East Germany) started its own standardized education system in the 1960s. The East German equivalent of both primary and secondary schools was the Polytechnic Secondary School (Polytechnische Oberschule), which all students attended for 10 years, from the ages of 6 to 16. At the end of the 10th year, an exit examination was set. Depending upon the results, a pupil could choose to come out of education or undertake an apprenticeship for an additional two years, followed by an Abitur. Those who performed very well and displayed loyalty to the ruling party could change to the Erweiterte Oberschule (extended high school), where they could take their Abitur examinations after 12 school years. Although this system was abolished in the early 1990s after reunification, it continues to influence school life in the eastern German states.[citation needed]

West Germany edit

 
Pupils of the Gymnasium Nonnenwerth, an all-girls Catholic school in 1960

After World War II, the Allied powers (Soviet Union, France, United Kingdom, and the U.S.) ensured that Nazi ideology was eliminated from the curriculum. They installed educational systems in their respective occupation zones that reflected their own ideas. When West Germany gained partial independence in 1949, its new constitution (Grundgesetz) granted educational autonomy to the state (Länder) governments. This led to widely varying school systems, often making it difficult for children to continue schooling whilst moving between states.[18]

Multi-state agreements ensure that basic requirements are universally met by all state school systems. Thus, all children are required to attend one type of school (five or six days a week) from the age of 6 to the age of 16. A pupil may change schools in the case of exceptionally good (or exceptionally poor) ability. Graduation certificates from one state are recognized by all the other states. Qualified teachers are able to apply for posts in any of the states.

Federal Republic of Germany edit

Since the 1990s, a few changes have been taking place in many schools:

  • Introduction of bilingual education in some subjects
  • Experimentation with different styles of teaching
  • Equipping all schools with computers and Internet access
  • Creation of local school philosophy and teaching goals (Schulprogramm), to be evaluated regularly
  • Reduction of Gymnasium school years (Abitur after grade 12) and introduction of afternoon periods as in many other western countries (turned down in 2019)

In 2000 after much public debate about Germany's perceived low international ranking in Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), there has been a trend towards a less ideological discussion on how to develop schools. These are some of the new trends:

  • Establishing federal standards on quality of teaching
  • More practical orientation in teacher training
  • Transfer of some responsibility from the Ministry of Education to local school

Further outcomes:

  • Bilingual education now requires mandatory English lessons in Grundschule
  • The educational act (Bildungspakt) in 2019 is designed to increase the use of the internet and computers in schools.

Overview edit

 
Overview of the German school system

In Germany, education is the responsibility of the states (Länder) and part of their constitutional sovereignty (Kulturhoheit der Länder).[19] Teachers are employed by the Ministry of Education for the state and usually have a job for life after a certain period (verbeamtet) (which, however, is not comparable in timeframe nor competitiveness to the typical tenure track, e.g. at universities in the US). This practice depends on the state and is currently changing. A parents' council is elected to voice the parents' views to the school's administration. Each class elects one or two Klassensprecher (class presidents; if two are elected usually one is male and the other female), who meet several times a year as the Schülerrat (students' council).

A team of school presidents is also elected by the pupils each year, whose main purpose is organizing school parties, sports tournaments and the like for their fellow students. The local town is responsible for the school building and employs the janitorial and secretarial staff. For an average school of 600 – 800 students, there may be two janitors and one secretary. School administration is the responsibility of the teachers, who receive a reduction in their teaching hours if they participate.

Church and state are separated in Germany. Compulsory school prayers and compulsory attendance at religious services at state schools are against the constitution. (It is expected, though, to stand politely for the school prayer even if one does not pray along.)

Literacy edit

Over 99% of Germans aged 15 and above are estimated to be able to read and write.[20]

Preschool edit

 
A forest kindergarten in Düsseldorf

German preschool is known as a Kindergarten (plural Kindergärten) or Kita, short for Kindertagesstätte (meaning "children's daycare center"). Children between the ages of 2 and 6 attend Kindergärten, which are not part of the school system. They are often run by city or town administrations, churches, or registered societies, many of which follow a certain educational approach as represented, e.g., by Montessori or Reggio Emilia or Berliner Bildungsprogramm. Forest kindergartens are well established. Attending a Kindergarten is neither mandatory nor free of charge, but can be partly or wholly funded, depending on the local authority and the income of the parents. All caretakers in Kita or Kindergarten must have a three-year qualified education, or be under special supervision during training.

Kindergärten can be open from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. or longer and may also house a Kinderkrippe, meaning crèche, for children between the ages of eight weeks and three years, and possibly an afternoon Hort (often associated with a primary school) for school-age children aged 6 to 10 who spend the time after their lessons there. Alongside nurseries, there are day-care nurses (called Tagesmutter, plural Tagesmütter—the formal, gender-neutral form is Tagespflegeperson(en)) working independently from any pre-school institution in individual homes and looking after only three to five children typically up to three years of age. These nurses are supported and supervised by local authorities.

The term Vorschule, meaning 'pre-school', is used both for educational efforts in Kindergärten and for a mandatory class that is usually connected to a primary school. Both systems are handled differently in each German state. The Schulkindergarten is a type of Vorschule.

During the German Empire, children were able to pass directly into secondary education after attending a privately run, fee-based Vorschule which then was another sort of primary school. The Weimar Constitution banned these, feeling them to be an unjustified privilege, and the Basic Law still contains the constitutional rule (Art. 7 Sect. VI) that: Pre-schools shall remain abolished.

Homeschooling edit

Homeschooling is – between Schulpflicht (compulsory schooling) beginning with elementary school to 18 years – illegal in Germany. The illegality has to do with the prioritization of children's rights over the rights of parents: children have the right to the company of other children and adults who are not their parents. For similar reasons, parents cannot opt their children out of sexual education classes because the state considers a child's right to information to be more important than a parent's desire to withhold it.[21]

Primary education edit

 
Education system in Germany

Parents looking for a suitable school for their child have a wide choice of elementary schools:

  • State school. State schools do not charge tuition fees. The majority of pupils attend state schools in their neighbourhood. Schools in affluent areas tend to be better than those in deprived areas. Once children reach school age, many middle-class and working-class families move away from deprived areas.[citation needed]
  • or, alternatively

The entry year can vary between 5 and 7, while stepping back or skipping a grade is also possible.

Secondary education edit

After children complete their primary education (at 10 years of age/grade 4, 12 year of age in Berlin and Brandenburg), there are four options for secondary schooling:[23]

  1. Gymnasium (Germany) until grade 12 or 13 (with Abitur as exit exam, qualifying for university).
  2. Realschule until grade 10 or 11 (with Mittlere Reife (or Realschulabschluss) as exit exam); students can then attend Berufsfachschule (full-time vocational schools[24]) or Fachoberschule for 2-3 years, which combines vocational school and an apprenticeship. In some regions there is Regionalschule, which is a combination of Realschule and Hauptschule. Pupils study for either 9 years, to obtain a qualification similar to the Hauptschulabschluss, or 10 years, to get the Mittlere Reife.
  3. Hauptschule until grade 9, with an exam called the Hauptschulabschluss, to conclude. Afterwards, students can attend vocational schools.
  4. Gesamtschule, which is a combination of the above, for 5-8 years, with a different qualification for different durations: 5 years for the Hauptschulabschluss; if a student opts for the longer 8 year program, they can take the gymnasium abitur exam, qualifying for university.
 
Standard classroom at a primary school in Germany
 
The choir of the Carl-von-Ossietzky-Gymnasium [de] in Bonn

After passing through any of the above schools, pupils can start a career with an apprenticeship in the Berufsschule (vocational school). The Berufsschule is normally attended twice a week during a two, three, or three-and-a-half-year apprenticeship; the other days are spent working at a company. This is intended to provide a knowledge of theory and practice. The company is obliged to accept the apprentice on its apprenticeship scheme. After this, the apprentice is registered on a list at the Industrie- und Handelskammer (IHK) (chamber of industry and commerce). During the apprenticeship, the apprentice is a part-time salaried employee of the company. After passing the Berufsschule and the exit exams of the IHK, a certificate is awarded and the young person is ready for a career up to a low management level. In some areas, the schemes teach certain skills that are a legal requirement (special positions in a bank, legal assistants).

Some special areas provide different paths. After attending any of the above schools and gaining a leaving certificate like Hauptschulabschluss, Mittlere Reife (or Realschulabschuss, from a Realschule) or Abitur from a Gymnasium or a Gesamtschule, school leavers can start a career with an apprenticeship at a Berufsschule (vocational school). Here the student is registered with certain bodies, e.g. associations such as the German Bar Association (Deutsche Rechtsanwaltskammer, GBA) (board of directors). During the apprenticeship, the young person is a part-time salaried employee of the institution, bank, physician or attorney's office. After leaving the Berufsfachschule and passing the exit examinations set by the German Bar Association or other relevant associations, the apprentice receives a certificate and is ready for a career at all levels except in positions which require a specific higher degree, such as a doctorate. In some areas, the apprenticeship scheme teaches skills that are required by law, including certain positions in a bank or those as legal assistants. The 16 states have exclusive responsibility in the field of education and professional education. The federal parliament and the federal government can influence the educational system only by financial aid to the states. There are many different school systems, but in each state the starting point is always the Grundschule (elementary school) for a period of four years; or six years in the case of Berlin and Brandenburg.

Percentage of jobholders holding Hauptschulabschluss, Realschulabschluss or Abitur in Germany[25]
1970 1982 1991 2000
Hauptschulabschluss 87.7% 79.3% 66.5% 54.9%
Realschulabschluss 10.9% 17.7% 27% 34.1%
Abitur 1.4% 3% 6.5% 11%

Grades 5 and 6 form an orientation or testing phase (Orientierungs- or Erprobungsstufe) during which students, their parents and teachers decide which of the above-mentioned paths the students should follow. In all states except Berlin and Brandenburg, this orientation phase is embedded into the program of the secondary schools. The decision for a secondary school influences the student's future, but during this phase changes can be made more easily. In practice this rarely comes to bear because teachers are afraid of sending pupils to more academic schools whereas parents are afraid of sending their children to less academic schools. In Berlin and Brandenburg, the orientation is embedded into that of the elementary schools. Teachers give a so-called educational (path) recommendation (Bildungs(gang)empfehlung) based on scholastic achievements in the main subjects (mathematics, German, natural sciences, foreign language) and classroom behavior with details and legal implications differing from state to state: in some German states, those wishing to apply to a Gymnasium or Realschule require such a recommendation stating that the student is likely to make a successful transition to that type of school; in other cases anyone may apply. In Berlin 30% – 35% of Gymnasium places are allocated by lottery. A student's performance at primary school is immaterial.[citation needed] While the entry year is depending on the last year in the Grundschule stepping back or skipping a grade is possible between 7th and 10th grade and only stepping back between 5th and 6th grade (so called Erprobungsstufe, meaning testing grade) and 11th and 12th grade.

The eastern states Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia combine Hauptschule and Realschule into Sekundarschule, Mittelschule and Regelschule respectively. All German states have Gymnasium as one possibility for the more able children, and all states—except Saxony—have some Gesamtschulen, but in different forms. The states of Berlin and Hamburg have only two types of schools: comprehensive schools and Gymnasium.

Learning a foreign language is compulsory throughout Germany in secondary schools and English is one of the more popular choices. Students at certain Gymnasium are required to learn Latin as their first foreign language and choose a second foreign language. The list of available foreign languages as well as the hours of compulsory foreign language lessons differ from state to state, but the more common choices besides Latin are English, French, Spanish, and ancient Greek. Many schools also offer voluntary study groups for the purpose of learning other languages. At which stage students begin learning a foreign language differs from state to state and is tailored to the cultural and socio-economical dynamics of each state. In some states, foreign language education starts in Grundschule (primary school). For example, in North Rhine-Westphalia and Lower Saxony, English starts in the third year of elementary school. Baden-Württemberg starts with English or French in the first year. The Saarland, which borders France, begins with French in the third year of primary school and French is taught in high school as the main foreign language.

It may cause problems in terms of education for families that plan to move from one German state to another as there are partially completely different curricula for nearly every subject.[citation needed]

Realschule students gain the chance to take their Abitur at a Gymnasium with a good degree in the Realschulabschluss. Stepping up is always provided by the school system.[clarification needed] Adults who did not achieve a Realschulabschluss or Abitur, or reached its equivalent, have the option of attending evening classes at an Abendgymnasium or Abendrealschule.

School organization edit

 
Apian Gymnasium

A few organizational central points are listed below. It should however be noted that due to the decentralized nature of the education system there are many more additional differences across the 16 states of Germany.

  • Every state has its own school system.
  • Each age group of students (born roughly in the same year) forms one or more grades or classes (Klassen) per school which remain the same for elementary school (years 1 to 4 or 6), orientation school (if there are orientation schools in the state), orientation phase (at Gymnasium years 5 to 6), and secondary school (years 5 or 7 to 10 in Realschulen and Hauptschulen; years 5 or 7 to 10 (differences between states) in Gymnasien[26]) respectively. Changes are possible, though, when there is a choice of subjects, e.g. additional languages; Then classes will be split (and newly merged) either temporarily or permanently for this particular subject.
  • Students usually sit at tables, not desks (usually two at one table), sometimes arranged in a semicircle or another geometric or functional shape. During exams in classrooms, the tables are sometimes arranged in columns with one pupil per table (if permitted by the room's capacities) to prevent cheating; at many schools, this is only the case for some exams in the two final years of school, i.e. some of the exams counting for the final grade on the high school diploma.
  • There is usually no school uniform or dress code. Many private schools have a simplified dress code, for instance, such as "no shorts, no sandals, no clothes with holes". Some schools are testing school uniforms, but those are not as formal as seen in the UK. They mostly consist of a normal sweater/shirt and jeans of a certain color, sometimes with the school's symbol on it. It is however a common custom to design graduation class shirts in Gymnasium, Realschule and Hauptschule.
  • School usually starts between 7.30 a.m. and 8:15 a.m. and can finish as early as 12; instruction in lower classes[which?] almost always ends before lunch. In higher grades[which?], however, afternoon lessons are very common and periods may have longer gaps without teacher supervision between them. Usually, afternoon classes are not offered every day and/or continuously until early evening, leaving students with large parts of their afternoons free of school; some all-day schools (Ganztagsschulen), however, offer classes or mainly-supervised activities throughout the afternoons to offer supervision for the students rather than increasing teaching hours. Afternoon lessons can continue until 6 o'clock.
  • Depending on school, there are breaks of 5 to 20 minutes after each period. There is no lunch break as school usually finishes before 1:30 for junior school. However, at schools with Nachmittagsunterricht (afternoon classes) ending after 1:30, there may be a lunch break of 45 to 90 minutes, though many schools lack any special break in general. Some schools have regular breaks of 5 minutes between every lesson and have additional 10 or 15-minute breaks after the second and fourth lesson.
  • In German state schools lessons have a length of exactly 45 minutes. Each subject is usually taught for two to three periods every week (main subjects like mathematics, German or foreign languages are taught for four to six periods) and usually no more than two periods consecutively. The beginning of every period and, usually, break is announced with an audible signal such as a bell.
  • Exams (which are always supervised) are usually essay-based, rather than multiple choice. As of 11th grade, exams usually consist of no more than three separate exercises. While most exams in the first grades of secondary schools usually span no more than 90 minutes, exams in 10th to 12th grade may span four periods or more (without breaks).
  • At every type of school, pupils study one foreign language (in most cases English) for at least five years. The study of languages is, however, far more rigorous and literature-oriented in Gymnasium. In Gymnasium, students can choose from a wider range of languages (mostly English, French, Russian—mostly in east German Bundesländer—or Latin) as the first language in 5th grade, and a second mandatory language in 7th grade. Some types of Gymnasium also require an additional third language (such as Spanish, Italian, Russian, Latin or Ancient Greek) or an alternative subject (usually based on one or two other subjects, e.g. British politics (English and politics), dietetics (biology) or media studies (arts and German) in 9th or 11th grade. Gymnasiums normally offer further subjects starting at 11th grade, with some schools offering a fourth foreign language.
  • A number of schools once had a Raucherecke (smokers' corner), a small area of the schoolyard where students over the age of eighteen are permitted to smoke on their breaks. Those special areas were banned in the states of Berlin, Hessen, and Hamburg, Brandenburg at the beginning of the 2005–06 school year. (Bavaria, Schleswig-Holstein, Lower Saxony 2006–07)). Schools in these states prohibit smoking for students and teachers and offences at school will be punished. All other states in Germany introduced similar laws in the aftermath of EU regulations on smoking.
  • As state schools are public, smoking is universally prohibited inside the buildings. Smoking teachers are generally asked not to smoke while at or near school.
  • Students over 14 years are permitted to leave the school compound during breaks at some schools. Teachers or school personnel tend to prevent younger students from leaving early and strangers from entering the compound without permission.
  • Tidying up the classroom and schoolyard is often the task of the students themselves. Unless a group of volunteering students, individuals are being picked sequentially.
  • Many schools have AGs or Arbeitsgemeinschaften (clubs) for afternoon activities such as sports, music or acting, but participation is not necessarily common. Some schools also have student volunteer mediators trained to resolve conflicts between their classmates or younger students.
  • Few schools have actual sports teams that compete with other schools. Even if the school has a sports team, students are not necessarily very aware of it.[citation needed]
  • While student newspapers used to be very common until the late 20th century, with new issues often produced every couple of months, many of them are now very short-lived, usually vanishing when the class graduates. Student newspapers are often financed mostly by advertisements.
  • Schools don't often have their own radio stations or TV channels; larger universities often have a local student-run radio station.
  • Although most German schools and state universities do not have classrooms equipped with a computer for each student, schools usually have at least one or two computer rooms and most universities offer a limited number of rooms with computers on every desk. State school computers are usually maintained by the same exclusive contractor in the entire city and updated slowly. Internet access is often provided by phone companies free of charge.
  • At the end of their schooling, students usually undergo a cumulative written and oral examination (Abitur in Gymnasien or Abschlussprüfung in Realschulen and Hauptschulen). Students leaving Gymnasium after 9th grade have the Hauptschule leaving examination and after 10th grade they have the Mittlere Reife (leaving examination of the Realschule, also called Mittlerer Schulabschluss).
  • After 10th grade Gymnasium students may leave school for at least one year of job education if they do not wish to continue. Realschule and Hauptschule students who have passed their Abschlussprüfung may decide to continue schooling at a Gymnasium, but are sometimes required to take additional courses to catch up.
  • Corporal punishment was banned in 1949 in East Germany and in 1973 in West Germany.
  • Fourth grade (or sixth, depending on the state) is often quite stressful for students of lower performance and their families. Many feel tremendous pressure when trying to achieve placement in Gymnasium, or at least when attempting to avoid placement in Hauptschule. Germany is unique compared to other western countries in its early segregation of students based on academic achievement.

School year edit

The school year starts after the summer break (different from state to state, usually end/mid of August) and is divided into two terms. There are typically 12 weeks of holidays in addition to public holidays. Exact dates differ between states, but there are generally six weeks of summer and two weeks of Christmas holiday. The other holiday periods occur in spring (during the period around Easter Sunday) and autumn (during the former harvest, where farmers used to need their children for field work). In some states schools can also schedule two or three special days off per term.

Timetables edit

Students have about 30–40 periods of 45 minutes each per week (depending on year and state), but secondary schools in particular have switched to 90-minute lessons (Block) which count as two 'traditional' lessons. To manage classes that are taught three or five lessons per week there are two common ways. At some schools with 90-minute periods there is still one 45-minute lesson each day, mostly between the first two blocks; at other schools those subjects are taught in weekly or term rotations. There are about 12 compulsory subjects: up to three foreign languages (the first is often begun in primary school, the second one in 6th or 7th grade, and the third somewhere between 7th and 11th grade), physics, biology, chemistry, civics/social/political studies, history, geography (starting between 5th and 7th grade), mathematics, music, visual arts, German, physical education, and religious education/ethics (to be taken from primary school on). The range of offered afternoon activities is different from school to school; however, most German schools offer choirs or orchestras, and sometimes sports, theater or languages. Many of these are offered as semi-scholastic AGs (Arbeitsgemeinschaften—literally "working groups"), which are noted in students' reports but not officially graded. Other common extracurricular activities are organized as private clubs, which are very popular in Germany.

Sample grade 10 Gymnasium timetable (Bavaria, Humanist)
Time Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
08.00–08.45 English Physics Biology Physics Greek
08.45–09.30 History English Chemistry Mathematics Chemistry
09.30–09.40 Break
09.40–10.25 Latin Greek Mathematics Latin Economics
10.25–11.10 German Geography Religious studies Greek German
11.10–11.30 Break
11.30–12.15 Music Mathematics Geography German Biology
12.15–13.00 Religious studies Civic education Economics English Latin
13.00–14.00 Break
14.00–14.45 Arts Intensive course
14.45–15.30 Intensive course Greek
15.30–16.15 PE
16.15–17.00 PE

There are three blocks of lessons, with each lesson taking 45 minutes. After each block, there is a break of 15–20 minutes, including after the sixth lesson (the number of lessons changes from year to year, so it is possible that one could be in school until 16.00). Nebenfächer (minor fields of study) are taught twice a week; Hauptfächer (major subjects) are taught three times.

In grades 11–13, 11–12, or 12–13 (depending on the school system), each student majors in two or three subjects (Leistungskurse), in which there are usually five lessons per week. The other subjects (Grundkurse) are usually taught three periods per week.

Sample grade 12 Gymnasium timetable (Lower Saxony)
Time Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
08.00–08.45 English Religious studies French Physics German
08.50–09.35 English Religious studies French Physics German
09.55–10.40 German Geography/Social Studies
(taught in English)
Mathematics Geography/Social Studies
(taught in English)
Mathematics
10.45–11.30 German Geography/Social Studies
(taught in English)
Mathematics Geography/Social Studies
(taught in English)
Mathematics
11.50–12.35 Physics Politics-Economy History English French
12.40–13.25 Physics Politics-Economy History English French
13.40–14.25 Arts "Seminarfach"+ History PE (different sports offered as courses)
14.30–15.15 Arts "Seminarfach"+ History PE (different sports offered as courses)

+ Seminarfach is a compulsory class in which each student is prepared to turn in his/her own research paper at the end of the semester. The class is aimed at training students' scientific research skills that will later be necessary in university.

There are significant differences between the 16 states' alternatives to this basic template, such as Waldorfschulen or other private schools. Adults can also go back to evening school and take the Abitur exam.

Public and private schools edit

In 2006, six percent of German children attended private schools.[27]

In Germany, Article 7, Paragraph 4 of the Grundgesetz, the constitution of Germany, guarantees the right to establish private schools. This article belongs to the first part of the German basic law, which defines civil and human rights. A right which is guaranteed in this part of the Grundgesetz can only be suspended in a state of emergency if the respective article specifically states this possibility. That is not the case with this article. It is also not possible to abolish these rights. This unusual protection of private schools was implemented to protect them from a second Gleichschaltung or similar event in the future.

Ersatzschulen are ordinary primary or secondary schools which are run by private individuals, private organizations or religious groups. These schools offer the same types of diplomas as in public schools. However, Ersatzschulen, like their state-run counterparts, are subjected to basic government standards, such as minimum required qualifications for teachers and pay grades. An Ersatzschule must have at least the same academic standards as those of a state school and Article 7, Paragraph 4 of the Grundgesetz forbids the segregation of pupils based on socioeconomic status (the so-called Sonderungsverbot). Therefore, most Ersatzschulen have very low tuition fees compared to those in most other Western European countries; scholarships are also often available. However, it is not possible to finance these schools with such low tuition fees: accordingly all German Ersatzschulen are subsidised with public funds.

Some students attend private schools through welfare subsidies. This is often the case if a student is considered to be a child at risk, such as students who have learning disabilities, special needs or come from dysfunctional home environments.

After factoring in parents' socioeconomic status, children who attend private schools are not as able as those at state schools. At the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) for example, after considering socioeconomic class, students at private schools underperformed those at state schools.[28] One has, however, to be careful interpreting that data: it may be that such students do not underperform because they attend a private school, but that they attend a private school because they underperform. Some private Realschulen and Gymnasien have lower entry requirements than public Realschulen and Gymnasien.

Special schools edit

 
A special school for children with special emotional needs in Kötitz, Germany

Most German children with special needs attend a school called Förderschule or Sonderschule (special school) that serves only such children. There are several types of special schools in Germany such as:

  • Sonderschule für Lernbehinderte—a special school serving children who have learning difficulties
  • Schule mit dem Förderschwerpunkt Geistige Entwicklung—a special school serving children who have very severe learning difficulties
  • Förderschule Schwerpunkt emotionale und soziale Entwicklung—a special school serving children who have special emotional needs

Only one in 21 German children attends such a special school. Teachers at those schools are qualified professionals who have specialized in special-needs education while at university. Special schools often have a very favourable student-teacher ratio and facilities compared with other schools. Special schools have been criticized. It is argued that special education separates and discriminates against those who are disabled or different. Some special-needs children do not attend special schools, but are mainstreamed into a Hauptschule or Gesamtschule (comprehensive school) and/or, in rare cases, into a Realschule or even a Gymnasium.

Elite schools edit

 
St. Afra is one of few specialist schools that serve only gifted children.

There are very few specialist schools for gifted children. As German schools do not IQ-test children, most intellectually gifted children remain unaware that they fall into this category. The German psychologist, Detlef H. Rost, carried out a pioneer long-term study on gifted children called the Marburger Hochbegabtenprojekt. In 1987/1988 he tested 7000 third graders on a test based on the German version of the Cattell Culture Fair III test. Those who scored at least two standard deviations above the mean were categorised as gifted. A total of 151 gifted subjects participated in the study alongside 136 controls. All participants in the study were tested blind with the result that they did not discover whether they were gifted or not. The study revealed that the gifted children did very well in school. The vast majority later attended a Gymnasium and achieved good grades. However, 15 percent, were classified as underachievers because they attended a Realschule (two cases) or a Hauptschule (one case), had repeated a grade (four cases) or had grades that put them in the lower half of their class (the rest of cases). The report also concluded that most gifted persons had high self-esteem and good psychological health.[29] Rost said that he was not in favour of special schools for the gifted. Gifted children seemed to be served well by Germany's existing school system.[30]

International schools edit

As of January 2015 the International Schools Consultancy (ISC)[31] listed Germany as having 164 international schools.[32] ISC defines an 'international school' in the following terms: "ISC includes an international school if the school delivers a curriculum to any combination of pre-school, primary or secondary students, wholly or partly in English outside an English-speaking country, or if a school in a country where English is one of the official languages, offers an English-medium curriculum other than the country’s national curriculum and is international in its orientation."[32] This definition is used by publications including The Economist.[33] In 1971 the first International Baccalaureate World School was authorized in Germany.[34] Today 70 schools offer one or more of the IB programmes including two who offer the new IB Career-related Programme.[35]

International comparisons edit

The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), coordinated by the OECD, assesses the skills of 15-year-olds in OECD countries and a number of partner countries. The assessment in the year 2000 demonstrated serious weaknesses in German pupils' performance. In the test of 41 countries, Germany ranked 21st in reading and 20th in both mathematics and the natural sciences, prompting calls for reform.[36] Major newspapers ran special sections on the PISA results, which were also discussed extensively on radio and television. In response, Germany's states formulated a number of specific initiatives addressing the perceived problems behind Germany's poor performance.[37]

By 2006, German schoolchildren had improved their position compared to previous years, being ranked (statistically) significantly above average (rank 13) in science skills and statistically not significantly above or below average in mathematical skills (rank 20) and reading skills (rank 18).[38][39] In 2012, Germany achieved above average results in all three areas of reading, mathematics, and natural sciences.[40] This declined in the 2018 report.[11]

The PISA Examination also found big differences in achievement between students attending different types of German schools.[41] The socio-economic gradient was very high in Germany, the students' performance there being more dependent on socio-economic factors than in most other countries.[38][39]

Performance on PISA 2003 (points earned) by school attended and social class
type school social class "very low" social class "low" social class "high" social class "very high"
Hauptschule 400 429 436 450
Gesamtschule 438 469 489 515
Realschule 482 504 528 526
Gymnasium 578 581 587 602
PISA 2003 – Der Bildungsstand der Jugendlichen in Deutschland – Ergebnisse des 2. internationalen Vergleiches.[42]

Some German teachers' representatives and a number of scientists disputed the PISA findings.[43] They claimed, amongst other things, that the questions had been ill-translated, that the samples drawn in some countries were not representative, that German students (most of whom had never done a multiple choice tests in their lives before) were disadvantaged by the multiple choice questions, that the PISA questions had no curricular validity and that PISA was "in fact an IQ-test",[44][45] which according to them showed that dysgenic fertility was taking place in Germany.[46][47][48][49][50] Additionally, the OECD was criticized for following its own agenda of a strictly economically utilitarian education policy—as opposed to humanist education policy following the German ideal of Bildung—and for trying to establish an educational testing industry without democratic legitimation.[51][52]

Apprenticeship edit

 
A Meisterbrief (master craftsman's certificate) from the Berliner Handwerkskammer (Berlin chamber of handicrafts); the motto on the certificate reads: "Work is the ennoblement of the citizen; boon will be the reward for his labour".

Germany has high standards for the education of craftspeople. Historically very few people attended college. In the 1950s for example, 80 percent had only Volksschule ("primary school") education of 6 or 7 years. Only 5 percent of youths entered college at this time and still fewer graduated. In the 1960s, six percent of youths entered college. In 1961 there were still 8,000 cities in which no children received secondary education.[53] However, this does not mean that Germany was a country of uneducated people. In fact, many of those who did not receive secondary education were highly skilled craftspeople and members of the upper middle class. Even though more people attend college today, a craftsperson is still highly valued in German society.

 
A master discusses a vacuum compressor with his apprentice and several other craftsmen.

Historically (prior to the 20th century) the relationship between a master craftsman and his apprentice was paternalistic. Apprentices were often very young when entrusted to a master craftsman by their parents. It was seen as the master's responsibility not only to teach the craft, but also to instill the virtues of a good craftsman. He was supposed to teach honour, loyalty, fair-mindedness, courtesy and compassion for the poor. He was also supposed to offer spiritual guidance, to ensure his apprentices fulfilled their religious duties and to teach them to "honour the Lord" (Jesus Christ) with their lives. The master craftsman who failed to do this would lose his reputation and would accordingly be dishonoured – a very bad fate in those days. The apprenticeship ended with the so-called Freisprechung (exculpation). The master announced in front of the trade heading that the apprentice had been virtuous and God-loving.[54][55][56] The young person now had the right to call himself a Geselle (journeyman). He had two options: either to work for a master or to become a master himself. Working for another master had several disadvantages. One was that, in many cases, the journeyman who was not a master was not allowed to marry and found a family. Because the church disapproved of sex outside of marriage, he was obliged to become a master if he did not want to spend his life celibate.[57] Accordingly, many of the so-called Geselle decided to go on a journey in order to become a master. This was called Waltz or Journeyman years.

 
A German roofer thatching a roof with reeds (he is wearing the traditional waistcoat and trousers of a craftsman)

In those days, the crafts were called the "virtuous crafts" and the virtuousness of the craftspersons was greatly respected. For example, according to one source, a person should be greeted from "the bricklayer craftspersons in the town, who live in respectability, die in respectability, who strive for respectability and who apply respectability to their actions."[58] In those days, the concept of the "virtuous crafts" stood in contrast to the concept of "academic freedom" as Brüdermann and Jost noticed.

Nowadays, the education of craftspersons has changed – in particular self-esteem and the concept of respectability.[59] Yet even today, a craftsperson does sometimes refer to the "craftsperson's codex of virtues" and the crafts sometimes may be referred to as the "virtuous crafts" and a craftsperson who gives a blessing at a roofing ceremony may, in many cases, remind of the "virtues of the crafts I am part of". Certain virtues are also ascribed to certain crafts. For example, a person might be called "always on time like a bricklayer" to describe punctuality.[60] On the other hand, "virtue" and "respectability", which in the past had been the center of the life of any craftsperson became less and less important for such education. Today, a young person who wants to start an apprenticeship must first find an Ausbilder: this may be a master craftsperson, a master in the industrial sector (Industriemeister) or someone else with proof of suitable qualifications in the training of apprentices. The Ausbilder must also provide proof of no criminal record and proof of respectability. The Ausbilder has to be at least 24 years of age. The Ausbilder has several duties, such as teaching the craft and the techniques, and instilling character and social skills. In some cases, the Ausbilder must also provide board and lodging. Agreement is reached on these points before the apprenticeship begins. The apprentice will also receive payment for his work. According to §17 Berufsbildungsgesetz, a first year apprentice will be paid less than someone who has been an apprentice for longer. An Ausbilder who provides board and lodging may set this off against the payment made. In the past, many of those who applied for an apprenticeship had only primary school education. Nowadays, only those with secondary school education apply for apprenticeships because secondary school attendance has become compulsory. In some trades, it has even become difficult for those holding the Hauptschulabschluss to find an apprenticeship because more and more pupils leave school with the Realschulabschluss or Abitur. The apprenticeship takes three years. During that time, the apprentice is trained by the Ausbilder and also attends a vocational school. This is called the German model or dual education system (Duale Ausbildung).

Tertiary education edit

 
Heidelberg University is the oldest and among the most prestigious universities of Germany. It was established in 1386.

Germany's universities are recognised internationally; in the Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU) for 2008, six of the top 100 universities in the world are in Germany, and 18 of the top 200.[61] Germany ranks third in the QS World University Rankings 2011.[62]

Most German universities are public institutions, charging fees of only around €60–500 per semester for each student, usually to cover expenses associated with the university cafeterias and (usually mandatory) public transport tickets.[63][64] Thus, academic education is open to most citizens and studying is very common in Germany. The dual education system combines both practical and theoretical education but does not lead to academic degrees. It is more popular in Germany than anywhere else in the world and is a role model for other countries.[65]

The oldest universities of Germany are also among the oldest and best regarded in the world, with Heidelberg University being the oldest (established in 1386 and in continuous operation since then). It is followed by Cologne University (1388), Leipzig University (1409), Rostock University (1419), Greifswald University (1456), Freiburg University (1457), LMU Munich (1472) and the University of Tübingen (1477).

While German universities have a strong focus on research, a large part of it is also done outside of universities in independent institutes that are embedded in academic clusters, such as within the Max Planck, Fraunhofer, Leibniz and Helmholtz institutes. This German peculiarity of "outsourcing" research leads to a competition for funds between universities and research institutes and may negatively affect academic rankings.[citation needed]

Figures for Germany are roughly:

  • 1,000,000 new students at all schools put together for one year
  • 400,000 Abitur graduations
  • 30,000 doctoral dissertations per year
  • 1000 habilitations per year (the traditional way to qualify as a professor, but typically postdoc or junior professorship is the preferred career path nowadays, which are not accounted for in this number)

Types of universities edit

The German tertiary education system distinguishes between two types of institutions: The term Universität (university) is reserved for institutions which have the right to confer doctorates. Other degree-awarding higher education institutions may use the more generic term Hochschule.

In addition, non-university institutions of tertiary level exist in the German education system. The admission requirement is usually a previous education including work experience. As an example, Fachschulen for technological subjects can be cited, which are completed with a state examination (EQF level 6).[66]

Universitäten edit

Only Universitäten have the right to confer doctorates and habilitations. Some universities use the term research university in international usage to emphasize their strength in research activity in addition to teaching, particularly to differentiate themselves from Fachhochschulen. A university covering the full range of scientific disciplines in contrast to more specialized universities might refer to itself as Volluniversität. Specialized universities which have the formal status of Universität include Technische Universitäten, Pädagogische Hochschulen (Universities of Education), Kunsthochschulen (Universities of Arts) and Musikhochschulen (Universities of Music). The excellence initiative has awarded eleven universities with the title University of Excellence. Professors at regular universities were traditionally required to have a doctorate as well as a habilitation. Since 2002, the junior professorship was introduced to offer a more direct path to employment as a professor for outstanding doctoral degree.

Fachhochschulen (Universities of Applied Sciences) edit

There is another type of university in Germany: the Fachhochschulen (Universities of Applied Sciences), which offer mostly the same degrees as Universitäten, but often concentrate on applied science (as the English name suggests) and usually have no power to award PhD-level degrees, at least not in their own right. Fachhochschulen have a more practical profile with a focus on employability. In research, they are rather geared to applied research instead of fundamental research. At a traditional university, it is important to study "why" a method is scientifically right; however, this is less important at Universities of Applied Sciences. Here the emphasis is placed on what systems and methods exist, where they come from, what their advantages and disadvantages are, how to use them in practice, when they should be used, and when not.

For professors at a Fachhochschule, at least three years of work experience are required for appointment while a habilitation is not expected. This is unlike their counterparts at traditional universities, where an academic career with research experience is necessary.

Prior to the Bologna Process, Fachhochschule graduates received a Diplom. To differentiate it from the Diplom which was conferred by Universitäten, the title is indicated starting with "Dipl." (Diplom) and ending with (FH), e.g., Dipl. Ing. (FH) Max Mustermann for a graduate engineer from a Fachhochschule. The FH Diploma is roughly equivalent to a bachelor's degree. An FH Diploma does not qualify the holder for a doctoral program directly, but in practice universities admit the best FH graduates on an individual basis after an additional entrance exam or participation in theoretical classes.

Admission edit

University entrance qualification edit

 
The Humboldt University of Berlin is the first modern university in the world.

Students wishing to attend a German Universität must, as a rule, hold the Abitur or a subject-restricted qualification for university entrance (Fachgebundene Hochschulreife). For Fachhochschulen, the Abitur, the Fachgebundene Hochschulreife certification or the Fachhochschulreife certification (general or subject-restricted) is required.

Lacking these school leaving certifications, in some states potential students can qualify for university entrance if they present additional formal proof that they will be able to keep up with their fellow students. This may take the form of a test of cognitive functioning or passing the Begabtenprüfung ("aptitude test", consisting of a written and oral exam). In some cases, students who do not hold the Abitur may enter university even if they do not pass the aptitude or cognitive functioning tests if they 1) have received previous vocational training, and 2) have worked at least three years and passed the Eingangsprüfung (entrance exam). Such is the case, for example, in Hamburg.[67]

While there are numerous ways to achieve entrance qualification to German universities,[68] the most traditional route has always been graduation from a Gymnasium with the Abitur; however this has become less common over time. As of 2008, less than half of university freshmen in some German states had graduated from a Gymnasium. Even in Bavaria (a state with a policy of strengthening the Gymnasium) only 56 percent of freshmen had graduated from a Gymnasium.[69] The rest were awarded the Abitur from another type of school or did not hold the Abitur certification at all.

High school diplomas received from countries outside of Germany are, in many cases, not considered equivalent to the Abitur, but rather to a Realschulabschluss and therefore do not qualify the bearer for admission to a German university. However, it is still possible for such applicants to be admitted to a German university if they fulfill additional formal criteria, such as a particular grade point average or points on a standardized admissions test. These criteria depend on the school leaving certificate of the potential student and are agreed upon by the Standing Conference of the Ministers of Education and Cultural Affairs. For example, holders of the US high school diploma with a combined math and verbal score of 1300 on the SAT or 29 on the ACT may qualify for university admission.

Foreign students lacking the entrance qualification can acquire a degree at a Studienkolleg, which is often recognized as an equivalent to the Abitur. The one-year course covers similar topics as the Abitur and ensures sufficient language skills to take up studies at a German university.

Admissions procedure edit

The process of application depends on the degree program applied for, the applicant's origin and the university entrance qualification.[70] Generally, all programs of study follow one of three admissions procedures.[71]

  • Free admissions: Every applicant who fulfills the university entrance qualification will be admitted. This is usually practiced in subjects in which many students quit their studies, e.g., mathematics, physics or engineering. Sometimes, the number of students who fail a course can be as high as 94 percent in these programs.[72]
  • Local admission restrictions: For degree programs where only a limited number of places are available (numerus clausus, often abbreviated NC), criteria by which applications will be evaluated differ from university to university and from program to program. Commonly used criteria include the final grade of the university entrance qualification (which takes into account the grades of the final exams as well as course grades), a weighted grade point average which increases the weight of relevant school subjects, interviews, motivational letters, letters of recommendation by previous professors, essays, relevant practical experience, and subject-specific entrance exams. Such restrictions are increasingly common at German universities.[73]
  • Nationwide admission restrictions: In the subjects medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, and pharmacy, a nationwide numerus clausus is in place. In these subjects, applications of Germans and foreigners who are legally treated like Germans (e.g., EU citizens) are handled centrally for all universities by a public trust (Stiftung für Hochschulzulassung). The following quotas are applied in this procedure:[74]
    • 20 percent of available admission slots are admitted by the final grade of the university entrance qualification
    • 20 percent of slots are granted to students who have the highest number of so-called waiting semesters in which they were not enrolled at university
    • 60 percent of slots are awarded by criteria at the university's discretion. Criteria universities commonly apply are: 1) final grade of the university entrance qualification (used most often), 2) interviews, 3) essays or motivational letters, and 4) entrance exams.
    • some additional slots are reserved for special cases and do not count into the previous three quotas:[75] For example, up to 2 percent of slots can be so called hardship cases (Härtefälle), which are granted preferential admission. An applicant may be counted as a hardship case only if there are exceptional circumstances making it impossible for the applicant to wait even a single semester for a place at university, e.g., because of a progressing disease.[76]

According to German law, universities are not permitted to discriminate against or grant preferential treatment to persons on basis of race, ethnic group, gender, social class, religion or political opinion.

Tuition fees edit

Public universities in Germany are funded by the federal states and do not charge tuition fees. However, all enrolled students do have to pay a semester fee (Semesterbeitrag). This fee consists of an administrative fee for the university (only in some of the states), a fee for Studentenwerk, which is a statutory student affairs organization, a fee for the university's AStA (Allgemeiner Studentenausschuss, students' government) and Studentenschaft (students' union), at many universities a fee for public transportation, and possibly more fees as decided by the university's students' parliament (e.g., for a cooperation with a local theater granting free entry for students). Summed up, the semester fee usually ranges between €150 and €350.[77]

In 2005, the German Federal Constitutional Court ruled that a federal law prohibiting tuition fees was unconstitutional, on the grounds that education is the sole responsibility of the states. Following this ruling, seven federal states introduced tuition fees of €500 per semester in 2006 and 2007. Due to massive student protests and a citizens' initiative which collected 70,000 signatures against tuition fees, the government of Hesse was the first to reverse course before the state election in 2008; other state governments soon followed. Several parties which spoke out for tuition fees lost state elections. Bavaria in 2013 and Lower Saxony in 2014 were the last states to abolish tuition fees.[78][79]

Since 1998, all German states had introduced tuition fees for long-time students (Langzeitstudiengebühren) of €500 up to €900 per semester.[80] These fees are required for students who study substantially longer than the standard period of study (Regelstudienzeit), which is a defined number of semesters for each degree program. Even after the abolition of general tuition fees, tuition fees for long-time students remain in six states.[81] Additionally, universities may charge tuition fees for so called non-consecutive master's degree programs, which do not build directly on a bachelor's degree, such as a Master of Business Administration.

With much controversy, the state of Baden-Württemberg has reintroduced tuition fees at public universities starting in 2017. From autumn 2017, students who are not citizens of an EU/EEA member state are expected to pay €1,500 per semester. Students who enroll for their second degree in Germany are expected to pay €650 per semester regardless of their country of origin.[82] Although heavily criticised in Germany, the amount is considered below average in comparison with other European countries.[83][84]

There are university-sponsored scholarships in Germany and a number of private and public institutions award scholarships—usually to cover living costs and books. There is a state-funded study loan programme, called BAföG (Bundesausbildungsförderungsgesetz, "Federal Education Aid Act"). It ensures that less wealthy students can receive up to €735 per month for the standard period of study if they or their parents cannot afford all of the costs involved with studying. Furthermore, students need to have a prospect of remaining in Germany to be eligible; this includes German and EU citizens, but often also long-term residents of other countries.[85] Part (typically half) of this money is an interest-free loan that is later repaid, with the other half considered a free grant, and the amount to be repaid is capped at €10,000. Currently, around a quarter of all students in Germany receive financial support via BAföG.[86]

For international students there are different approaches to get a full scholarship or a funding of their studies. To be able to get a scholarship a successful application is mandatory. It can be submitted upon arrival in Germany as well as after arrival.[87] But due to the fact that many scholarships are only available to students who are already studying, the chances of an acceptance are limited for applicants from abroad. Therefore, many foreign students have to work to finance their studies.

Students edit

Since the end of World War II, the number of young people entering a university has more than tripled in Germany, but university attendance is still lower than that of many other European nations. This can be explained with the dual education system with its strong emphasis on apprenticeships and vocational schools. Many jobs which do require an academic degree in other countries (such as nursing) require completed vocational training instead in Germany.

The rate of university graduates varies by federal state. The number is the highest in Berlin and the lowest in Schleswig-Holstein.[citation needed] Similarly, the ratio of school graduates with university entrance qualification varies by state between 38% and 64%.[88]

The organizational structure of German universities goes back to the university model introduced by Wilhelm von Humboldt in the early 19th century, which identifies the unity of teaching and research as well as academic freedom as ideals. Colleges elsewhere had previously dedicated themselves to religion and classic literature, and Germany's shift to a research-based model was an institutional innovation.[89] This model lead to the foundation of Humboldt University of Berlin and influenced the higher education systems of numerous countries. Some critics argue that nowadays German universities have a rather unbalanced focus, more on education and less on research.[citation needed]

 
Handball-Mixed-Tournament at the 4th Eurokonstantia, the international sports tournament at the university sports centre in Konstanz in 2009

At German universities, students enroll for a specific program of study (Studiengang). During their studies, students can usually choose freely from all courses offered at the university. However, all bachelor's degree programs require a number of particular compulsory courses and all degree programs require a minimum number of credits that must be earned in the core field of the program of study. It is not uncommon to spend longer than the regular period of study (Regelstudienzeit) at university. There are no fixed classes of students who study and graduate together. Students can change universities according to their interests and the strengths of each university. Sometimes students attend multiple different universities over the course of their studies. This mobility means that at German universities there is a freedom and individuality unknown in the US, the UK, or France. Professors also choose their subjects for research and teaching freely. This academic freedom is laid down in the German constitution.

Since German universities do not offer accommodation or meals, students are expected to organize and pay for board and lodging themselves. Inexpensive places in dormitories are available from Studentenwerk, a statutory non-profit organization for student affairs. However, there are only enough places for a fraction of students. Studentenwerk also runs canteens and cafés on campus, which are similarly affordable. Other common housing options include renting a private room or apartment as well as living together with one or more roommates to form a Wohngemeinschaft (often abbreviated WG). Furthermore, many university students continue to live with their parents. One third to one half of the students works to make a little extra money, often resulting in a longer stay at university.

Degrees edit

Recently, the implementation of the Bologna Declaration introduced bachelor's and master's degrees as well as ECTS credits to the German higher education system. Previously, universities conferred Diplom and Magister degrees depending on the field of study, which usually took 4–6 years. These were the only degrees below the doctorate. In the majority of subjects, students can only study for bachelor's and master's degrees, as Diplom or Magister courses do not accept new enrollments. However, a few Diplom courses still prevail.[90] The standard period of study is usually three years (six semesters, with 180 ECTS points) for bachelor's degrees and two years (four semesters, 120 ECTS) for master's degrees. The following Bologna degrees are common in Germany:

  • Bachelor of Arts (B.A.); Master of Arts (M.A.)
  • Bachelor of Science (BSc); Master of Science (MSc)
  • Bachelor of Engineering (BEng); Master of Engineering (MEng)
  • Bachelor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.); Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.)
  • Bachelor of Music (B.Mus.); Master of Music (M.Mus.)

In addition, there are courses leading to the Staatsexamen (state examination). These did usually not transition to bachelor's and master's degrees. For future doctors, dentists, veterinarians, pharmacists, and lawyers, the Staatsexamen is required to be allowed to work in their profession. For teachers, judges, and public prosecutors, it is the required degree for working in civil service. Students usually study at university for 4–8 years before they take the First Staatsexamen. Afterwards, they go on to work in their future jobs for one or two years (depending on subject and state), before they are able to take the Second Staatsexamen, which tests their practical abilities. While it is not an academic degree formally, the First Staatsexamen is equivalent to a master's degree and qualifies for doctoral studies. On request, some universities bestow an additional academic degree (e.g., Diplom-Jurist or Magister iuris) on students who have passed First Staatsexamen.

The highest German academic degree is the doctorate. Each doctoral degree has a particular designation in Latin (except for engineering, where the designation is in German), which signifies in which field the doctorate is conferred in. The doctorate is indicated before the name in abbreviated form, e.g., Dr. rer. nat. Max Mustermann (for a doctor in natural sciences). The prefix "Dr." is used for addressing, for example in formal letters. Outside of the academic context, however, the designation is usually dropped.

While it is not an academic degree formally, the Habilitation is a higher, post-doctoral academic qualification for teaching independently at universities. It is indicated by appending "habil." after the designation of the doctorate, e.g., Dr. rer. nat. habil. Max Mustermann. The holder of a Habilitation may work as Privatdozent.

Research edit

 
Inside Wendelstein 7-X, a research facility at Max Planck Institute of Plasma Physics close to the University of Greifswald. In contrast to many other countries, a great portion of research is exhibited in independent institutes.

Scientific research in Germany is conducted by universities and research institutes. The raw output of scientific research from Germany consistently ranks among the world's best.[91] The national academy of Germany is the Leopoldina Academy of Sciences. Additionally, the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities acts as an umbrella organization for eight local academies and acatech is the Academy of Science and Engineering.[92]

Organizations funding research edit

National libraries edit

Research institutes edit

Prizes edit

Every year, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft awards ten outstanding scientists working at German research institutions with the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize, Germany's most important research prize. With a maximum of €2.5 million per award it is one of the highest endowed research prizes in the world.[93] Additionally, numerous foundations and non-profit organizations award further prizes, medals and scholarships.

Determinants of academic attainment edit

 
The Schule Schloss Salem is considered as one of the most prestigious elite schools in Germany.

50 years ago the person least likely to attend a Gymnasium was a "Catholic working-class girl from the rural parts of Germany". Nowadays however the person least likely to attend a Gymnasium is a "minority youngster from the ghetto",[94] who is "the son of immigrants"[95]

The influence of social class on educational achievement is much greater in western Germany than it is in eastern Germany (former GDR). An analysis of PISA data on Gymnasium pupils for the year 2000 showed that, while in western Germany the child of an academic was 7.26 times as likely as that of a skilled worker to attend, in eastern Germany a child from an academic family was only 2.78 times as likely as a working-class child to attend.[96] The reasons for this were unclear. Some people believed that immigrants were responsible, because more uneducated immigrant families lived in western than in eastern Germany. This assumption however could not be confirmed. The difference between east and west was even stronger when only ethnic German children were studied.[97]

Social class differences in educational achievement are much more marked in Germany's big cities than they are in the rural parts of Germany. In cities with more than 300,000 inhabitants, children of academics are 14.36 times as likely as children of skilled workers to attend Gymnasium.[96]

Gender edit

Educational achievement varies more in German males than it does in German females: boys are more likely to attend special education schools but also more likely to be postgraduate students; 63% of pupils attending special education programs for the academically challenged are male. Males are less likely to meet the statewide performance targets, more likely to drop out of school and more likely to be classified emotionally disturbed. 86% of the pupils receiving special training because of emotional disturbance are male.[98] Research shows a class-effect: native middle-class males perform as well as middle-class females in terms of educational achievement but lower-class males and immigrant males lag behind lower-class females and immigrant females. A lack of male role models contributes to a low academic achievement in the case of lower-class males .[98] On the other hand, 58% of all postgraduate students and 84% of all German college professors were male in 2010.[99]

Socioeconomic factors edit

Children from poor immigrant or working-class families are less likely to succeed in school than children from middle- or upper-class backgrounds. This disadvantage for the financially challenged of Germany is greater than in any other industrialized nation.[100] However, the true reasons stretch beyond economic ones. The poor also tend to be less educated. After allowing for parental education, money does not play a major role in children's academic outcomes.[101][102]

Immigrant children and youths, mostly of lower-class background, are the fastest-growing segment of the German population. So their prospects bear heavily on the well-being of the country. More than 30% of Germans aged 15 years and younger have at least one parent born abroad. In the big cities, 60% of children aged 5 years and younger have at least one parent born abroad.[103] Immigrant children academically underperform their peers.[104] Immigrants have tended to be less educated than native Germans.

Immigrants from Pakistan, India, China and Vietnam perform exceptionally well. In eastern Germany, Vietnamese and Chinese of lower-class backgrounds outperform students from European backgrounds despite the fact that in most cases their parents are poorer and less educated than the parents of their European-born peers. Teachers in eastern Germany have also been shown to be more motivated than teachers in western Germany. That might be another reason for this Asian achievement.[105]

Studies edit

ELEMENT-study Multiple Regression Analysis
Variable Beta (strength of influence)
Factors determining mathematical performance in 6th-graders attending a Berlin primary school
mathematical performance in 4th grade 0.540
general cognitive ability 0.236
parents hold the Abitur (as compared to children of parents without school diploma) 0.144
parents hold the Mittlere Reife (as compared to children of parents without school diploma) 0.096
Number of books present in the child's home 0.055
male gender no influence could be found
German is spoken in the child's home no influence could be found
parents hold the Hauptschulabschluss (as compared to children of parents without school diploma) no influence could be found

The ELEMENT study dealt with determinants of academic achievement in Berlin. It was carried out in Berlin, where some of the pupils started at a Gymnasium after the 4th grade, while others stayed in primary school until 6th grade and started at different schools after the 6th grade. Factors correlated with academic achievement tend to be intercorrelated (that means that they are also correlated with other factors that determine academic achievement). The number of books owned by a pupil's parents, for example, is correlated with the parents' education. Because of this Multiple Regression Analysis was used. Multiple Regression allows us to understand the influence of one variable when the other variables are held fixed.

It was revealed by the study that the most important variable determining mathematical performance in the 6th grade was mathematical performance in the 4th grade. Children who have a head start in the 4th grade keep it until the 6th grade. It was also revealed by the study that some variables were immaterial. If a language other than German is spoken in the home that was correlated with poor mathematical performance in other studies. However correlation does not imply causation and the ELEMENT-study revealed that if other factors were taken into account for the language spoken at home, this had no effect on mathematical performance.

ELEMENT-long term study of the development of mathematical ability
Development in mathematical ability of children attending a Berlin primary school by parents' education
mathematical ability by 4th grade mathematical ability by 6th grade[106]
no school diploma 89.7 105.4
Hauptschulabschluss or similar diploma 91.1 108.2
Mittlere Reife or similar diploma 94.8 112.8
Abitur 101.0 120.8
Development in mathematical ability of children attending a Berlin Gymnasium by parents education
mathematical ability by 4th grade (while still in primary school) mathematical ability by 6th grade (Gymnasium)[106]
no school diploma 104.2 123.3
Hauptschulabschluss or similar diploma 111.0 128.8
Mittlere Reife or similar diploma 111.6 131.3
Abitur 114.5 135.2

The aim of another ELEMENT-study was to monitor the development of general mathematical ability. One finding is that those admitted to a Gymnasium after the fourth grade had showed better mathematical ability than those who stayed in primary school, ab initio. That was true for all social classes. Another finding was that children of all social classes did better in the sixth grade when they were at a Gymnasium. By the end of the sixth grade, those attending a Gymnasium were two years ahead of those attending a primary school.

Did the Gymnasium boost students ability? There are different opinions about this. Some argue that this is the cases and even after testing performance in grade four, those who were admitted to a Gymnasium outperformed their peers who were not at grade six.[107] That was also the interpretation of Prof. Dr. Dr. Lehman, who did the study. He stated: The findings indicate that the Gymnasium help students of all social classes reach their full mathematical potential.[108] Others however, who have reanalyzed the data, claimed that those attending a Gymnasium were different ab initio and could not properly be compared to those attending a primary school. The data is of high political relevance as those who are in favour of the tripartite system and those who are in favour of comprehensive schools both use it to prove their point. Those, who are in favour of comprehensive schools, claim that the data shows that the primary schools which resembles a comprehensive schools boost children's ability, while those in favour of the tripartite system argue that the data shows the Gymnasium boost students ability.

Children edit

Children whose families receive welfare, children whose parents dropped out of school, children of teenage parents, children raised by a lone parent, children raised in crime-ridden inner-city neighbourhoods, children who have multiple young siblings, and children who live in overcrowded substandard apartments are at risk of poor educational achievement in Germany. Often these factors go together, making it very hard for children to overcome the odds. A number of measures have been assessed to help those children reach their full potential.[109]

Kindergarten has been shown to improve school readiness in children at risk. Children attending a kindergarten were less likely to have impaired speech or impaired motor development. Only 50% of children whose parents did not graduate from school are ready for school at age six. If such children were enrolled in a high-quality three-year Kindergarten programme, 87% were ready for school at age six. Thus Kindergarten helps to overcome unequal opportunities.[110]

Families whose children are at risk for low academic achievement may be visited by trained professionals. They offer a wide variety of services that relate to each child's and each family's background and needs. Such professionals may visit pregnant low-income women and talk with them about positive health-related behaviors, such as following a healthy diet or refraining from the use of alcohol or tobacco while pregnant. Positive health-related behavior may have a major impact on children's school performance.

Home visitors may provide information on childcare and social services, help parents in crisis and model problem-solving skills. They may help implement the preschool/school curriculum at home or provide a curriculum of educational games designed to improve language, development and cognitive skills. In most cases, such support is offered to families on a voluntary basis. Families who are eligible for the program may decide for themselves whether or not they want to participate. There are no penalties if they decide against it or against continuing with the program.[109]

Working class pupils edit

In Germany most children are streamed by ability into different schools after fourth grade. The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study revealed that working class children needed better reading abilities than middle-class children to be nominated for the Gymnasium. After allowing for reading abilities, odds to be nominated to Gymnasium for upper-middle-class children were still 2.63 times better than for working-class children.

Points needed to be nominated for Gymnasium[111]
Teachers nominating
child for Gymnasium
Parents wanting child
to attend Gymnasium
children from upper-middle-class backgrounds 537 498
children from lower-middle-class backgrounds 569 559
children of parents holding pink-collar jobs 582 578
children of self-employed parents 580 556
children from upper-working-class backgrounds 592 583
children from lower-working-class backgrounds 614 606

Germany's Left Party brought up the discussion about affirmative action. According to Stefan Zillich, quotas should be "a possibility" to help working class children who did not do well in school gain access to a Gymnasium.[112] Headmasters of Gymnasien have objected, saying that this type of policy would "be a disservice" to poor children, that they would not be able to academically keep up with their classmates and that they would not feel welcome at a Gymnasium. Wolfgang Harnischfeger, headmaster of a well known Berlin Gymnasium, stated: "It can be noticed in children as young as kindergarten-age, that children take after their parents. They emulate their language, their way of dressing, their way of spending their freetime. Children from Neukölln (a poor neighbourhood) would not feel good about themselves if they had to attend that type of school that mainly serves pupils from social classes different from their own. They will not be able to integrate. Every field-day, every school party will show that very soon." He also said that "this kind of policy would weaken the Gymnasium" and that this would be dangerous, because "German society could not afford to do without the truly educated adults the Gymnasium produces".[113] Stefan Zillich has answered to this, saying that "German society can not afford having only so few adults who were truly educated".[113] While affirmative action laws were not passed (status: January 2010) sought after schools have been guaranteed the right to employ their own quotas since the 1970s.

Contemporary issues edit

There is a constant public debate about tracking students by ability into several types of secondary school (i.e. Gymnasium, Realschule and Hauptschule). Opponents of streaming by ability claim that streaming is unfair, that parents from higher socio-economic groups are more effective in sending children of similar aptitude to higher-level schools (Gymnasium). Proponents of streaming claim that it limits income segregation between rich and poor areas, as wealthier parents in poor neighborhoods may still send their gifted children to a fairly good public school due to streaming, giving them less motivation to move to a wealthier area. They also say that potential access to a Selective school would allow gifted children of lower-class parents living in poor neighborhoods better educational opportunities than if they were confined to schools with the average pupil population of their neighborhoods.

Opponents of streaming have pointed out that countries that performed very well in PISA, such as Finland, do not stream by ability. Proponents have pointed out that German comprehensive schools ranked below other German schools on PISA and that children from the lower socio-economic groups attending comprehensive schools fare worse in PISA than middle-class students attending the same schools.

There is also a concern about the poor standard of school buildings and the lack of digital technlogy in classrooms.

International students in Germany edit

According to official data, international students make up nearly 15 percent of Germany's student population, with 325,000 international students studying in Germany during the winter semester 2020/2021.[114]

See also edit

Notes edit

translation note It's a common pitfall to translate the German "kooperativ" into "cooperative" in English. However, this is a so-called false friend. The English word "cooperative" describes either a business/organisation that is fully owned by the people that work for it (i.e. "Genossenschaft" in German), or it describes someone's willingness to act or work together, as opposed to their resistance/refusal to acting/working together (="sich kooperativ zeigen" in German).

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  108. ^ Prof. Dr. Dr. Rainer Lehmann, Jenny Lenkeit: "ELEMENT – Erhebung zum Lese- und Mathematikverständnis Entwicklungen in den Jahrgangsstufen 4 bis 6 in Berlin – Abschlussbericht über die Untersuchungen 2003, 2004 und 2005 an Berliner Grundschulen und grundständigen Gymnasien". Humboldt Universität zu Berlin; p.43 and 44
  109. ^ a b Hans Weiß (Hrsg.): Frühförderung mit Kindern und Familien in Armutslagen. München/Basel: Ernst Reinhardt Verlag. ISBN 3-497-01539-3
  110. ^ Die Zeit (14. Mai 2008): Kindergarten gleicht soziale Unterschiede aus. Zeit.de
  111. ^ IGLU 2006 Press conference, retrieved May 27, 2008 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  112. ^ Susanne Vieth-Entus (29. Dezember 2008): "Sozialquote: Berliner Gymnasien sollen mehr Schüler aus armen Familien aufnehmen". Der Tagesspiegel
  113. ^ a b Martin Klesmann (23. February 2009). "'Kinder aus Neukölln würden sich nicht integrieren lassen' – Ein Politiker und ein Schulleiter streiten über Sozialquoten an Gymnasien". Berliner Zeitung
  114. ^ DAAD. "Wissenschaft weltoffen kompakt 2022" (PDF). Retrieved 10 July 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Bernstein, George, and Lottelore Bernstein. "Attitudes toward Women's Education in Germany, 1870-1914." International Journal of Women's Studies 2 (1979): 473-488.
  • Foght, H.W. ed. Comparative education (1918), compares United States, England, Germany, France, Canada, and Denmark online
  • Green, Lowell. "The education of women in the Reformation." History of Education Quarterly 19.1 (1979): 93-116. online
  • Hahn, Walter. "Education in East and West Germany a study of similarities and contrasts." Studies in Comparative Communism 5.1 (1972): 47-79.
  • Lundgreen, Peter. "Industrialization and the educational formation of manpower in Germany." Journal of Social History 9.1 (1975): 64-80, on 19th century. online
  • Petschauer, Peter. "Improving Educational-Opportunities for Girls in 18th-Century Germany." Eighteenth-Century Life 3.2 (1976): 56-62.

External links edit

  • DAAD.de German Academic Exchange Service
  • BildungsServer.de The German education system: basic facts
  • FZS-Online.org Free union of student bodies (FZS) of Germany
  • The New Student's Reference Work/German Universities (1916)
  • Information on education in Germany, OECD – Contains indicators and information about Germany and how it compares to other OECD and non-OECD countries
  • Diagram of German education system, OECD – Using 1997 ISCED classification of programmes and typical ages. Also in German
  • Vocational education in Germany, UNESCO-UNEVOC – contains a full report on the state of vocational education in Germany (World TVET database)

education, germany, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, add. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Education in Germany news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Education in Germany is primarily the responsibility of individual German states Lander with the federal government only playing a minor role Sign of different coexisting school types on a school complex in GermanyWhile kindergarten nursery school is optional formal education is compulsory for all children ages 6 to 18 1 Students can complete three types of school leaving qualifications ranging from the more vocational Hauptschulabschluss and Mittlere Reife over to the more academic Abitur The latter permits students to apply to study at university level Higher education in Germany usually begins with a bachelor s degree and is commonly followed up with a master s degree with 45 of all undergraduates proceeding to postgraduate studies within 1 5 years of graduating 2 While rules vary see Tuition fees from Land state to Land German public universities generally don t charge tuition fees Germany is well known internationally for its vocational training model 3 4 5 the Ausbildung apprenticeship with about 50 per cent of all school leavers entering vocational training 6 Contents 1 Secondary school forms 2 History 2 1 Prussian 2 2 German Empire 2 3 Weimar Republic 2 4 Nazi Germany 2 5 East Germany 2 6 West Germany 2 7 Federal Republic of Germany 3 Overview 3 1 Literacy 4 Preschool 4 1 Homeschooling 5 Primary education 6 Secondary education 6 1 School organization 6 2 School year 6 3 Timetables 6 4 Public and private schools 6 5 Special schools 6 6 Elite schools 6 7 International schools 6 8 International comparisons 7 Apprenticeship 8 Tertiary education 8 1 Types of universities 8 1 1 Universitaten 8 1 2 Fachhochschulen Universities of Applied Sciences 8 2 Admission 8 2 1 University entrance qualification 8 2 2 Admissions procedure 8 3 Tuition fees 8 4 Students 8 5 Degrees 9 Research 9 1 Organizations funding research 9 2 National libraries 9 3 Research institutes 9 4 Prizes 10 Determinants of academic attainment 10 1 Gender 10 2 Socioeconomic factors 10 3 Studies 10 4 Children 10 5 Working class pupils 10 6 Contemporary issues 10 7 International students in Germany 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksSecondary school forms editGermany s secondary education is separated into two parts lower and upper Lower secondary education in Germany is meant to teach individuals basic general education and gets them ready to enter upper secondary education In the upper secondary level Germany has a vast variety of vocational programs German secondary education includes five types of school One the Gymnasium is designed to prepare pupils for higher education and finishes with the final examination Abitur after grade 12 or 13 From 2005 to 2018 a school reform known as G8 provided the Abitur in 8 school years The reform failed due to high demands on learning levels for the children and were turned to G9 in 2019 Only a few Gymnasiums stay with the G8 model Children usually attend Gymnasium from 10 to 18 years The Realschule has a range of emphasis for intermediate pupils and finishes with the final examination Mittlere Reife after grade 10 the Hauptschule prepares pupils for vocational education and finishes with the final examination Hauptschulabschluss after grade 9 and the Realschulabschluss after grade 10 There are two types of grade 10 one is the higher level called type 10b and the lower level is called type 10a only the higher level type 10b can lead to the Realschule and this finishes with the final examination Mittlere Reife after grade 10b This new path of achieving the Realschulabschluss at a vocationally oriented secondary school was changed by the statutory school regulations in 1981 with a one year qualifying period During the one year qualifying period of the change to the new regulations pupils could continue with class 10 to fulfil the statutory period of education After 1982 the new path was compulsory as explained above 7 A less common 8 secondary school alternative is the so called Gesamtschule i e comprehensive school There are two main types of Gesamtschule namely integriert integrated or kooperativ collaborative translation note There are also Forder or Sonderschulen schools for students with special educational needs One in 21 pupils attends a Forderschule 9 10 Nevertheless the Forder or Sonderschulen can also lead in special circumstances to a Hauptschulabschluss of both type 10a or type 10b the latter of which is the Realschulabschluss The amount of extracurricular activity is determined individually by each school and varies greatly With the 2015 school reform the German government has tried to push more of those pupils into other schools which is known as Inklusion A special system of apprenticeship called Duale Ausbildung the dual education system allows pupils in vocational courses to do in service training in a company as well as at a state school 10 Students in Germany scored above the OECD average in reading 498 score points mathematics 500 and science 503 in PISA 2018 11 Average reading performance in 2018 returned to levels that were last observed in 2009 reversing most gains up to 2012 In science mean performance was below 2006 levels while in mathematics PISA 2018 results lay significantly below those of the 2012 study 11 12 13 The Human Rights Measurement Initiative finds that Germany is achieving 75 4 of what should be possible for the right to education at their level of income 14 15 History editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Prussian edit Main article Prussian education system Historically Lutheranism had a strong influence on German culture including its education Martin Luther advocated compulsory schooling so that all people would independently be able to read and interpret the Bible This concept became a model for schools throughout Germany German public schools generally have religious education provided by the churches in cooperation with the state ever since During the 18th century the Kingdom of Prussia was among the first countries in the world to introduce free and generally compulsory primary education consisting of an eight year course of basic education Volksschule It provided not only the skills needed in an early industrialized world reading writing and arithmetic but also a strict education in ethics duty discipline and obedience Children of affluent parents often went on to attend preparatory private schools for an additional four years but the general population had virtually no access to secondary education and universities In 1810 during the Napoleonic Wars Prussia introduced state certification requirements for teachers which significantly raised the standard of teaching The final examination Abitur was introduced in 1788 implemented in all Prussian secondary schools by 1812 and extended to all of Germany in 1871 The state also established teacher training colleges for prospective teachers in the common or elementary grades German Empire edit When the German Empire was formed in 1871 the school system became more centralized In 1872 Prussia recognized the first separate secondary schools for females As learned professions demanded well educated young people more secondary schools were established and the state claimed the sole right to set standards and to supervise the newly established schools Four different types of secondary schools developed A nine year classical Gymnasium including study of Latin and Classical Greek or Hebrew plus one modern language A nine year Realgymnasium focusing on Latin modern languages science and mathematics A six year Realschule without university entrance qualification but with the option of becoming a trainee in one of the modern industrial office or technical jobs and A nine year Oberrealschule focusing on modern languages science and mathematics By the turn of the 20th century the four types of schools had achieved equal rank and privilege although they did not have equal prestige 16 Weimar Republic edit nbsp Classroom furniture from 1900 left to 1985 right After 1919 the Weimar Republic established a free universal four year elementary school Grundschule Most pupils continued at these schools for another four year course Those who were able to pay a small fee went on to a Mittelschule that provided a more challenging curriculum for an additional one or two years Upon passing a rigorous entrance exam after year four pupils could also enter one of the four types of secondary school Nazi Germany edit See also Nazi university During the Nazi era 1933 1945 though the curriculum was reshaped to teach the beliefs of the regime 17 the basic structure of the education system remained unchanged East Germany edit Main article Education in East Germany This section needs expansion with Information on denazification policies for parity with subsequent FRG subsection You can help by adding to it June 2023 The German Democratic Republic East Germany started its own standardized education system in the 1960s The East German equivalent of both primary and secondary schools was the Polytechnic Secondary School Polytechnische Oberschule which all students attended for 10 years from the ages of 6 to 16 At the end of the 10th year an exit examination was set Depending upon the results a pupil could choose to come out of education or undertake an apprenticeship for an additional two years followed by an Abitur Those who performed very well and displayed loyalty to the ruling party could change to the Erweiterte Oberschule extended high school where they could take their Abitur examinations after 12 school years Although this system was abolished in the early 1990s after reunification it continues to influence school life in the eastern German states citation needed West Germany edit nbsp Pupils of the Gymnasium Nonnenwerth an all girls Catholic school in 1960After World War II the Allied powers Soviet Union France United Kingdom and the U S ensured that Nazi ideology was eliminated from the curriculum They installed educational systems in their respective occupation zones that reflected their own ideas When West Germany gained partial independence in 1949 its new constitution Grundgesetz granted educational autonomy to the state Lander governments This led to widely varying school systems often making it difficult for children to continue schooling whilst moving between states 18 Multi state agreements ensure that basic requirements are universally met by all state school systems Thus all children are required to attend one type of school five or six days a week from the age of 6 to the age of 16 A pupil may change schools in the case of exceptionally good or exceptionally poor ability Graduation certificates from one state are recognized by all the other states Qualified teachers are able to apply for posts in any of the states Federal Republic of Germany edit Since the 1990s a few changes have been taking place in many schools Introduction of bilingual education in some subjects Experimentation with different styles of teaching Equipping all schools with computers and Internet access Creation of local school philosophy and teaching goals Schulprogramm to be evaluated regularly Reduction of Gymnasium school years Abitur after grade 12 and introduction of afternoon periods as in many other western countries turned down in 2019 In 2000 after much public debate about Germany s perceived low international ranking in Programme for International Student Assessment PISA there has been a trend towards a less ideological discussion on how to develop schools These are some of the new trends Establishing federal standards on quality of teaching More practical orientation in teacher training Transfer of some responsibility from the Ministry of Education to local schoolFurther outcomes Bilingual education now requires mandatory English lessons in Grundschule The educational act Bildungspakt in 2019 is designed to increase the use of the internet and computers in schools Overview editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Overview of the German school systemIn Germany education is the responsibility of the states Lander and part of their constitutional sovereignty Kulturhoheit der Lander 19 Teachers are employed by the Ministry of Education for the state and usually have a job for life after a certain period verbeamtet which however is not comparable in timeframe nor competitiveness to the typical tenure track e g at universities in the US This practice depends on the state and is currently changing A parents council is elected to voice the parents views to the school s administration Each class elects one or two Klassensprecher class presidents if two are elected usually one is male and the other female who meet several times a year as the Schulerrat students council A team of school presidents is also elected by the pupils each year whose main purpose is organizing school parties sports tournaments and the like for their fellow students The local town is responsible for the school building and employs the janitorial and secretarial staff For an average school of 600 800 students there may be two janitors and one secretary School administration is the responsibility of the teachers who receive a reduction in their teaching hours if they participate Church and state are separated in Germany Compulsory school prayers and compulsory attendance at religious services at state schools are against the constitution It is expected though to stand politely for the school prayer even if one does not pray along Literacy edit Over 99 of Germans aged 15 and above are estimated to be able to read and write 20 Preschool edit nbsp A forest kindergarten in DusseldorfGerman preschool is known as a Kindergarten plural Kindergarten or Kita short for Kindertagesstatte meaning children s daycare center Children between the ages of 2 and 6 attend Kindergarten which are not part of the school system They are often run by city or town administrations churches or registered societies many of which follow a certain educational approach as represented e g by Montessori or Reggio Emilia or Berliner Bildungsprogramm Forest kindergartens are well established Attending a Kindergarten is neither mandatory nor free of charge but can be partly or wholly funded depending on the local authority and the income of the parents All caretakers in Kita or Kindergarten must have a three year qualified education or be under special supervision during training Kindergarten can be open from 7 a m to 5 p m or longer and may also house a Kinderkrippe meaning creche for children between the ages of eight weeks and three years and possibly an afternoon Hort often associated with a primary school for school age children aged 6 to 10 who spend the time after their lessons there Alongside nurseries there are day care nurses called Tagesmutter plural Tagesmutter the formal gender neutral form is Tagespflegeperson en working independently from any pre school institution in individual homes and looking after only three to five children typically up to three years of age These nurses are supported and supervised by local authorities The term Vorschule meaning pre school is used both for educational efforts in Kindergarten and for a mandatory class that is usually connected to a primary school Both systems are handled differently in each German state The Schulkindergarten is a type of Vorschule During the German Empire children were able to pass directly into secondary education after attending a privately run fee based Vorschule which then was another sort of primary school The Weimar Constitution banned these feeling them to be an unjustified privilege and the Basic Law still contains the constitutional rule Art 7 Sect VI that Pre schools shall remain abolished Homeschooling edit Main article Homeschooling international status and statistics Germany Homeschooling is between Schulpflicht compulsory schooling beginning with elementary school to 18 years illegal in Germany The illegality has to do with the prioritization of children s rights over the rights of parents children have the right to the company of other children and adults who are not their parents For similar reasons parents cannot opt their children out of sexual education classes because the state considers a child s right to information to be more important than a parent s desire to withhold it 21 Primary education edit nbsp Education system in GermanyParents looking for a suitable school for their child have a wide choice of elementary schools State school State schools do not charge tuition fees The majority of pupils attend state schools in their neighbourhood Schools in affluent areas tend to be better than those in deprived areas Once children reach school age many middle class and working class families move away from deprived areas citation needed or alternatively Waldorf school 2 006 schools in 2007 covers grades from 1 13 Montessori method school 272 Freie Alternativschule free alternative school 85 22 Protestant 63 or Catholic 114 parochial schoolsThe entry year can vary between 5 and 7 while stepping back or skipping a grade is also possible Secondary education editSee also Education in Berlin and Education in Hamburg This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message After children complete their primary education at 10 years of age grade 4 12 year of age in Berlin and Brandenburg there are four options for secondary schooling 23 Gymnasium Germany until grade 12 or 13 with Abitur as exit exam qualifying for university Realschule until grade 10 or 11 with Mittlere Reife or Realschulabschluss as exit exam students can then attend Berufsfachschule full time vocational schools 24 or Fachoberschule for 2 3 years which combines vocational school and an apprenticeship In some regions there is Regionalschule which is a combination of Realschule and Hauptschule Pupils study for either 9 years to obtain a qualification similar to the Hauptschulabschluss or 10 years to get the Mittlere Reife Hauptschule until grade 9 with an exam called the Hauptschulabschluss to conclude Afterwards students can attend vocational schools Gesamtschule which is a combination of the above for 5 8 years with a different qualification for different durations 5 years for the Hauptschulabschluss if a student opts for the longer 8 year program they can take the gymnasium abitur exam qualifying for university nbsp Standard classroom at a primary school in Germany nbsp The choir of the Carl von Ossietzky Gymnasium de in BonnAfter passing through any of the above schools pupils can start a career with an apprenticeship in the Berufsschule vocational school The Berufsschule is normally attended twice a week during a two three or three and a half year apprenticeship the other days are spent working at a company This is intended to provide a knowledge of theory and practice The company is obliged to accept the apprentice on its apprenticeship scheme After this the apprentice is registered on a list at the Industrie und Handelskammer IHK chamber of industry and commerce During the apprenticeship the apprentice is a part time salaried employee of the company After passing the Berufsschule and the exit exams of the IHK a certificate is awarded and the young person is ready for a career up to a low management level In some areas the schemes teach certain skills that are a legal requirement special positions in a bank legal assistants Some special areas provide different paths After attending any of the above schools and gaining a leaving certificate like Hauptschulabschluss Mittlere Reife or Realschulabschuss from a Realschule or Abitur from a Gymnasium or a Gesamtschule school leavers can start a career with an apprenticeship at a Berufsschule vocational school Here the student is registered with certain bodies e g associations such as the German Bar Association Deutsche Rechtsanwaltskammer GBA board of directors During the apprenticeship the young person is a part time salaried employee of the institution bank physician or attorney s office After leaving the Berufsfachschule and passing the exit examinations set by the German Bar Association or other relevant associations the apprentice receives a certificate and is ready for a career at all levels except in positions which require a specific higher degree such as a doctorate In some areas the apprenticeship scheme teaches skills that are required by law including certain positions in a bank or those as legal assistants The 16 states have exclusive responsibility in the field of education and professional education The federal parliament and the federal government can influence the educational system only by financial aid to the states There are many different school systems but in each state the starting point is always the Grundschule elementary school for a period of four years or six years in the case of Berlin and Brandenburg Percentage of jobholders holding Hauptschulabschluss Realschulabschluss or Abitur in Germany 25 1970 1982 1991 2000Hauptschulabschluss 87 7 79 3 66 5 54 9 Realschulabschluss 10 9 17 7 27 34 1 Abitur 1 4 3 6 5 11 Grades 5 and 6 form an orientation or testing phase Orientierungs or Erprobungsstufe during which students their parents and teachers decide which of the above mentioned paths the students should follow In all states except Berlin and Brandenburg this orientation phase is embedded into the program of the secondary schools The decision for a secondary school influences the student s future but during this phase changes can be made more easily In practice this rarely comes to bear because teachers are afraid of sending pupils to more academic schools whereas parents are afraid of sending their children to less academic schools In Berlin and Brandenburg the orientation is embedded into that of the elementary schools Teachers give a so called educational path recommendation Bildungs gang empfehlung based on scholastic achievements in the main subjects mathematics German natural sciences foreign language and classroom behavior with details and legal implications differing from state to state in some German states those wishing to apply to a Gymnasium or Realschule require such a recommendation stating that the student is likely to make a successful transition to that type of school in other cases anyone may apply In Berlin 30 35 of Gymnasium places are allocated by lottery A student s performance at primary school is immaterial citation needed While the entry year is depending on the last year in the Grundschule stepping back or skipping a grade is possible between 7th and 10th grade and only stepping back between 5th and 6th grade so called Erprobungsstufe meaning testing grade and 11th and 12th grade The eastern states Saxony Saxony Anhalt and Thuringia combine Hauptschule and Realschule into Sekundarschule Mittelschule and Regelschule respectively All German states have Gymnasium as one possibility for the more able children and all states except Saxony have some Gesamtschulen but in different forms The states of Berlin and Hamburg have only two types of schools comprehensive schools and Gymnasium Learning a foreign language is compulsory throughout Germany in secondary schools and English is one of the more popular choices Students at certain Gymnasium are required to learn Latin as their first foreign language and choose a second foreign language The list of available foreign languages as well as the hours of compulsory foreign language lessons differ from state to state but the more common choices besides Latin are English French Spanish and ancient Greek Many schools also offer voluntary study groups for the purpose of learning other languages At which stage students begin learning a foreign language differs from state to state and is tailored to the cultural and socio economical dynamics of each state In some states foreign language education starts in Grundschule primary school For example in North Rhine Westphalia and Lower Saxony English starts in the third year of elementary school Baden Wurttemberg starts with English or French in the first year The Saarland which borders France begins with French in the third year of primary school and French is taught in high school as the main foreign language It may cause problems in terms of education for families that plan to move from one German state to another as there are partially completely different curricula for nearly every subject citation needed Realschule students gain the chance to take their Abitur at a Gymnasium with a good degree in the Realschulabschluss Stepping up is always provided by the school system clarification needed Adults who did not achieve a Realschulabschluss or Abitur or reached its equivalent have the option of attending evening classes at an Abendgymnasium or Abendrealschule School organization edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Apian GymnasiumA few organizational central points are listed below It should however be noted that due to the decentralized nature of the education system there are many more additional differences across the 16 states of Germany Every state has its own school system Each age group of students born roughly in the same year forms one or more grades or classes Klassen per school which remain the same for elementary school years 1 to 4 or 6 orientation school if there are orientation schools in the state orientation phase at Gymnasium years 5 to 6 and secondary school years 5 or 7 to 10 in Realschulen and Hauptschulen years 5 or 7 to 10 differences between states in Gymnasien 26 respectively Changes are possible though when there is a choice of subjects e g additional languages Then classes will be split and newly merged either temporarily or permanently for this particular subject Students usually sit at tables not desks usually two at one table sometimes arranged in a semicircle or another geometric or functional shape During exams in classrooms the tables are sometimes arranged in columns with one pupil per table if permitted by the room s capacities to prevent cheating at many schools this is only the case for some exams in the two final years of school i e some of the exams counting for the final grade on the high school diploma There is usually no school uniform or dress code Many private schools have a simplified dress code for instance such as no shorts no sandals no clothes with holes Some schools are testing school uniforms but those are not as formal as seen in the UK They mostly consist of a normal sweater shirt and jeans of a certain color sometimes with the school s symbol on it It is however a common custom to design graduation class shirts in Gymnasium Realschule and Hauptschule School usually starts between 7 30 a m and 8 15 a m and can finish as early as 12 instruction in lower classes which almost always ends before lunch In higher grades which however afternoon lessons are very common and periods may have longer gaps without teacher supervision between them Usually afternoon classes are not offered every day and or continuously until early evening leaving students with large parts of their afternoons free of school some all day schools Ganztagsschulen however offer classes or mainly supervised activities throughout the afternoons to offer supervision for the students rather than increasing teaching hours Afternoon lessons can continue until 6 o clock Depending on school there are breaks of 5 to 20 minutes after each period There is no lunch break as school usually finishes before 1 30 for junior school However at schools with Nachmittagsunterricht afternoon classes ending after 1 30 there may be a lunch break of 45 to 90 minutes though many schools lack any special break in general Some schools have regular breaks of 5 minutes between every lesson and have additional 10 or 15 minute breaks after the second and fourth lesson In German state schools lessons have a length of exactly 45 minutes Each subject is usually taught for two to three periods every week main subjects like mathematics German or foreign languages are taught for four to six periods and usually no more than two periods consecutively The beginning of every period and usually break is announced with an audible signal such as a bell Exams which are always supervised are usually essay based rather than multiple choice As of 11th grade exams usually consist of no more than three separate exercises While most exams in the first grades of secondary schools usually span no more than 90 minutes exams in 10th to 12th grade may span four periods or more without breaks At every type of school pupils study one foreign language in most cases English for at least five years The study of languages is however far more rigorous and literature oriented in Gymnasium In Gymnasium students can choose from a wider range of languages mostly English French Russian mostly in east German Bundeslander or Latin as the first language in 5th grade and a second mandatory language in 7th grade Some types of Gymnasium also require an additional third language such as Spanish Italian Russian Latin or Ancient Greek or an alternative subject usually based on one or two other subjects e g British politics English and politics dietetics biology or media studies arts and German in 9th or 11th grade Gymnasiums normally offer further subjects starting at 11th grade with some schools offering a fourth foreign language A number of schools once had a Raucherecke smokers corner a small area of the schoolyard where students over the age of eighteen are permitted to smoke on their breaks Those special areas were banned in the states of Berlin Hessen and Hamburg Brandenburg at the beginning of the 2005 06 school year Bavaria Schleswig Holstein Lower Saxony 2006 07 Schools in these states prohibit smoking for students and teachers and offences at school will be punished All other states in Germany introduced similar laws in the aftermath of EU regulations on smoking As state schools are public smoking is universally prohibited inside the buildings Smoking teachers are generally asked not to smoke while at or near school Students over 14 years are permitted to leave the school compound during breaks at some schools Teachers or school personnel tend to prevent younger students from leaving early and strangers from entering the compound without permission Tidying up the classroom and schoolyard is often the task of the students themselves Unless a group of volunteering students individuals are being picked sequentially Many schools have AGs or Arbeitsgemeinschaften clubs for afternoon activities such as sports music or acting but participation is not necessarily common Some schools also have student volunteer mediators trained to resolve conflicts between their classmates or younger students Few schools have actual sports teams that compete with other schools Even if the school has a sports team students are not necessarily very aware of it citation needed While student newspapers used to be very common until the late 20th century with new issues often produced every couple of months many of them are now very short lived usually vanishing when the class graduates Student newspapers are often financed mostly by advertisements Schools don t often have their own radio stations or TV channels larger universities often have a local student run radio station Although most German schools and state universities do not have classrooms equipped with a computer for each student schools usually have at least one or two computer rooms and most universities offer a limited number of rooms with computers on every desk State school computers are usually maintained by the same exclusive contractor in the entire city and updated slowly Internet access is often provided by phone companies free of charge At the end of their schooling students usually undergo a cumulative written and oral examination Abitur in Gymnasien or Abschlussprufung in Realschulen and Hauptschulen Students leaving Gymnasium after 9th grade have the Hauptschule leaving examination and after 10th grade they have the Mittlere Reife leaving examination of the Realschule also called Mittlerer Schulabschluss After 10th grade Gymnasium students may leave school for at least one year of job education if they do not wish to continue Realschule and Hauptschule students who have passed their Abschlussprufung may decide to continue schooling at a Gymnasium but are sometimes required to take additional courses to catch up Corporal punishment was banned in 1949 in East Germany and in 1973 in West Germany Fourth grade or sixth depending on the state is often quite stressful for students of lower performance and their families Many feel tremendous pressure when trying to achieve placement in Gymnasium or at least when attempting to avoid placement in Hauptschule Germany is unique compared to other western countries in its early segregation of students based on academic achievement School year edit The school year starts after the summer break different from state to state usually end mid of August and is divided into two terms There are typically 12 weeks of holidays in addition to public holidays Exact dates differ between states but there are generally six weeks of summer and two weeks of Christmas holiday The other holiday periods occur in spring during the period around Easter Sunday and autumn during the former harvest where farmers used to need their children for field work In some states schools can also schedule two or three special days off per term Timetables edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Students have about 30 40 periods of 45 minutes each per week depending on year and state but secondary schools in particular have switched to 90 minute lessons Block which count as two traditional lessons To manage classes that are taught three or five lessons per week there are two common ways At some schools with 90 minute periods there is still one 45 minute lesson each day mostly between the first two blocks at other schools those subjects are taught in weekly or term rotations There are about 12 compulsory subjects up to three foreign languages the first is often begun in primary school the second one in 6th or 7th grade and the third somewhere between 7th and 11th grade physics biology chemistry civics social political studies history geography starting between 5th and 7th grade mathematics music visual arts German physical education and religious education ethics to be taken from primary school on The range of offered afternoon activities is different from school to school however most German schools offer choirs or orchestras and sometimes sports theater or languages Many of these are offered as semi scholastic AGs Arbeitsgemeinschaften literally working groups which are noted in students reports but not officially graded Other common extracurricular activities are organized as private clubs which are very popular in Germany Sample grade 10 Gymnasium timetable Bavaria Humanist Time Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday08 00 08 45 English Physics Biology Physics Greek08 45 09 30 History English Chemistry Mathematics Chemistry09 30 09 40 Break09 40 10 25 Latin Greek Mathematics Latin Economics10 25 11 10 German Geography Religious studies Greek German11 10 11 30 Break11 30 12 15 Music Mathematics Geography German Biology12 15 13 00 Religious studies Civic education Economics English Latin13 00 14 00 Break14 00 14 45 Arts Intensive course14 45 15 30 Intensive course Greek15 30 16 15 PE16 15 17 00 PEThere are three blocks of lessons with each lesson taking 45 minutes After each block there is a break of 15 20 minutes including after the sixth lesson the number of lessons changes from year to year so it is possible that one could be in school until 16 00 Nebenfacher minor fields of study are taught twice a week Hauptfacher major subjects are taught three times In grades 11 13 11 12 or 12 13 depending on the school system each student majors in two or three subjects Leistungskurse in which there are usually five lessons per week The other subjects Grundkurse are usually taught three periods per week Sample grade 12 Gymnasium timetable Lower Saxony Time Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday08 00 08 45 English Religious studies French Physics German08 50 09 35 English Religious studies French Physics German09 55 10 40 German Geography Social Studies taught in English Mathematics Geography Social Studies taught in English Mathematics10 45 11 30 German Geography Social Studies taught in English Mathematics Geography Social Studies taught in English Mathematics11 50 12 35 Physics Politics Economy History English French12 40 13 25 Physics Politics Economy History English French13 40 14 25 Arts Seminarfach History PE different sports offered as courses 14 30 15 15 Arts Seminarfach History PE different sports offered as courses Seminarfach is a compulsory class in which each student is prepared to turn in his her own research paper at the end of the semester The class is aimed at training students scientific research skills that will later be necessary in university There are significant differences between the 16 states alternatives to this basic template such as Waldorfschulen or other private schools Adults can also go back to evening school and take the Abitur exam Public and private schools edit In 2006 six percent of German children attended private schools 27 In Germany Article 7 Paragraph 4 of the Grundgesetz the constitution of Germany guarantees the right to establish private schools This article belongs to the first part of the German basic law which defines civil and human rights A right which is guaranteed in this part of the Grundgesetz can only be suspended in a state of emergency if the respective article specifically states this possibility That is not the case with this article It is also not possible to abolish these rights This unusual protection of private schools was implemented to protect them from a second Gleichschaltung or similar event in the future Ersatzschulen are ordinary primary or secondary schools which are run by private individuals private organizations or religious groups These schools offer the same types of diplomas as in public schools However Ersatzschulen like their state run counterparts are subjected to basic government standards such as minimum required qualifications for teachers and pay grades An Ersatzschule must have at least the same academic standards as those of a state school and Article 7 Paragraph 4 of the Grundgesetz forbids the segregation of pupils based on socioeconomic status the so called Sonderungsverbot Therefore most Ersatzschulen have very low tuition fees compared to those in most other Western European countries scholarships are also often available However it is not possible to finance these schools with such low tuition fees accordingly all German Ersatzschulen are subsidised with public funds Some students attend private schools through welfare subsidies This is often the case if a student is considered to be a child at risk such as students who have learning disabilities special needs or come from dysfunctional home environments After factoring in parents socioeconomic status children who attend private schools are not as able as those at state schools At the Programme for International Student Assessment PISA for example after considering socioeconomic class students at private schools underperformed those at state schools 28 One has however to be careful interpreting that data it may be that such students do not underperform because they attend a private school but that they attend a private school because they underperform Some private Realschulen and Gymnasien have lower entry requirements than public Realschulen and Gymnasien Special schools edit nbsp A special school for children with special emotional needs in Kotitz GermanyMost German children with special needs attend a school called Forderschule or Sonderschule special school that serves only such children There are several types of special schools in Germany such as Sonderschule fur Lernbehinderte a special school serving children who have learning difficulties Schule mit dem Forderschwerpunkt Geistige Entwicklung a special school serving children who have very severe learning difficulties Forderschule Schwerpunkt emotionale und soziale Entwicklung a special school serving children who have special emotional needsOnly one in 21 German children attends such a special school Teachers at those schools are qualified professionals who have specialized in special needs education while at university Special schools often have a very favourable student teacher ratio and facilities compared with other schools Special schools have been criticized It is argued that special education separates and discriminates against those who are disabled or different Some special needs children do not attend special schools but are mainstreamed into a Hauptschule or Gesamtschule comprehensive school and or in rare cases into a Realschule or even a Gymnasium Elite schools edit nbsp St Afra is one of few specialist schools that serve only gifted children There are very few specialist schools for gifted children As German schools do not IQ test children most intellectually gifted children remain unaware that they fall into this category The German psychologist Detlef H Rost carried out a pioneer long term study on gifted children called the Marburger Hochbegabtenprojekt In 1987 1988 he tested 7000 third graders on a test based on the German version of the Cattell Culture Fair III test Those who scored at least two standard deviations above the mean were categorised as gifted A total of 151 gifted subjects participated in the study alongside 136 controls All participants in the study were tested blind with the result that they did not discover whether they were gifted or not The study revealed that the gifted children did very well in school The vast majority later attended a Gymnasium and achieved good grades However 15 percent were classified as underachievers because they attended a Realschule two cases or a Hauptschule one case had repeated a grade four cases or had grades that put them in the lower half of their class the rest of cases The report also concluded that most gifted persons had high self esteem and good psychological health 29 Rost said that he was not in favour of special schools for the gifted Gifted children seemed to be served well by Germany s existing school system 30 International schools edit As of January 2015 the International Schools Consultancy ISC 31 listed Germany as having 164 international schools 32 ISC defines an international school in the following terms ISC includes an international school if the school delivers a curriculum to any combination of pre school primary or secondary students wholly or partly in English outside an English speaking country or if a school in a country where English is one of the official languages offers an English medium curriculum other than the country s national curriculum and is international in its orientation 32 This definition is used by publications including The Economist 33 In 1971 the first International Baccalaureate World School was authorized in Germany 34 Today 70 schools offer one or more of the IB programmes including two who offer the new IB Career related Programme 35 International comparisons edit The Programme for International Student Assessment PISA coordinated by the OECD assesses the skills of 15 year olds in OECD countries and a number of partner countries The assessment in the year 2000 demonstrated serious weaknesses in German pupils performance In the test of 41 countries Germany ranked 21st in reading and 20th in both mathematics and the natural sciences prompting calls for reform 36 Major newspapers ran special sections on the PISA results which were also discussed extensively on radio and television In response Germany s states formulated a number of specific initiatives addressing the perceived problems behind Germany s poor performance 37 By 2006 German schoolchildren had improved their position compared to previous years being ranked statistically significantly above average rank 13 in science skills and statistically not significantly above or below average in mathematical skills rank 20 and reading skills rank 18 38 39 In 2012 Germany achieved above average results in all three areas of reading mathematics and natural sciences 40 This declined in the 2018 report 11 The PISA Examination also found big differences in achievement between students attending different types of German schools 41 The socio economic gradient was very high in Germany the students performance there being more dependent on socio economic factors than in most other countries 38 39 Performance on PISA 2003 points earned by school attended and social classtype school social class very low social class low social class high social class very high Hauptschule 400 429 436 450Gesamtschule 438 469 489 515Realschule 482 504 528 526Gymnasium 578 581 587 602PISA 2003 Der Bildungsstand der Jugendlichen in Deutschland Ergebnisse des 2 internationalen Vergleiches 42 Some German teachers representatives and a number of scientists disputed the PISA findings 43 They claimed amongst other things that the questions had been ill translated that the samples drawn in some countries were not representative that German students most of whom had never done a multiple choice tests in their lives before were disadvantaged by the multiple choice questions that the PISA questions had no curricular validity and that PISA was in fact an IQ test 44 45 which according to them showed that dysgenic fertility was taking place in Germany 46 47 48 49 50 Additionally the OECD was criticized for following its own agenda of a strictly economically utilitarian education policy as opposed to humanist education policy following the German ideal of Bildung and for trying to establish an educational testing industry without democratic legitimation 51 52 Apprenticeship edit nbsp A Meisterbrief master craftsman s certificate from the Berliner Handwerkskammer Berlin chamber of handicrafts the motto on the certificate reads Work is the ennoblement of the citizen boon will be the reward for his labour Germany has high standards for the education of craftspeople Historically very few people attended college In the 1950s for example 80 percent had only Volksschule primary school education of 6 or 7 years Only 5 percent of youths entered college at this time and still fewer graduated In the 1960s six percent of youths entered college In 1961 there were still 8 000 cities in which no children received secondary education 53 However this does not mean that Germany was a country of uneducated people In fact many of those who did not receive secondary education were highly skilled craftspeople and members of the upper middle class Even though more people attend college today a craftsperson is still highly valued in German society nbsp A master discusses a vacuum compressor with his apprentice and several other craftsmen Historically prior to the 20th century the relationship between a master craftsman and his apprentice was paternalistic Apprentices were often very young when entrusted to a master craftsman by their parents It was seen as the master s responsibility not only to teach the craft but also to instill the virtues of a good craftsman He was supposed to teach honour loyalty fair mindedness courtesy and compassion for the poor He was also supposed to offer spiritual guidance to ensure his apprentices fulfilled their religious duties and to teach them to honour the Lord Jesus Christ with their lives The master craftsman who failed to do this would lose his reputation and would accordingly be dishonoured a very bad fate in those days The apprenticeship ended with the so called Freisprechung exculpation The master announced in front of the trade heading that the apprentice had been virtuous and God loving 54 55 56 The young person now had the right to call himself a Geselle journeyman He had two options either to work for a master or to become a master himself Working for another master had several disadvantages One was that in many cases the journeyman who was not a master was not allowed to marry and found a family Because the church disapproved of sex outside of marriage he was obliged to become a master if he did not want to spend his life celibate 57 Accordingly many of the so called Geselle decided to go on a journey in order to become a master This was called Waltz or Journeyman years nbsp A German roofer thatching a roof with reeds he is wearing the traditional waistcoat and trousers of a craftsman In those days the crafts were called the virtuous crafts and the virtuousness of the craftspersons was greatly respected For example according to one source a person should be greeted from the bricklayer craftspersons in the town who live in respectability die in respectability who strive for respectability and who apply respectability to their actions 58 In those days the concept of the virtuous crafts stood in contrast to the concept of academic freedom as Brudermann and Jost noticed Nowadays the education of craftspersons has changed in particular self esteem and the concept of respectability 59 Yet even today a craftsperson does sometimes refer to the craftsperson s codex of virtues and the crafts sometimes may be referred to as the virtuous crafts and a craftsperson who gives a blessing at a roofing ceremony may in many cases remind of the virtues of the crafts I am part of Certain virtues are also ascribed to certain crafts For example a person might be called always on time like a bricklayer to describe punctuality 60 On the other hand virtue and respectability which in the past had been the center of the life of any craftsperson became less and less important for such education Today a young person who wants to start an apprenticeship must first find an Ausbilder this may be a master craftsperson a master in the industrial sector Industriemeister or someone else with proof of suitable qualifications in the training of apprentices The Ausbilder must also provide proof of no criminal record and proof of respectability The Ausbilder has to be at least 24 years of age The Ausbilder has several duties such as teaching the craft and the techniques and instilling character and social skills In some cases the Ausbilder must also provide board and lodging Agreement is reached on these points before the apprenticeship begins The apprentice will also receive payment for his work According to 17 Berufsbildungsgesetz a first year apprentice will be paid less than someone who has been an apprentice for longer An Ausbilder who provides board and lodging may set this off against the payment made In the past many of those who applied for an apprenticeship had only primary school education Nowadays only those with secondary school education apply for apprenticeships because secondary school attendance has become compulsory In some trades it has even become difficult for those holding the Hauptschulabschluss to find an apprenticeship because more and more pupils leave school with the Realschulabschluss or Abitur The apprenticeship takes three years During that time the apprentice is trained by the Ausbilder and also attends a vocational school This is called the German model or dual education system Duale Ausbildung Tertiary education editSee also Academic ranks in Germany and List of universities in Germany nbsp Heidelberg University is the oldest and among the most prestigious universities of Germany It was established in 1386 Germany s universities are recognised internationally in the Academic Ranking of World Universities ARWU for 2008 six of the top 100 universities in the world are in Germany and 18 of the top 200 61 Germany ranks third in the QS World University Rankings 2011 62 Most German universities are public institutions charging fees of only around 60 500 per semester for each student usually to cover expenses associated with the university cafeterias and usually mandatory public transport tickets 63 64 Thus academic education is open to most citizens and studying is very common in Germany The dual education system combines both practical and theoretical education but does not lead to academic degrees It is more popular in Germany than anywhere else in the world and is a role model for other countries 65 The oldest universities of Germany are also among the oldest and best regarded in the world with Heidelberg University being the oldest established in 1386 and in continuous operation since then It is followed by Cologne University 1388 Leipzig University 1409 Rostock University 1419 Greifswald University 1456 Freiburg University 1457 LMU Munich 1472 and the University of Tubingen 1477 While German universities have a strong focus on research a large part of it is also done outside of universities in independent institutes that are embedded in academic clusters such as within the Max Planck Fraunhofer Leibniz and Helmholtz institutes This German peculiarity of outsourcing research leads to a competition for funds between universities and research institutes and may negatively affect academic rankings citation needed Figures for Germany are roughly 1 000 000 new students at all schools put together for one year 400 000 Abitur graduations 30 000 doctoral dissertations per year 1000 habilitations per year the traditional way to qualify as a professor but typically postdoc or junior professorship is the preferred career path nowadays which are not accounted for in this number Types of universities edit The German tertiary education system distinguishes between two types of institutions The term Universitat university is reserved for institutions which have the right to confer doctorates Other degree awarding higher education institutions may use the more generic term Hochschule In addition non university institutions of tertiary level exist in the German education system The admission requirement is usually a previous education including work experience As an example Fachschulen for technological subjects can be cited which are completed with a state examination EQF level 6 66 Universitaten edit Only Universitaten have the right to confer doctorates and habilitations Some universities use the term research university in international usage to emphasize their strength in research activity in addition to teaching particularly to differentiate themselves from Fachhochschulen A university covering the full range of scientific disciplines in contrast to more specialized universities might refer to itself as Volluniversitat Specialized universities which have the formal status of Universitat include Technische Universitaten Padagogische Hochschulen Universities of Education Kunsthochschulen Universities of Arts and Musikhochschulen Universities of Music The excellence initiative has awarded eleven universities with the title University of Excellence Professors at regular universities were traditionally required to have a doctorate as well as a habilitation Since 2002 the junior professorship was introduced to offer a more direct path to employment as a professor for outstanding doctoral degree Fachhochschulen Universities of Applied Sciences edit Main article Fachhochschule There is another type of university in Germany the Fachhochschulen Universities of Applied Sciences which offer mostly the same degrees as Universitaten but often concentrate on applied science as the English name suggests and usually have no power to award PhD level degrees at least not in their own right Fachhochschulen have a more practical profile with a focus on employability In research they are rather geared to applied research instead of fundamental research At a traditional university it is important to study why a method is scientifically right however this is less important at Universities of Applied Sciences Here the emphasis is placed on what systems and methods exist where they come from what their advantages and disadvantages are how to use them in practice when they should be used and when not For professors at a Fachhochschule at least three years of work experience are required for appointment while a habilitation is not expected This is unlike their counterparts at traditional universities where an academic career with research experience is necessary Prior to the Bologna Process Fachhochschule graduates received a Diplom To differentiate it from the Diplom which was conferred by Universitaten the title is indicated starting with Dipl Diplom and ending with FH e g Dipl Ing FH Max Mustermann for a graduate engineer from a Fachhochschule The FH Diploma is roughly equivalent to a bachelor s degree An FH Diploma does not qualify the holder for a doctoral program directly but in practice universities admit the best FH graduates on an individual basis after an additional entrance exam or participation in theoretical classes Admission edit University entrance qualification edit nbsp The Humboldt University of Berlin is the first modern university in the world Students wishing to attend a German Universitat must as a rule hold the Abitur or a subject restricted qualification for university entrance Fachgebundene Hochschulreife For Fachhochschulen the Abitur the Fachgebundene Hochschulreife certification or the Fachhochschulreife certification general or subject restricted is required Lacking these school leaving certifications in some states potential students can qualify for university entrance if they present additional formal proof that they will be able to keep up with their fellow students This may take the form of a test of cognitive functioning or passing the Begabtenprufung aptitude test consisting of a written and oral exam In some cases students who do not hold the Abitur may enter university even if they do not pass the aptitude or cognitive functioning tests if they 1 have received previous vocational training and 2 have worked at least three years and passed the Eingangsprufung entrance exam Such is the case for example in Hamburg 67 While there are numerous ways to achieve entrance qualification to German universities 68 the most traditional route has always been graduation from a Gymnasium with the Abitur however this has become less common over time As of 2008 less than half of university freshmen in some German states had graduated from a Gymnasium Even in Bavaria a state with a policy of strengthening the Gymnasium only 56 percent of freshmen had graduated from a Gymnasium 69 The rest were awarded the Abitur from another type of school or did not hold the Abitur certification at all High school diplomas received from countries outside of Germany are in many cases not considered equivalent to the Abitur but rather to a Realschulabschluss and therefore do not qualify the bearer for admission to a German university However it is still possible for such applicants to be admitted to a German university if they fulfill additional formal criteria such as a particular grade point average or points on a standardized admissions test These criteria depend on the school leaving certificate of the potential student and are agreed upon by the Standing Conference of the Ministers of Education and Cultural Affairs For example holders of the US high school diploma with a combined math and verbal score of 1300 on the SAT or 29 on the ACT may qualify for university admission Foreign students lacking the entrance qualification can acquire a degree at a Studienkolleg which is often recognized as an equivalent to the Abitur The one year course covers similar topics as the Abitur and ensures sufficient language skills to take up studies at a German university Admissions procedure edit The process of application depends on the degree program applied for the applicant s origin and the university entrance qualification 70 Generally all programs of study follow one of three admissions procedures 71 Free admissions Every applicant who fulfills the university entrance qualification will be admitted This is usually practiced in subjects in which many students quit their studies e g mathematics physics or engineering Sometimes the number of students who fail a course can be as high as 94 percent in these programs 72 Local admission restrictions For degree programs where only a limited number of places are available numerus clausus often abbreviated NC criteria by which applications will be evaluated differ from university to university and from program to program Commonly used criteria include the final grade of the university entrance qualification which takes into account the grades of the final exams as well as course grades a weighted grade point average which increases the weight of relevant school subjects interviews motivational letters letters of recommendation by previous professors essays relevant practical experience and subject specific entrance exams Such restrictions are increasingly common at German universities 73 Nationwide admission restrictions In the subjects medicine dentistry veterinary medicine and pharmacy a nationwide numerus clausus is in place In these subjects applications of Germans and foreigners who are legally treated like Germans e g EU citizens are handled centrally for all universities by a public trust Stiftung fur Hochschulzulassung The following quotas are applied in this procedure 74 20 percent of available admission slots are admitted by the final grade of the university entrance qualification 20 percent of slots are granted to students who have the highest number of so called waiting semesters in which they were not enrolled at university 60 percent of slots are awarded by criteria at the university s discretion Criteria universities commonly apply are 1 final grade of the university entrance qualification used most often 2 interviews 3 essays or motivational letters and 4 entrance exams some additional slots are reserved for special cases and do not count into the previous three quotas 75 For example up to 2 percent of slots can be so called hardship cases Hartefalle which are granted preferential admission An applicant may be counted as a hardship case only if there are exceptional circumstances making it impossible for the applicant to wait even a single semester for a place at university e g because of a progressing disease 76 According to German law universities are not permitted to discriminate against or grant preferential treatment to persons on basis of race ethnic group gender social class religion or political opinion Tuition fees edit Public universities in Germany are funded by the federal states and do not charge tuition fees However all enrolled students do have to pay a semester fee Semesterbeitrag This fee consists of an administrative fee for the university only in some of the states a fee for Studentenwerk which is a statutory student affairs organization a fee for the university s AStA Allgemeiner Studentenausschuss students government and Studentenschaft students union at many universities a fee for public transportation and possibly more fees as decided by the university s students parliament e g for a cooperation with a local theater granting free entry for students Summed up the semester fee usually ranges between 150 and 350 77 In 2005 the German Federal Constitutional Court ruled that a federal law prohibiting tuition fees was unconstitutional on the grounds that education is the sole responsibility of the states Following this ruling seven federal states introduced tuition fees of 500 per semester in 2006 and 2007 Due to massive student protests and a citizens initiative which collected 70 000 signatures against tuition fees the government of Hesse was the first to reverse course before the state election in 2008 other state governments soon followed Several parties which spoke out for tuition fees lost state elections Bavaria in 2013 and Lower Saxony in 2014 were the last states to abolish tuition fees 78 79 Since 1998 all German states had introduced tuition fees for long time students Langzeitstudiengebuhren of 500 up to 900 per semester 80 These fees are required for students who study substantially longer than the standard period of study Regelstudienzeit which is a defined number of semesters for each degree program Even after the abolition of general tuition fees tuition fees for long time students remain in six states 81 Additionally universities may charge tuition fees for so called non consecutive master s degree programs which do not build directly on a bachelor s degree such as a Master of Business Administration With much controversy the state of Baden Wurttemberg has reintroduced tuition fees at public universities starting in 2017 From autumn 2017 students who are not citizens of an EU EEA member state are expected to pay 1 500 per semester Students who enroll for their second degree in Germany are expected to pay 650 per semester regardless of their country of origin 82 Although heavily criticised in Germany the amount is considered below average in comparison with other European countries 83 84 There are university sponsored scholarships in Germany and a number of private and public institutions award scholarships usually to cover living costs and books There is a state funded study loan programme called BAfoG Bundesausbildungsforderungsgesetz Federal Education Aid Act It ensures that less wealthy students can receive up to 735 per month for the standard period of study if they or their parents cannot afford all of the costs involved with studying Furthermore students need to have a prospect of remaining in Germany to be eligible this includes German and EU citizens but often also long term residents of other countries 85 Part typically half of this money is an interest free loan that is later repaid with the other half considered a free grant and the amount to be repaid is capped at 10 000 Currently around a quarter of all students in Germany receive financial support via BAfoG 86 For international students there are different approaches to get a full scholarship or a funding of their studies To be able to get a scholarship a successful application is mandatory It can be submitted upon arrival in Germany as well as after arrival 87 But due to the fact that many scholarships are only available to students who are already studying the chances of an acceptance are limited for applicants from abroad Therefore many foreign students have to work to finance their studies Students edit Since the end of World War II the number of young people entering a university has more than tripled in Germany but university attendance is still lower than that of many other European nations This can be explained with the dual education system with its strong emphasis on apprenticeships and vocational schools Many jobs which do require an academic degree in other countries such as nursing require completed vocational training instead in Germany The rate of university graduates varies by federal state The number is the highest in Berlin and the lowest in Schleswig Holstein citation needed Similarly the ratio of school graduates with university entrance qualification varies by state between 38 and 64 88 The organizational structure of German universities goes back to the university model introduced by Wilhelm von Humboldt in the early 19th century which identifies the unity of teaching and research as well as academic freedom as ideals Colleges elsewhere had previously dedicated themselves to religion and classic literature and Germany s shift to a research based model was an institutional innovation 89 This model lead to the foundation of Humboldt University of Berlin and influenced the higher education systems of numerous countries Some critics argue that nowadays German universities have a rather unbalanced focus more on education and less on research citation needed nbsp Handball Mixed Tournament at the 4th Eurokonstantia the international sports tournament at the university sports centre in Konstanz in 2009At German universities students enroll for a specific program of study Studiengang During their studies students can usually choose freely from all courses offered at the university However all bachelor s degree programs require a number of particular compulsory courses and all degree programs require a minimum number of credits that must be earned in the core field of the program of study It is not uncommon to spend longer than the regular period of study Regelstudienzeit at university There are no fixed classes of students who study and graduate together Students can change universities according to their interests and the strengths of each university Sometimes students attend multiple different universities over the course of their studies This mobility means that at German universities there is a freedom and individuality unknown in the US the UK or France Professors also choose their subjects for research and teaching freely This academic freedom is laid down in the German constitution Since German universities do not offer accommodation or meals students are expected to organize and pay for board and lodging themselves Inexpensive places in dormitories are available from Studentenwerk a statutory non profit organization for student affairs However there are only enough places for a fraction of students Studentenwerk also runs canteens and cafes on campus which are similarly affordable Other common housing options include renting a private room or apartment as well as living together with one or more roommates to form a Wohngemeinschaft often abbreviated WG Furthermore many university students continue to live with their parents One third to one half of the students works to make a little extra money often resulting in a longer stay at university Degrees edit Further information Academic degree Germany Recently the implementation of the Bologna Declaration introduced bachelor s and master s degrees as well as ECTS credits to the German higher education system Previously universities conferred Diplom and Magister degrees depending on the field of study which usually took 4 6 years These were the only degrees below the doctorate In the majority of subjects students can only study for bachelor s and master s degrees as Diplom or Magister courses do not accept new enrollments However a few Diplom courses still prevail 90 The standard period of study is usually three years six semesters with 180 ECTS points for bachelor s degrees and two years four semesters 120 ECTS for master s degrees The following Bologna degrees are common in Germany Bachelor of Arts B A Master of Arts M A Bachelor of Science BSc Master of Science MSc Bachelor of Engineering BEng Master of Engineering MEng Bachelor of Fine Arts B F A Master of Fine Arts M F A Bachelor of Music B Mus Master of Music M Mus In addition there are courses leading to the Staatsexamen state examination These did usually not transition to bachelor s and master s degrees For future doctors dentists veterinarians pharmacists and lawyers the Staatsexamen is required to be allowed to work in their profession For teachers judges and public prosecutors it is the required degree for working in civil service Students usually study at university for 4 8 years before they take the First Staatsexamen Afterwards they go on to work in their future jobs for one or two years depending on subject and state before they are able to take the Second Staatsexamen which tests their practical abilities While it is not an academic degree formally the First Staatsexamen is equivalent to a master s degree and qualifies for doctoral studies On request some universities bestow an additional academic degree e g Diplom Jurist or Magister iuris on students who have passed First Staatsexamen The highest German academic degree is the doctorate Each doctoral degree has a particular designation in Latin except for engineering where the designation is in German which signifies in which field the doctorate is conferred in The doctorate is indicated before the name in abbreviated form e g Dr rer nat Max Mustermann for a doctor in natural sciences The prefix Dr is used for addressing for example in formal letters Outside of the academic context however the designation is usually dropped While it is not an academic degree formally the Habilitation is a higher post doctoral academic qualification for teaching independently at universities It is indicated by appending habil after the designation of the doctorate e g Dr rer nat habil Max Mustermann The holder of a Habilitation may work as Privatdozent Research edit nbsp Inside Wendelstein 7 X a research facility at Max Planck Institute of Plasma Physics close to the University of Greifswald In contrast to many other countries a great portion of research is exhibited in independent institutes Scientific research in Germany is conducted by universities and research institutes The raw output of scientific research from Germany consistently ranks among the world s best 91 The national academy of Germany is the Leopoldina Academy of Sciences Additionally the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities acts as an umbrella organization for eight local academies and acatech is the Academy of Science and Engineering 92 Organizations funding research edit Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG Federal Ministry for Economics and Technology BMWi German Academic Exchange Service DAAD promoting international exchange of scientists and studentsNational libraries edit German National Library of Economics ZWB German National Library of Medicine ZB MED German National Library of Science and Technology TIB Research institutes edit Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres an association of advanced research centers in science technology biology and medicine Max Planck Society focusing on fundamental research Fraunhofer Society focusing on applied research and mission oriented research Leibniz Association addressing research issues of particular interest to the societyPrizes edit Every year Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft awards ten outstanding scientists working at German research institutions with the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize Germany s most important research prize With a maximum of 2 5 million per award it is one of the highest endowed research prizes in the world 93 Additionally numerous foundations and non profit organizations award further prizes medals and scholarships Determinants of academic attainment edit nbsp The Schule Schloss Salem is considered as one of the most prestigious elite schools in Germany 50 years ago the person least likely to attend a Gymnasium was a Catholic working class girl from the rural parts of Germany Nowadays however the person least likely to attend a Gymnasium is a minority youngster from the ghetto 94 who is the son of immigrants 95 The influence of social class on educational achievement is much greater in western Germany than it is in eastern Germany former GDR An analysis of PISA data on Gymnasium pupils for the year 2000 showed that while in western Germany the child of an academic was 7 26 times as likely as that of a skilled worker to attend in eastern Germany a child from an academic family was only 2 78 times as likely as a working class child to attend 96 The reasons for this were unclear Some people believed that immigrants were responsible because more uneducated immigrant families lived in western than in eastern Germany This assumption however could not be confirmed The difference between east and west was even stronger when only ethnic German children were studied 97 Social class differences in educational achievement are much more marked in Germany s big cities than they are in the rural parts of Germany In cities with more than 300 000 inhabitants children of academics are 14 36 times as likely as children of skilled workers to attend Gymnasium 96 Gender edit Educational achievement varies more in German males than it does in German females boys are more likely to attend special education schools but also more likely to be postgraduate students 63 of pupils attending special education programs for the academically challenged are male Males are less likely to meet the statewide performance targets more likely to drop out of school and more likely to be classified emotionally disturbed 86 of the pupils receiving special training because of emotional disturbance are male 98 Research shows a class effect native middle class males perform as well as middle class females in terms of educational achievement but lower class males and immigrant males lag behind lower class females and immigrant females A lack of male role models contributes to a low academic achievement in the case of lower class males 98 On the other hand 58 of all postgraduate students and 84 of all German college professors were male in 2010 99 Socioeconomic factors edit See also Poverty in Germany German Gymnasium Great Equaliser or Breeding Ground of Privilege and Academic achievement among different groups in Germany Children from poor immigrant or working class families are less likely to succeed in school than children from middle or upper class backgrounds This disadvantage for the financially challenged of Germany is greater than in any other industrialized nation 100 However the true reasons stretch beyond economic ones The poor also tend to be less educated After allowing for parental education money does not play a major role in children s academic outcomes 101 102 Immigrant children and youths mostly of lower class background are the fastest growing segment of the German population So their prospects bear heavily on the well being of the country More than 30 of Germans aged 15 years and younger have at least one parent born abroad In the big cities 60 of children aged 5 years and younger have at least one parent born abroad 103 Immigrant children academically underperform their peers 104 Immigrants have tended to be less educated than native Germans Immigrants from Pakistan India China and Vietnam perform exceptionally well In eastern Germany Vietnamese and Chinese of lower class backgrounds outperform students from European backgrounds despite the fact that in most cases their parents are poorer and less educated than the parents of their European born peers Teachers in eastern Germany have also been shown to be more motivated than teachers in western Germany That might be another reason for this Asian achievement 105 Studies edit ELEMENT study Multiple Regression AnalysisVariable Beta strength of influence Factors determining mathematical performance in 6th graders attending a Berlin primary school mathematical performance in 4th grade 0 540general cognitive ability 0 236parents hold the Abitur as compared to children of parents without school diploma 0 144parents hold the Mittlere Reife as compared to children of parents without school diploma 0 096Number of books present in the child s home 0 055male gender no influence could be foundGerman is spoken in the child s home no influence could be foundparents hold the Hauptschulabschluss as compared to children of parents without school diploma no influence could be foundThe ELEMENT study dealt with determinants of academic achievement in Berlin It was carried out in Berlin where some of the pupils started at a Gymnasium after the 4th grade while others stayed in primary school until 6th grade and started at different schools after the 6th grade Factors correlated with academic achievement tend to be intercorrelated that means that they are also correlated with other factors that determine academic achievement The number of books owned by a pupil s parents for example is correlated with the parents education Because of this Multiple Regression Analysis was used Multiple Regression allows us to understand the influence of one variable when the other variables are held fixed It was revealed by the study that the most important variable determining mathematical performance in the 6th grade was mathematical performance in the 4th grade Children who have a head start in the 4th grade keep it until the 6th grade It was also revealed by the study that some variables were immaterial If a language other than German is spoken in the home that was correlated with poor mathematical performance in other studies However correlation does not imply causation and the ELEMENT study revealed that if other factors were taken into account for the language spoken at home this had no effect on mathematical performance ELEMENT long term study of the development of mathematical abilityDevelopment in mathematical ability of children attending a Berlin primary school by parents education mathematical ability by 4th grade mathematical ability by 6th grade 106 no school diploma 89 7 105 4Hauptschulabschluss or similar diploma 91 1 108 2Mittlere Reife or similar diploma 94 8 112 8Abitur 101 0 120 8Development in mathematical ability of children attending a Berlin Gymnasium by parents education mathematical ability by 4th grade while still in primary school mathematical ability by 6th grade Gymnasium 106 no school diploma 104 2 123 3Hauptschulabschluss or similar diploma 111 0 128 8Mittlere Reife or similar diploma 111 6 131 3Abitur 114 5 135 2The aim of another ELEMENT study was to monitor the development of general mathematical ability One finding is that those admitted to a Gymnasium after the fourth grade had showed better mathematical ability than those who stayed in primary school ab initio That was true for all social classes Another finding was that children of all social classes did better in the sixth grade when they were at a Gymnasium By the end of the sixth grade those attending a Gymnasium were two years ahead of those attending a primary school Did the Gymnasium boost students ability There are different opinions about this Some argue that this is the cases and even after testing performance in grade four those who were admitted to a Gymnasium outperformed their peers who were not at grade six 107 That was also the interpretation of Prof Dr Dr Lehman who did the study He stated The findings indicate that the Gymnasium help students of all social classes reach their full mathematical potential 108 Others however who have reanalyzed the data claimed that those attending a Gymnasium were different ab initio and could not properly be compared to those attending a primary school The data is of high political relevance as those who are in favour of the tripartite system and those who are in favour of comprehensive schools both use it to prove their point Those who are in favour of comprehensive schools claim that the data shows that the primary schools which resembles a comprehensive schools boost children s ability while those in favour of the tripartite system argue that the data shows the Gymnasium boost students ability Children edit Children whose families receive welfare children whose parents dropped out of school children of teenage parents children raised by a lone parent children raised in crime ridden inner city neighbourhoods children who have multiple young siblings and children who live in overcrowded substandard apartments are at risk of poor educational achievement in Germany Often these factors go together making it very hard for children to overcome the odds A number of measures have been assessed to help those children reach their full potential 109 Kindergarten has been shown to improve school readiness in children at risk Children attending a kindergarten were less likely to have impaired speech or impaired motor development Only 50 of children whose parents did not graduate from school are ready for school at age six If such children were enrolled in a high quality three year Kindergarten programme 87 were ready for school at age six Thus Kindergarten helps to overcome unequal opportunities 110 Families whose children are at risk for low academic achievement may be visited by trained professionals They offer a wide variety of services that relate to each child s and each family s background and needs Such professionals may visit pregnant low income women and talk with them about positive health related behaviors such as following a healthy diet or refraining from the use of alcohol or tobacco while pregnant Positive health related behavior may have a major impact on children s school performance Home visitors may provide information on childcare and social services help parents in crisis and model problem solving skills They may help implement the preschool school curriculum at home or provide a curriculum of educational games designed to improve language development and cognitive skills In most cases such support is offered to families on a voluntary basis Families who are eligible for the program may decide for themselves whether or not they want to participate There are no penalties if they decide against it or against continuing with the program 109 Working class pupils edit In Germany most children are streamed by ability into different schools after fourth grade The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study revealed that working class children needed better reading abilities than middle class children to be nominated for the Gymnasium After allowing for reading abilities odds to be nominated to Gymnasium for upper middle class children were still 2 63 times better than for working class children Points needed to be nominated for Gymnasium 111 Teachers nominatingchild for Gymnasium Parents wanting childto attend Gymnasiumchildren from upper middle class backgrounds 537 498children from lower middle class backgrounds 569 559children of parents holding pink collar jobs 582 578children of self employed parents 580 556children from upper working class backgrounds 592 583children from lower working class backgrounds 614 606Germany s Left Party brought up the discussion about affirmative action According to Stefan Zillich quotas should be a possibility to help working class children who did not do well in school gain access to a Gymnasium 112 Headmasters of Gymnasien have objected saying that this type of policy would be a disservice to poor children that they would not be able to academically keep up with their classmates and that they would not feel welcome at a Gymnasium Wolfgang Harnischfeger headmaster of a well known Berlin Gymnasium stated It can be noticed in children as young as kindergarten age that children take after their parents They emulate their language their way of dressing their way of spending their freetime Children from Neukolln a poor neighbourhood would not feel good about themselves if they had to attend that type of school that mainly serves pupils from social classes different from their own They will not be able to integrate Every field day every school party will show that very soon He also said that this kind of policy would weaken the Gymnasium and that this would be dangerous because German society could not afford to do without the truly educated adults the Gymnasium produces 113 Stefan Zillich has answered to this saying that German society can not afford having only so few adults who were truly educated 113 While affirmative action laws were not passed status January 2010 sought after schools have been guaranteed the right to employ their own quotas since the 1970s Contemporary issues edit There is a constant public debate about tracking students by ability into several types of secondary school i e Gymnasium Realschule and Hauptschule Opponents of streaming by ability claim that streaming is unfair that parents from higher socio economic groups are more effective in sending children of similar aptitude to higher level schools Gymnasium Proponents of streaming claim that it limits income segregation between rich and poor areas as wealthier parents in poor neighborhoods may still send their gifted children to a fairly good public school due to streaming giving them less motivation to move to a wealthier area They also say that potential access to a Selective school would allow gifted children of lower class parents living in poor neighborhoods better educational opportunities than if they were confined to schools with the average pupil population of their neighborhoods Opponents of streaming have pointed out that countries that performed very well in PISA such as Finland do not stream by ability Proponents have pointed out that German comprehensive schools ranked below other German schools on PISA and that children from the lower socio economic groups attending comprehensive schools fare worse in PISA than middle class students attending the same schools There is also a concern about the poor standard of school buildings and the lack of digital technlogy in classrooms International students in Germany edit According to official data international students make up nearly 15 percent of Germany s student population with 325 000 international students studying in Germany during the winter semester 2020 2021 114 See also edit nbsp Germany portal nbsp European Union portal nbsp Education portalAbitur after twelve years Academic grading in Germany Education in East Germany Music schools in Germany List of schools in Germany List of specialist schools in Germany List of universities in Germany Open access in GermanyNotes edittranslation note It s a common pitfall to translate the German kooperativ into cooperative in English However this is a so called false friend The English word cooperative describes either a business organisation that is fully owned by the people that work for it i e Genossenschaft in German or it describes someone s willingness to act or work together as opposed to their resistance refusal to acting working together sich kooperativ zeigen in German References edit Bundeszentrale fur politische Bildung 2024 Schulpflicht Bundeszentrale fur politische Bildung Archived from the original on 23 December 2023 Retrieved 25 January 2024 Federal Statistics Office 12 May 2022 Prufungsjahr 2019 45 der Bachelorabsolventinnen und absolventen begannen ein Masterstudium Retrieved 25 January 2024 Jacoby Tamar 16 October 2014 Why Germany Is So Much Better at Training Its Workers The Atlantic Archived from the original on 20 January 2024 Retrieved 25 January 2024 Hasting Evans Graham 1 July 2023 Germany beats England hands down on apprenticeships so what can we learn FE WEEK Archived from the original on 21 July 2023 Retrieved 25 January 2024 Cassidy Nigel 14 December 2011 German 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Forschung und Bildung Frankfurt Main 1993 Journeymen were not the only group who were not allowed to marry in former Europe other groups included farm hands who were only allowed to marry if it was approved by their betters and the poor who often were not allowed to marry at all for some descriptions of this see Shorter Edward 1977 Die Geburt der modernen Familie Reinbek bei Hamburg Rowohlt Wissell Rudolf 1929 Des alten Handwerks Recht und Gewohnheit Berlin Wasmuth Schulz Knut 1999 Handwerk in Europa Schriften des Historischen Kollegs Kolloquium 41 Verlag Oldenbourg ISBN 978 3 486 56395 5 However this might not be a compliment to the punctuality of bricklayers but refer to the fact that a bricklayer always stops work as soon as the shift has finished Duden Redewendungen p 594 Top 100 World Universities Academic Ranking of World Universities Archived from the original on 22 August 2008 Retrieved 28 March 2011 German universities in the 2010 QS World University Rankings Topuniversities 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here Colleges ignore life s biggest questions and we all pay the price The Boston Globe Retrieved 17 July 2019 University of Leipzig Study Programs Mathematics Universitat Leipzig Detail Studiengang Archived from the original on 18 December 2009 Retrieved 25 May 2010 Top 20 Country Rankings in All Fields 2006 Thomson Corporation Retrieved 4 January 2007 Academies of Sciences and Humanities research in germany org Federal Ministry of Education and Research Retrieved 31 January 2017 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize dfg de Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Retrieved 31 January 2017 Beate Hock Gerda Holz Hg Erfolg oder Scheitern Arme und benachteiligte Jugendliche auf dem Weg ins Berufsleben Funfter Zwischenbericht zu einer Studie im Auftrag des Bundesverbandes der Arbeiterwohlfahrt P 9 Rainer Geissler Die Metamorphose der Arbeitertochter zum Migrantensohn Zum Wandle der Chancenstruktur im bildungssystem nach Schicht Geschlecht Ethnie und deren Verknupfungen in Peter A Berger Heike Kahlert Hrsg Institutionalisierte Ungleichheiten Wie das Bildungswesen Chancen blockiert Juvenat Verlag Weinheim und Munchen 2005 S 71 100 ISBN 3 7799 1583 9 a b Deutsches PISA Konsortium Hrsg 2002 PISA 2000 Die Lander der Bundesrepublik im Vergleich Opladen Leske und Budrich p 166 Deutsches PISA Konsortium Hrsg 2002 PISA 2000 Die Lander der Bundesrepublik im Vergleich Opladen Leske und Budrich p 171 172 a b Renate Rastatter MdL Gruene Fraktion de Archived 8 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine Nicht dummer aber die Dummen Dr Lucia Jerg Bretzke neue Gleichstellungsbeauftragte idw online de Retrieved 28 December 2017 Internationale Leistungsvergleiche im Schulbereich Bildungsministerium fur Bildung und Forschung Retrieved 2007 07 20 Lauterbach Wolfgang 2003 Armut in Deutschland Folgen fur Familien und Kinder Oldenburg Oldenburger Universitatsreden ISBN 3 8142 1143 X S 32 33 Becker Nietfeld 1999 Arbeitslosigkeit und Bildungschancen von Kindern im Transformationsprozess Kolner Zeitschrift fur Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie Jg 51 Heft 1 1999 BiBB Menschen mit Migrationshintergrund neue Definition alte Probleme Archived 16 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Hans Boeckler Stiftung OECD Studie Mangel an Akademikern TAZ Ostlehrer integrieren Migrantenkinder besser a b Prof Dr Dr Rainer Lehmann Jenny Lenkeit ELEMENT Erhebung zum Lese und Mathematikverstandnis Entwicklungen in den Jahrgangsstufen 4 bis 6 in Berlin Abschlussbericht uber die Untersuchungen 2003 2004 und 2005 an Berliner Grundschulen und grundstandigen Gymnasien Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin p 44 Deutscher Philologenverband Erkenntnisse der ELEMENT Studie vorurteilsfrei zur Kenntnis nehmen Pressemeldung 22 April 2008 Prof Dr Dr Rainer Lehmann Jenny Lenkeit ELEMENT Erhebung zum Lese und Mathematikverstandnis Entwicklungen in den Jahrgangsstufen 4 bis 6 in Berlin Abschlussbericht uber die Untersuchungen 2003 2004 und 2005 an Berliner Grundschulen und grundstandigen Gymnasien Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin p 43 and 44 a b Hans Weiss Hrsg Fruhforderung mit Kindern und Familien in Armutslagen Munchen Basel Ernst Reinhardt Verlag ISBN 3 497 01539 3 Die Zeit 14 Mai 2008 Kindergarten gleicht soziale Unterschiede aus Zeit de IGLU 2006 Press conference retrieved May 27 2008 Archived 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Susanne Vieth Entus 29 Dezember 2008 Sozialquote Berliner Gymnasien sollen mehr Schuler aus armen Familien aufnehmen Der Tagesspiegel a b Martin Klesmann 23 February 2009 Kinder aus Neukolln wurden sich nicht integrieren lassen Ein Politiker und ein Schulleiter streiten uber Sozialquoten an Gymnasien Berliner Zeitung DAAD Wissenschaft weltoffen kompakt 2022 PDF Retrieved 10 July 2022 Further reading editBernstein George and Lottelore Bernstein Attitudes toward Women s Education in Germany 1870 1914 International Journal of Women s Studies 2 1979 473 488 Foght H W ed Comparative education 1918 compares United States England Germany France Canada and Denmark online Green Lowell The education of women in the Reformation History of Education Quarterly 19 1 1979 93 116 online Hahn Walter Education in East and West Germany a study of similarities and contrasts Studies in Comparative Communism 5 1 1972 47 79 Lundgreen Peter Industrialization and the educational formation of manpower in Germany Journal of Social History 9 1 1975 64 80 on 19th century online Petschauer Peter Improving Educational Opportunities for Girls in 18th Century Germany Eighteenth Century Life 3 2 1976 56 62 External links editDAAD de German Academic Exchange Service BildungsServer de The German education system basic facts FZS Online org Free union of student bodies FZS of Germany The New Student s Reference Work German Universities 1916 Information on education in Germany OECD Contains indicators and information about Germany and how it compares to other OECD and non OECD countries Diagram of German education system OECD Using 1997 ISCED classification of programmes and typical ages Also in German Vocational education in Germany UNESCO UNEVOC contains a full report on the state of vocational education in Germany World TVET database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Education in Germany amp oldid 1199848379, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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