Education

‘Onderwijs niet in gedrang door student-promovendus’

Staatssecretaris Zijlstra verwacht dat ook in de toekomst de meeste promovendi een werknemerstatus zullen krijgen en onderwijs blijven geven. Hij is niet bang dat het onderwijs te lijden zal hebben van de invoering van een bursalenstelsel.

‘Het is de verantwoordelijkheid van de (autonome) universiteiten om bursalen slechts daar in te zetten waar voldoende onderwijspersoneel beschikbaar is’, schrijft Zijlstra in antwoord op vragen van PvdA-kamerlid Jandnanansing. Zij is bang dat de invoering van bursalen voor nog meer druk zal zorgen bij universitair docenten en onderzoekers, omdat bursalen geen les hoeven te geven.

Zijlstra wil universiteiten de keus geven om een deel van hun promovendi een studentenstatus en een beurs te geven. Dat is goedkoper, waardoor er meer promotieplaatsen komen. Veel promovendi zijn daar tegen, omdat ze dan onder meer geen recht op zwangerschapsverlof en pensioenopbouw hebben.

Verder maakt de staatssecretaris in zijn antwoord opnieuw duidelijk dat selectie aan de poort wat hem betreft vooral bedoeld is om studenten op de juiste plek te krijgen. De zesjescultuur kunnen instellingen volgens hem beter bestrijden door een ambitieuze studiecultuur te creëren, ‘bijvoorbeeld door kleinschalige onderwijsvormen, onderwijs op maat, betrokken docenten en goede begeleidingsvormen te bieden’.

The study covered 29 countries (all EU member states except Bulgaria, but including Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway). Dutch women meanwhile trailed hopelessly behind in the percentages that pursue science and technology degrees.
The report provided complied figures for men and women in EU higher education. The trend was clear: women more frequently enroll in higher education and they also are more likely to graduate. And this discrepancy between men and women continues grows.

Women account for 59 percent of all graduates in the European Union. In the Netherlands, that figure stands at 57 percent. In Estonia and Latvia, women account for seventy percent of all graduates.
Women represent the majority of students and graduates in almost all countries and dominate in education, health and welfare, humanities and arts. Men dominate in engineering, manufacturing and construction. Around two thirds of countries have gender equality policies in higher education. However, almost all these policies and projects target only females.
While there is much good news for women in the report, the proportion of women among teaching staff in higher education institutions declines with every step on the academic career ladder. Yet only about a third of the countries have implemented concrete policies to address this problem.

Technical studies
The report also highlighted the fact that in no other country in the EU do so few women graduate with degrees in science, mathematics or computer science as in the Netherlands, where women account for only one in five graduates in these disciplines. Throughout the rest of the EU, the average is forty percent, or twice that of in the Netherlands. Romania, at 62 percent, has a particularly high percentage of women enrolled in technical studies. Meanwhile, Belgium and Hungary also perform poorly in this area, although they are still eight and nine percent higher than the Netherlands, respectively.
Regarding technical studies, inequality between men and women exists everywhere. In all EU countries, women account for only approximately 25 percent of all graduates of technical degree programmes. And in the Netherlands that percentage is even lower: only 18 percent. Germany is at same level as Netherlands, and Ireland is the worst performer, with just 16 percent of its women pursuing technical degrees.

In summing up the report’s findings, the EU commissioner responsible for education, Androulla Vassiliou, said: “The relationship between gender and educational attainment has changed significantly over the past fifty years and differences now take more complex forms. Schools are overwhelmingly staffed by women, but education systems are managed by men. Most graduates are female and most school drop-outs are boys. We need to base gender equality policies on these realities.”
With a few exceptions, all European countries have, or plan to have, gender equality policies in education, with their primary aim being to challenge traditional gender roles and stereotypes.

Editor Redactie

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