w w Wy w w w p .-p' 6B Wednesday, November 5, 2014 // The Statement Do U.S. colleges have something to learn from German tuition policy? by Rachel Premack en German universities began charging tuition in 2006, the back- lash was swift. At the University of Freiburg, where University of Michigan His- ry Department Chair Kathleen Canning was administering a study abroad program in the 2000s, students occupied classrooms and hung enormous banners that read, "Education is a human right." The fees that caused the outrage? An aver- age of $630 per semester. At this University, in-state LSA students pay $6,579 and out- of-staters pay $20,789. "It didn't matter how much it was," Canning said. "It didn't matter that it was affordable for most middle-class fami- lies. It was the principal of introducing .mtion." Lucky for the students, the final Ger- man federal state abolished tuition in October. Now anyone - German citizen or not - can receive a free college educa- tion at one of Germany's globally lauded universities. Past German college students are now among world-renowned philosophers, researchers, entrepreneurs, writers and leaders. The nation is the world's third- largest importer and exporter. More Nobel laureates are from Germany than any other nationality - save for the U.S. IMU.K. So why don't these students have to pay tie thousands of dollars per year that Americans do? Tuition in the United States has not always been so high. At the University, adjust- ing for inflation, in-state students paid $1,472 in the 1969-1970 academic year. It rose, by decade, to $1,970 in 1980, $3,065 in 1990 and $5,704 by 2000. Just as well, until the mid-20th century, higher education was something attainable only by the most elite social classes in Ger- many. "The whole notion of buildings, education, was a fundamental attribute of the bourgeoi- sie and the nobility," Canning said. "It was not something that anyone in the middle class or lower middle class could aspire to." University education remains somewhat exclusive in Germany, though its hierarchical system is becoming easier to enter. In elemen- tary school, children take an exam that divides them into one of three schools: gymnasium; realschule or hauptschule. Only gymnasium is a university-preparatory school. Gymnasium has become more accessible VdMMthe past few decades. According to Ger- man dataportal Statista, 15 percentofstudents in 1952 were in gymnasium. By 2005, it was 33 percent. The increasingly open doors of the gym- nasium have caused a strain on universities the past decade and a half, Canning said. Pro- essorships are few. In the Frieburg history department, for instance, Canning said there were nine history professors. The University of Michigan has 90. "There's a second tier of what they call mid-career instructors who, however, have no job security and they're not even permanent lecturers like-you would have here," Canning added. "They're often filling in or actually teaching for free while hoping to geta profes- sorship somewhere else." Johannes von Moltke, associate profes- sor and chair of German, said, "There's over- per semester was unlikely to break the bank; however, the implementation of tuition on principle could later prove difficult. "There's always the possibility that it could be increased," Capotescu said. "We saw that in the U.S. that once higher tuition was intro- duced it kept increasing." In 2012, the average debt of a University graduate was nearly $28,000, with 44 per- cent of the student body graduating with debt. Moreover, while the German government client and because of the way American capi- talism works, customer service is part of the experience... Of course it kind of commodifies education. It becomes a good to be exchanged between a seller and buyer. Whereas in Ger- many, the ideal is still it's a public good so you're not paying or buying for it, you're taking advantage of your right to education. But then it isn't kind of fenced in with all of these con- sumer bells and whistles." That lack-of-consumer model is also reflected in the type of education students can expect. Canning described three types of classes: lectures and small, introductory and advanced seminars. A first-year student in an introductory seminar on the French Revolution, Canning described, would be expected to already know the chronology of the Revolution, or receive suggestions for background reading. The course would focus on reading primary sources - in French - and discussingthem. Students in lecture courses rarely have performance-based measurements, like quizzes or tests, at the end. Instead, stu- dents ask to take an oral exam with a profes- sor if they feel they know the material well enough. "If you bomb, it's your own fault and no one cares," Canning said. "There's nobody there to hold your hand. It's up to you. You're a scholar, you're at the university because you wantto actually learn. Ourlittle 'holding out the carrot' just doesn't happen." LSA junior Alexandra Trecha, who is y studying in Freiburg this year, noticed the difference in expectations. "There definitely isn't as much 'checking in' and students are expected to be much more responsible and invested in their work here compared to the U.S.," Trecha said. At the University, students expect, well, everything from their college experience. The University provides transportation, housing, food, libraries, mental health support, aca- demic and career advising and - perhaps most importantly -- a social scene. In the U.S., the college years are supposed to be "the best time" of your life. Germans see college as a continuation of one's education, as momentous as moving from tenth to 11th grade. More fanfare surrounds. moving away from home. "It's not the place you go and get away from your parents for four years and drink and fig- ure out who you are," Canning said. Capotescu noted that much soul-searching and deciding what one's talents are occurs in high school. Indeed, hopeful doctors in Ger- many attend medical or law school directly after high school rather than dabbling in biol- ogy courses for two years before deciding to major in philosophy. "College is a lot more functional," Capo- tescu said. "You go through university to get to a job." TO READ MORE VISIT MICHIGAN DAILY.COM fashion voyeur: boxers? briefs? boxer briefs? BY MAX RADWIN THE THOUGHT BUBBLE 'm not sure what kind of underwear I'm supposed to buy anymore. When I was a toddler, briefs were the thing. Then boxer briefs when Igrew up alittle. Boxers were cool because you were supposed to sag your pants and show them off. I guess it was considered "cool" at the time. I mean I still think box- ers are cool - cool enough, or I wouldn't wear them. I don't sag my pants like a little hoodlum any- more, though. My boxers have neat patterns on them, usually. Most of them have a checkered pattern of some kind. But the nice ones have vertical stripes. I can't explain it, but there's something classy about vertical stripes. Once my brother asked for silk underwear for Christmas, and they had vertical stripes, too. You can't get silk underwear in check- ered pattern, that's for damn sure. :5 0 Except now, suddenly, all of my friends are wearing boxer briefs. The happy medium between tighty-whities and boxers. Should I also be wearing them? Not that I'm feeling undergarment-related peer pressure, but I'm just wondering if there's a benefit to boxer briefs. Why the switch, guys? They look too tight, too revealing, too uncom- fortable. At the same time, they seem like a more mature type of underwear. It seems like the kind of underwear that a twenty- or thirty- something would wear. In fact, I'm pretty sure that's the kind of under- wear that my dad wears, and he's fifty-something. The other day I was consideringmakingthe change to demonstrate an increased level of maturity. A fake it till you make it kind of thing. But at the same time, I'm content with boxers. They're comfortable, breezy. I like that. So maybe I'll stick with them for now. crowding in German universities. Because it's really accessible, a lot of people study." Rackham student Cristian Capotescu received his history degree from the Univer- sity of Freiburg in 2010. Lectures are not so different in German schools than in the U.S., Capotescu described, with packed lecture halls of hundreds of students. Where differences existed were in semi- nars and tutorials, the latter being something like a class section with a greater emphasis on learning how to better write, read, etc. Capo- tescu said graduate students often teach semi- nars, whereas here professors almost always lead them. Stranger yet, undergraduates are wont to teach these tutorials. "The quality of those sections are a lot lower," Capotescu said. "I certainly think graduate students are more qualified to teach those sections, but is it worth $40,000 a year?" The ban on tuition in Germany was lifted in 2006. Following that, various German states began issuing small semester fees to better its quality of education. Canning said the hugely unpopular tuition actually did not help condi- tions at university. "Either they just conceded that it wasn't enough money to really do anything and it was too controversial to even bother with it," Can- ning said. Capotescu agreed that 500 euros ($624.95) LUNA ANNA ARCHEY/Dail continues investmoney in education, a mere 16 percent of the University's budget come from state appropriations. "The money we need grows and the money we get shrinks," von Moltke said. As recently as 1990, state funding and tuition contributed equallyto the budget. Capotescu noted issueswith a huge student body, not unlike Germany. "We assume that with American educa- tion, you pay so much so it's better. When you look closer at elite public higher education at schools like Michigan, it's not a perfect world or utopia," Capotescu said. "You still have 150 students in a lecture." The increased tuition did encourage a state of mind that does not exist in Germany. Amer- ican college students view themselves as con- sumers at the University; we spend a certain amount of money and expect a certain qual- ity of service. German collegiates, though, are "student-citizens," von Moltke explained. For instance, career advising is more or less non-existent in Germany. Students can use government offices for these things. In fact, most services like housing and public trans- portation for students are provided by the city or state. "Itsjob is to serve the public, not to treat its students as clients," von Moltke said. "For bet- ter and for worse, in the U.S., you are apaying I study water quality, water purification, sustainability of using water ... Water is a huge issue. We don't consider the fact that there could be a drought and you might turn on your tap and water won't come out of it ... You have to have water to do things. And I also just love chemistry and math and you get to do a lot of that (in my field). It's fun, it's super nerdy ... Hey, got to be nerdy about something! -HANNAH ROCKWELL, ENGINEERING SENIOR RPRINTS: WEB WHAT OasO --C I t ll _ r A X c~w~. wot you00 yiNt) A RU-J 1 EC «t I4 A SP'tC-Iz.i So j ,VCIIFl LLO BY ANDREW FULLER