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Offer emergency grants to help refugees, universities urged

German universities need to collect better data and rethink selection system to improve integration, analysis finds

Published on
July 29, 2019
Last updated
July 29, 2019
Source: Getty
Micro-boost paper says refugee students could benefit from micro-loans

Universities can help refugee students by giving out micro-loans or grants needing minimal paperwork to help with rent or health emergencies, according to an analysis that looks at how campuses in Germany can better assist their studies.

About 900,000 migrants entered Germany in 2015 鈥 鈥 although the rate has slowed considerably.

Since then, just over 10,000 refugees have enrolled in university courses, according to earlier this year from the German Rectors鈥 Conference, which says refugee academic integration 鈥渃ontinues to progress well鈥.

But this figure is 鈥渁 rather low percentage鈥 given how many have come to Germany, says Lisa Unangst, a researcher at Boston College in the US, who has recommended a series of changes to the German system that she said could also be useful advice for universities in other countries hoping to educate refugees.

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Several universities 鈥 including the University of Dundee, Georgia State University and Victoria University of Wellington 鈥 have already brought in micro-grants or loans to help low-income students.

These are offered in addition to normal lines of student funding, and designed to cover gaps in rent or health emergencies, Ms Unangst said. There is some paperwork involved in accessing the money, but 鈥渋t鈥檚 not designed to be burdensome鈥, she said.

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Existing student grants and loans for low-income students in Germany are often insufficient to cover actual living costs, according to Ms Unangst鈥檚 paper, 鈥淩efugees in the German higher education system: implications and recommendations for policy change鈥, published in Policy Reviews in Higher Education.Three-quarters of students on university preparatory courses for refugees rely on such assistance.

German universities 鈥 which have less of a tradition of student services than their more residential counterparts in the US or the UK 鈥 should create 鈥渆mergency funds for small, immediate financial needs鈥, recommends Ms Unangst鈥檚 analysis, based on interviews with university staff dealing with refugees. Campuses could also offer food banks, bicycle clinics, and book and computer exchanges, it suggests.

Another factor holding German universities鈥 integration efforts back was inadequate data collection, she said, a consequence of privacy concerns. This meant that universities generally only had data based on voluntary surveys that identified only the region students were from 鈥 not the country 鈥 and did not record what languages they could speak.

Refugees will also struggle to break into the most competitive subjects, such as law and medicine, which require 鈥渁lmost perfect academic performance鈥 at the high school level to win entry, the analysis finds. They are also included in capped international student totals, meaning 鈥渟tudents from Afghanistan are competing against graduating secondary school students from Brazil and Canada for a limited number of spaces鈥.

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But any tinkering with Germany鈥檚 selection system 鈥 which covers just under half of courses, typically science, technology, engineering and mathematics, with the rest having no selection 鈥 to give refugees preferential access could be controversial, Ms Unangst said.

There also seemed to be a 鈥減rofound lack of information sharing鈥 between universities about how to integrate refugees, the analysis found. 鈥淣one of the people I interviewed discussed best practice from other universities,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 clearly work to be done,鈥 she added.

david.matthews@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

Surely this is needless, now that the war in Syria is over and any real refugees will be returning home to rebuild their country.

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