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by Sophie McAdam
True Activist
All German universities will offer free higher education starting this week, after the region of Lower Saxony changed its policies to fit with the rest of the country. German policy-makers say that free university education for all is a basic right, and that tuition fees are unfair and discourage poorer students from continuing with their education.
“Tuition fees are socially unjust,” said Dorothee Stapelfeldt, senator for science in Hamburg, a region which scrapped fees back in 2012. “It is a core task of politics to ensure that young women and men can study with a high quality standard free of charge in Germany.”
A spokesman for the Social Democrats (the country´s leading political party) said during Germany´s elections last March: “Tuition fees keep young people from low-income families from studying and are socially disruptive.”
Dr Holger Fischer, vice-president of Hamburg University, said: “There is a tradition here that education is free from beginning to end, and that is very difficult to change.” This attitude is reflected by students in Germany, who admit to thinking other countries “crazy” for charging people to learn.
International students can also benefit from Germany´s decision to scrap tuition fees, and more information on studying in Germany can be found here. Masters degrees are not included in the plans to scrap tuition fees, although costs are still much cheaper than countries like the U.S for post-grad study.
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