Education

Over 48,000 students want their tuition back

Give students back their tuition fees from this year, or let them study for free next year: more than 48 thousand students have signed a petition.

In an online petition, over 48 thousand students demand compensation for all tuition fees paid this academic year. (Photo: Dalia Madi)

The coronavirus pandemic has completely upended the Dutch educational system. To mitigate the effects of the containment measures, Education Ministers Van Engelshoven and Slob announced a large support package of 8.5 billion euros last February.

This will also go some way towards compensating students, as they will receive a 50 percent discount on their tuition fees next year. Students graduating this year will also be compensated. Most of them will receive a refund for three months’ tuition, or 535 euros. 

Slogan
But that just won’t cut it, say the students behind the initiative Tuition Fee Refunds NOW!. Their online petition demands full compensation for all tuition fees paid in the 2020-2021 academic year. This could also take the form of a tuition fee waiver for next year, or student debt reductions. As their slogan puts it: “Why half a refund for a full-blown crisis?”.

The 48,000 digital signatures collected by Tuition Fee Refunds NOW! are more than enough to put their cause on the agenda of the House of Representatives, which requires only 40,000 signatures.

Non-EU studentenNon-EU students
The petition is also submitted on behalf of non-EU students. ” The petition is for everyone who studies in the Netherlands,” the action group says. “We are also in contact with a group of internationals who started a petition specifically for this purpose.”

In an interview with the Groningen student newspaper UKrant, the petitioners said they were optimistic about their chances. After all, they said, in February a majority of Parliament voted in favour of an extra, tuition-free year for delayed students.

Still, it remains to be seen whether these tens of thousands of signatures will sway the government. Full refunds would be very expensive, and The Hague sees the 50 percent discount currently being offered as a generous gesture.

HOP, Evelien Flink/Delta, Marjolein van der Veldt
Translation: Taalcentrum-VU

HOP Hoger Onderwijs Persbureau

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