Campus

Swingen met een strikje

Within Temptation treedt op met het Metropole Orkest, Caro Emerald haalt nummer 1 in de hitlijsten – dus ja, natuurlijk heeft de Delftse Groover BigBand succes. Al vijf jaar, en dat wordt vrijdag 4 juni groots gevierd in het Flora Theater.

Je kunt er een lang verhaal van maken, maar eigenlijk zijn de leden van de Delftse studentenjazzvereniging Groover gewoon gek op een feestje. Lid zijn betekent weekends vol jamsessies, tripjes naar concerten, muzikale workshops en vooral: zelf concerten geven. De twintig musici van de bigbandsectie maken daar in smoking met roze strik een extra theatraal spektakel van, met zangeres Suzan Heykoop als swingend boegbeeld. “Deze band doet zijn naam eer aan, it really grooves!”, riep Henk Meutgeert, dirigent van het jazzorkest van het Concertgebouw al eens.

Tijdens het lustrumconcert speelt de bigband een speciaal repertoire, vol latin, swing en pop. Ook spelen de bandleden een paar nummers met jazzkoor Vocallz van Groover. “Het is één van de eerste concerten die we echt zelf organiseren en waarbij de bigband centraal staat”, zegt bassist en vijfdejaars elektro Wyger Brink (23) trots. En dat terwijl ze al vaak optraden. Tijdens de Owee bijvoorbeeld, de huldiging van het Nuna-zonneraceteam en de Varsity. “Vorige maand stonden we nog op het Just Jazz-feest in Speakers. De grote zaal stond helemaal vol en iedereen genoot. De impuls die je als band dán krijgt, is echt geweldig.” Om over het publiek maar niet te spreken. Want één garantie krijg je aanstaande vrijdag: de voeten gaan van de vloer. Big time.

Lustrumconcert Groover Bigband. Vrijdag 4 juni om 20.30 uur in het Flora Theater. Entree: € 10, inclusief twee drankjes. Kaartjes bestellen via bigband@grooverjazz.nl

TU Delft’s BSc programmes use a first-year diploma (propedeuse) system, whereby first-year students must earn a certain number of course credits in order to progress to their second-year of study. But from 2005 to 2007, only an average of 17 percent of the university’s first-year BSc students managed to earn enough credits to receive their first-year diplomas, according to recently released figures. Students in the applied sciences programmes performed better than students in engineering or design-based programmes. An average of one in four students following the applied mathematics and sciences programmes, and life science & technology, earned their first-year diplomas in one year (or ‘p-in-1’ for short), yet these students were high achievers compared to the first-year students studying maritime engineering (one out of 25 students pass rate) and architecture (one out of 12). Systems Engineering, Policy Analysis and Management students scored 14 percent, three percentage points below the average for all TU Delft first-year BSc students. But according to Els van Daalen, director of education at the Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management (TPM), students at this faculty are involved in more extracurricular activities: “They enjoy participating in commissions and organising things.”

To progress from one year to the next at the TPM faculty, students should earn an average of 45 or more course credits per year. For first-year students, the average was 35 course credits per year. One method introduced to help TPM students perform better is the ‘TB-week’, whereby, in the first week of the academic year, the students are given a summary review of all the courses they will study throughout the entire year. Van Daalen: “This gives them a better overview of their entire educational programme. Whereas students know what physics and mathematics involve, at the TPM faculty it is less self-evident what certain courses entail.”

At the end of TB-week, students fill out forms, explaining what they had learned and how they intend to approach their studies. “If students later receive a negative academic evaluation, this form can then play a role,” Van Daalen explains, while adding that TPM’s teachers now place greater emphasis on practical coursework. “When studying mathematics, it’s normal, for instance, for students to work on equations.” This is also perhaps why physics students perform better. “If you don’t like physics, you wouldn’t come to study at this faculty,” says Rob Mudde, director of education at the Faculty of Applied Sciences (AS).

The AS faculty achieved a first-year diploma rate of 27 percent – the same as last year, but excluding students who quit their studies or switched to other programmes. “Even if you have model students, you won’t achieve a 100 percent p-in-1 rate,” Mudde says, while adding that he believes other Dutch universities have around 30 percent p-in-1 rates.

Five years ago the AS faculty introduced various new educational methods, while also giving more attention to individual students. Long, dull lectures in large lecture halls were replaced by theoretical subjects taught in smaller academic blocks and course work performed by small groups of students. Mudde: “The pass rates for introductory physics courses rose from 40 to 70 percent.” AS staff members also meet with each student four times per year to find out how they’re progressing in their studies. “We come across students who are satisfied that they already have ten course credits in April,” Mudde says, “but we want them to understand that they must remain realistic about their study progression.”  

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