EPISODE · Aug 12, 2025 · 14 MIN
The Alarming Decline of Dutch Education
from Joannes Wyckmans Podcast · host Joannes J.A. Wyckmans
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sn97IsIcbSgDetailed Briefing: The Deteriorating State of Dutch EducationThis briefing summarizes the critical issues facing the Dutch education system as presented by Ad Verbrugge, Associate Professor at Vrije Universiteit and Chairman of Beter Onderwijs Nederland (Better Education Netherlands). Verbrugge paints a stark picture of decline, attributing it to systemic failures, misguided policies, and a shift away from fundamental educational principles.Ad Verbrugge unequivocally states that the current state of Dutch education is "bad, outright, very worrying" and demonstrably due to "failing policy for years on end." This decline is not recent but has been accumulating over the past 20-30 years, with a significant "plummeting" trend observed after 2010.Dramatic Decline: The percentage of functionally illiterate individuals (those unable to read a newspaper due to complex sentences and multi-syllabic words) has risen sharply:2000: 1 in 102006: 1 in 7 (when Beter Onderwijs Nederland was founded due to concern over this trend)2019: 1 in 42022: 1 in 3Impact on 15-Year-Olds: "One in three 15-year-old students in the Netherlands of the entire population has insufficient reading skills." This refers to native Dutch children, not just recent immigrants.Causes of Declining Literacy:Inadequate Teacher Training (PABOs): Teachers are "insufficiently trained."Flawed Didactics: Schools do not apply "responsible didactics," specifically lacking "explicit direct instruction" (show-and-do, practice, correction). The traditional method of teaching letters, syllables, and words is neglected.Impact of Migration: While not solely responsible, migration plays a role, with a disproportionate number of students with a migration background in these statistics, particularly those who don't speak Dutch at home and whose parents cannot provide support.No Retention Policies: The system no longer allows children to repeat grades, even when they have significant language deficits. This means children with the language level of a seven-year-old are pushed through to secondary education (VMBO), where their issues often worsen.MBO (Vocational Education) Quality Decline: The level in MBO, especially "kaderonderwijs" (practical professions), has been "enormously abandoned."Unacceptable Pressure: The influx of students, including "more than 100,000 from abroad," has created an "unacceptable" pressure on student housing, leading to situations where students are "bivouacking in tents."Unilateral Focus on Quantity: This issue is linked to a "fairly one-sided focus on quantity," resulting in some university programs having "70-80% foreign students," which the system "cannot handle" and is "not at all desirable."I. Overall Assessment: "Outright Bad and Very Worrying"II. Key Problems and Contributing Factors:A. Worsening Literacy and Language ProficiencyB. Housing Crisis for Students & InternationalizationHosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.
What this episode covers
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sn97IsIcbSgDetailed Briefing: The Deteriorating State of Dutch EducationThis briefing summarizes the critical issues facing the Dutch education system as presented by Ad Verbrugge, Associate Professor at Vrije Universiteit and Chairman of Beter Onderwijs Nederland (Better Education Netherlands). Verbrugge paints a stark picture of decline, attributing it to systemic failures, misguided policies, and a shift away from fundamental educational principles.Ad Verbrugge unequivocally states that the current state of Dutch education is "bad, outright, very worrying" and demonstrably due to "failing policy for years on end." This decline is not recent but has been accumulating over the past 20-30 years, with a significant "plummeting" trend observed after 2010.Dramatic Decline: The percentage of functionally illiterate individuals (those unable to read a newspaper due to complex sentences and multi-syllabic words) has risen sharply:2000: 1 in 102006: 1 in 7 (when Beter Onderwijs Nederland was founded due to concern over this trend)2019: 1 in 42022: 1 in 3Impact on 15-Year-Olds: "One in three 15-year-old students in the Netherlands of the entire population has insufficient reading skills." This refers to native Dutch children, not just recent immigrants.Causes of Declining Literacy:Inadequate Teacher Training (PABOs): Teachers are "insufficiently trained."Flawed Didactics: Schools do not apply "responsible didactics," specifically lacking "explicit direct instruction" (show-and-do, practice, correction). The traditional method of teaching letters, syllables, and words is neglected.Impact of Migration: While not solely responsible, migration plays a role, with a disproportionate number of students with a migration background in these statistics, particularly those who don't speak Dutch at home and whose parents cannot provide support.No Retention Policies: The system no longer allows children to repeat grades, even when they have significant language deficits. This means children with the language level of a seven-year-old are pushed through to secondary education (VMBO), where their issues often worsen.MBO (Vocational Education) Quality Decline: The level in MBO, especially "kaderonderwijs" (practical professions), has been "enormously abandoned."Unacceptable Pressure: The influx of students, including "more than 100,000 from abroad," has created an "unacceptable" pressure on student housing, leading to situations where students are "bivouacking in tents."Unilateral Focus on Quantity: This issue is linked to a "fairly one-sided focus on quantity," resulting in some university programs having "70-80% foreign students," which the system "cannot handle" and is "not at all desirable."I. Overall Assessment: "Outright Bad and Very Worrying"II. Key Problems and Contributing Factors:A. Worsening Literacy and Language ProficiencyB. Housing Crisis for Students & InternationalizationHosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.
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The Alarming Decline of Dutch Education
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