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UNIVERSITY

Foreign students’ complaints flood Swedish education agency

Complaints from foreign students who’ve been rejected from Swedish universities have left the National Agency for Higher Education (Högskoleverket) struggling to keep up.

Foreign students' complaints flood Swedish education agency

Last year, the Agency’s board of appeals received a total of 1,500 requests from students wishing to appeal admissions decisions made by Swedish universities, reports the Dagens Nyheter (DN) newspaper.

So far this year, around 3,300 students have filed reports, and two universities, Stockholm University and the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), account for about 20 percent of the complaints.

Both schools receive a high number of applications from foreign students seeking entry to the schools’ various masters programmes, including computer science, engineering, and the natural sciences.

And many of those who don’t ultimately gain admission have taken to venting their frustrations to Högskolverket.

“The possibility to appeal is a fundamental right for the students. But the consequence has been that our lawyers have had to put aside their everyday tasks,” said Eva Westberg, head of Högskolverket’s legal department, to DN.

The head of Högskolverket’s board of appeals, Anders Mellstrand, is sympathetic to foreign students who are upset to learn they have not been admitted to the Swedish university of their choice.

“If you come from a different education system it can be hard to see how your own accomplishments will measure up. And to get a free education in Europe is desirable for students from other parts of the world,” he told the newspaper.

Mellstrand recently issued a memo to the heads of Sweden’s universities which explained that appeals from foreign students require the most effort because it’s hard to judge the merits and educational background to which applicants point in their complaints.

But Muhammad Atif Nisar, a native from Lahore, Pakistan now studying at KTH, doesn’t think it’s that hard to figure out what is needed to get accepted to a Swedish university.

“Everything you need to know you can find on the internet,” he told DN.

ISLAM

Police probe opened after poster campaign against ‘Islamophobic’ lecturers at French university

The French government condemned on Monday a student protest campaign targeting two university professors accused of Islamophobia, saying it could put the lecturers in danger.

Police probe opened after poster campaign against 'Islamophobic' lecturers at French university
Illustration photo: Justin Tallis/AFP

Student groups plastered posters last week on the walls of a leading political science faculty in Grenoble that likened the professors to “fascists” and named them both in a campaign backed by the UNEF student union.

Junior interior minister Marlene Schiappa said the posters and social media comments recalled the online harassment of French schoolteacher Samuel Paty last October, who was beheaded in public after being denounced online for offending Muslims.

“These are really odious acts after what happened with the decapitation of Samuel Paty who was smeared in the same way on social networks,” she said on the BFM news channel. “We can’t put up with this type of thing.”

“When something is viewed as racist or discriminatory, there’s a hierarchy where you can report these types of issues, which will speak to the professor and take action if anything is proven,” Schiappa said.

Sciences Po university, which runs the Institute of Political Studies (IEP) in Grenoble in eastern France, also condemned the campaign on Monday and has filed a criminal complaint.

An investigation has been opened into slander and property damage after the posters saying “Fascists in our lecture halls. Islamophobia kills” were found on the walls of the faculty.

One of the professors is in charge of a course called “Islam and Muslims in contemporary France” while the other is a lecturer in German who has taught at the faculty for 25 years.

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