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Americans can study in Germany for free, in English

Palculator

Unconfirmed Member
Any age limits? Im 29 and due to get out of the military soon. Would gi bill pay for it?
Don't quote me on this, but the only thing I remember about my University application forms were them asking if I was above 50 or something. 29 doesn't seem that crazy and I've had plenty of people in my classes who look like they're in their 30s.
 

eot

Banned
Baffles me that this is still a surprise to people on GAF.

Every thread concerning university tuition in the US, there is someone talking about how university is free in many EU countries.

If you're interested in this, check out Scandinavia, Austria, and other central and southern EU states.

Sweden used to be free for all, but now it's just free for EU citizens. I think the tuition fees are low by American standards though.
 

kruis

Exposing the sinister cartel of retailers who allow companies to pay for advertising space.
Germans are crazy for subsidizing education for the rest of the world. Education there is not really free, it's paid for by German tax payers and when thousands of people make advantage of this, the tax bill goes up or education won't be free for German students anymore.
 

YoungFa

Member
Germans are crazy for subsidizing education for the rest of the world. Education there is not really free, it's paid for by German tax payers and when thousands of people make advantage of this, the tax bill goes up or education won't be free for German students anymore.
Did you even bother to read the article? Theres an economic incentive to motivate foreigners to study in germany.
 

YourMaster

Member
Germans are crazy for subsidizing education for the rest of the world. Education there is not really free, it's paid for by German tax payers and when thousands of people make advantage of this, the tax bill goes up or education won't be free for German students anymore.

It isn't free, but it isn't 'paying for' it's 'investing in'. This may come to as a shock to some, but some government expenditures actually have a net-positive return on investment.
In western europe highly educated people don't make many babies, we have shortages in highly skilled labor, so if every second foreign student stays several years after their education to work and pay taxes they'll pay back their education and then some.

And many people stay, because it's easy to get a job with their eductation.
 

oti

Banned
Germans are crazy for subsidizing education for the rest of the world. Education there is not really free, it's paid for by German tax payers and when thousands of people make advantage of this, the tax bill goes up or education won't be free for German students anymore.

You're outgermanangsting Germans.
 
I'd be all over this if I could pass the financial qualifications (proof of sufficient resources).

Really disappointing. I've been enamored with the idea of continuing my education. I'm too poor to do it here in the US, and I'm too poor to do it in Germany where it's free. :/
 

Randam

Member
Tuition fees were state based and in 2009 there were already several states that cancelled them again or never introduced them in the first place, like Hesse or Berlin. So, you could have studied for free. :p

yeah, I know.
but I would have had to move, pay for an apartment, and so on..
 

Bollocks

Member
Germans are crazy for subsidizing education for the rest of the world. Education there is not really free, it's paid for by German tax payers and when thousands of people make advantage of this, the tax bill goes up or education won't be free for German students anymore.

yep incredible dumb idea, foreigners who never paid any tax in this country get a free education with tax payer money and then leave again to go back home with their german tax money education
 

Palculator

Unconfirmed Member
yep incredible dumb idea, foreigners who never paid any tax in this country get a free education with tax payer money and then leave again to go back home with their german tax money education
Well, I'm sure the people in charge were completely oblivious to this very obvious observation and didn't at all consider it when weighing costs vs. benefits.
 
Can you be more specific?
I studied Electronical Engineering at Paderborn University, a nice friendly town with a decent campus and reputation.

Haven't fully decided beyond STEM myself. Thinking along the lines of physics/astronomy/astrophysics. I understand and apologize if I'm being too vague (halfway through HS and feeling rather lost).
 
Haven't fully decided beyond STEM myself. Thinking along the lines of physics/astronomy/astrophysics. I understand and apologize if I'm being too vague (halfway through HS and feeling rather lost).

I'm still not sure what you want to know though.
So I'll start by saying: yes it is possible to study all those in Germany and a multitude of Universities.


On thing is very important to know about the German university system. It is really not that important at what university you study.
We don't have an ivy league where everything else is a waste of time.
 
This link brings up so many "How does Germany work", "Why is Germany so great" and "Can we learn from Germany" videos. They are fascinating to watch.

This looks as if we are arming up... xD
V3guXA3l.png
 
I'm still not sure what you want to know though.
So I'll start by saying: yes it is possible to study all those in Germany and a multitude of Universities.


On thing is very important to know about the German university system. It is really not that important at what university you study.
We don't have an ivy league where everything else is a waste of time.

That's quite a relief to hear. Thank you so much.
 
Haven't fully decided beyond STEM myself. Thinking along the lines of physics/astronomy/astrophysics. I understand and apologize if I'm being too vague (halfway through HS and feeling rather lost).

You could just pick Physics and get all your listed topics.

In my experience are German degrees less specialized than American degrees.
 

oti

Banned
yep incredible dumb idea, foreigners who never paid any tax in this country get a free education with tax payer money and then leave again to go back home with their german tax money education

You know. We try to help people in need as much as we can. And who needs more help than students trapped in a terrible education system.
 

Palculator

Unconfirmed Member
That's quite a relief to hear. Thank you so much.
Thank you!
One thing I'm not sure about: Don't American colleges usually go through a bunch of "general education" courses before you actually fully focus on your major? That's not really a thing here since our highschools cover enough of that already and Universities can just assume you know all of that already. So maybe you'd have to read up on some stuff that gets taught in regular highschool here, but since I have no first hand experience or know people that went through both I can't tell you how much that of a problem that could be.

Edit: Lol, you're not even American. I just assumed since the thread was targeted at Americans. My bad.
 

sphinx

the piano man
Don't quote me on this, but the only thing I remember about my University application forms were them asking if I was above 50 or something. 29 doesn't seem that crazy and I've had plenty of people in my classes who look like they're in their 30s.

I started my Bachelor degere with 34 years and there was never a mention about it.

From the University's side I don't thik there's a limit. From the side of the office for foreigners where you get your visa, though, I think there's a limit, don't quote me but I think is 45 years.

people can and will take advantage of this option, both locals and foreigners.

.- The Semester Ticket, which grants you full transportition in the city and sometimes a whole state ist worth paying your 14 semesters.

.- your health insurance is also like 20% of the actual price compared to when you are a normal person who just works.

.- you are also allowed to work half time and in most cases you are exempt from paying taxes just because.

.- Student and a parent? here! there's money for you!

Sadly I don't have what it takes to up and go to Germany for 4 years.

it sounds easy but it's very very hard and you need a strong character and resilience. People just look at the article and think "yay, here's my ticket for a better future" but leaving friends and family behind for years is a huge thing to do.

yep incredible dumb idea, foreigners who never paid any tax in this country get a free education with tax payer money and then leave again to go back home with their german tax money education

I am Mexican, and I put my house in Mexico for rent and every single mexican peso I got from that has been spent in Germany, pure benefit for the german economy.

regarding Uni, the first year you need to have the complete amount of money for that year up front, then every year you have to show more money again.

you know, Germans are very smart regarding finances.

when Merkel lets all those refugees in and they "help" greece and stuff, they know very well it's for the benefit of Germany's economy,

They know very very well what they are doing.
 

Devil

Member
Welcome to Germany.
We are very nice and polite.
Try to learn at least some German while you're here, we appreciate it greatly.
Never talk about Atemlos durch die Nacht, just don't.
We do not acknowledge the word Soccer.
You have to have a football team. Go with HSV for the most action.
Relax.
Have fun.

Reading HSV with an english voice and pronunciation for the first time ever makes it sound like a nasty illness even more :p
 

Kuldar

Member
It's a good way to handle their demographic issue, a part of students will stay and work in Germany and thus help the german economy.
 
Best thing being a young student was the fact that you would get €150 every month until you are 25 years old because you are awesome.

Reading HSV with an english voice and pronunciation for the first time ever makes it sound like a nasty illness even more :p

It is. The Bundesliga is trying to get rid of the HSV for 50 years now.

We are like syphilis.
 

darkinstinct

...lacks reading comprehension.
"Free" is a very relative term. You need about 850 € a month to cover your living expenses. To make that money you have to earn about 1050 € before taxes/social insurance. You are allowed to work 120 days a year fulltime, that means you have to find a job that pays 13 € an hour to actually cover your cost. That is if you don't do trips home, which can be another 2k a year. The standard student job pays close to 9 € an hour.

I know this is in the OP but it's buried between the other stuff. Also because studies are free the popular courses are incredibly crowded (300 students in a room for 250 is the rule, not the exception). Or they have strict requirements to take them. And only 5 % of all students are allowed to be foreigners. So yeah, it's not that easy.
 

LNBL

Member
If you're European, its also free in Germany, Sweden, other scandinavian countries i thi k and Scotland
 

nOoblet16

Member
it sounds easy but it's very very hard and you need a strong character and resilience. People just look at the article and think "yay, here's my ticket for a better future" but leaving friends and family behind for years is a huge thing to do.
Yep, I moved to UK 5 years ago leaving my family behind and it was a tough decision, after those 5 years in UK I already started feeling "settled in" enough to decide against moving to Germany.


I am Mexican, and I put my house in Mexico for rent and every single mexican peso I got from that has been spent in Germany, pure benefit for the german economy.

regarding Uni, the first year you need to have the complete amount of money for that year up front, then every year you have to show more money again.

you know, Germans are very smart regarding finances.

when Merkel lets all those refugees in and they "help" greece and stuff, they know very well it's for the benefit of Germany's economy,

They know very very well what they are doing.

And not to mention the fact that a lot of students stay and work there, and pay taxes..thereby pouring it back into the system.
 

nOoblet16

Member
"Free" is a very relative term. You need about 850 € a month to cover your living expenses. To make that money you have to earn about 1050 € before taxes/social insurance. You are allowed to work 120 days a year fulltime, that means you have to find a job that pays 13 € an hour to actually cover your cost. That is if you don't do trips home, which can be another 2k a year. The standard student job pays close to 9 € an hour.

I know this is in the OP but it's buried between the other stuff. Also because studies are free the popular courses are incredibly crowded (300 students in a room for 250 is the rule, not the exception). Or they have strict requirements to take them. And only 5 % of all students are allowed to be foreigners. So yeah, it's not that easy.

What kind of trips home costs 2k a year? Unless you are going back 2-4 times a year (why would you do that anyway?) A return ticket from UK to India (which is quite some distance) costs anywhere between £350 to £500 for me.

The % is something that's not really a hard limit and on top of that I am sure they get much less applications than that from internationals.
 
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