10 - Netherlands - Branches of study, specialisation

Fields of study

Bachelor-master system

The bachelor-master system was introduced in 2002. The distinction between higher professional education and university education in terms of their respective goals remains. By now, all 4-year HBO courses and a majority of university courses have been converted into bachelor’s and master’s degree programmes. A bachelor’s programme at university takes three years and a master’s degree takes one or two years. Within the HBO system, all bachelor’s degree courses take four years, and there are now (2007) 130 accredited master’s degree programmes.

The introduction of the bachelor-master system and accreditation system is part of the move towards a common open system of higher education in Europe. Students have a greater degree of choice and can more easily attend a master’s degree programme at a different institution (in the Netherlands or abroad) from the one where they obtained their bachelor’s degree.

Accreditation

The main task of an accreditation body is to accredit existing degree courses and assess new ones. Internationally accepted criteria have to be used in order to ensure that Dutch degrees are comparable to those awarded elsewhere. The Netherlands-Flanders Accreditation Organisation (NVAO) has been monitoring the quality of bachelor’s and master’s programmes since 2003 on a 6-year cycle. NVAO accreditation is not compulsory for master’s programmes that existed before 2003, though they may apply for it on a voluntary basis.

Accreditation is an indispensable element of the bachelor-master system. This entails giving an official stamp of approval to programmes of study that meet certain quality standards. Accreditation is an independent form of certification based on an integrated assessment of the quality of an entire degree course. Bachelor’s and master’s degrees may be awarded for accredited courses and students on accredited programmes are eligible for financial assistance, subject to the terms of the Student Finance Act.

Bachelor’s degree programmes

There are two types of bachelor’s degree course in the Netherlands: broad and narrow. Narrow courses target a specific subject area. A broad bachelor’s degree is multidisciplinary (i.e. it contains elements from several fields of study). Students choose a main subject (major) and a number of optional subsidiary subjects (minors). There are no special regulations governing the major-minor system. Some institutions offer both broad and narrow bachelor’s courses, but an increasing number are opting for the broad variant.

Post-initial master’s degrees

The new master’s degree programmes (for example in Finance, Fine Arts, Health Administration, Real Estate or Theology) do not follow on directly from a specific bachelor’s course. They are primarily designed for people who already have an HBO or university bachelor’s degree and relevant work experience. These programmes do not receive any government funding. However, students who have not yet used up all the financial support to which they are entitled, can still make use of it, on condition that the new course is accredited by the NVAO. In order to be admitted to a post-initial master’s degree programme, applicants need not necessarily hold a bachelor's degree in a related subject. Since the number of places is limited, candidates are individually selected. Post-initial master’s degree programmes are offered by some universities as well as by HBO institutions.

Higher professional education

All existing first degree courses were given the status of bachelor’s degree programmes by law as of 1 September 2002. HBO master’s degree programmes are also recognised by law, providing they are accredited by the NVAO, and HBO institutions can now develop their own master’s programmes for accreditation by the NVAO. Master’s degrees may only be awarded for accredited courses. The existing advanced courses will remain in their present form until they are discontinued by royal decree and upgraded to master’s degree programmes. Many of them already have master’s degree status.

A bachelor’s degree awarded by an HBO institution will qualify its holder for admission to a master’s degree programme at either an HBO institution or a university. However, universities will usually require holders of such degrees to complete a bridging programme. HBO institutions and universities set their own intake requirements.

Government-funded higher professional education courses cover the following seven areas: Education, Economics, Behaviour and Society, Language and Culture, Engineering and Technology, Agriculture and the Natural Environment, and Health Care. Most HBO institutions offer courses in several of these fields. There are full-time and part-time courses and dual forms of training combining study and work experience. Initial teacher training courses at HBO level are dealt with separately In.

University education

Most university courses have already switched to the bachelor-master system. This usually takes places in two stages, resulting in differences within and between institutions. Of the 14 universities, ten teach and carry out research in a broad range of disciplines spanning seven sectors: Economics, Health, Behaviour and Society, Science, Law, Engineering and Technology, and Language and Culture. Three – the universities of technology in Delft (TUD), Eindhoven (TUE) and Twente (UT) – focus predominantly on engineering and technology. The Agricultural University in Wageningen provides courses in agriculture and the natural environment and comes under the Minister of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality. Besides the 14 universities, there are a number of approved institutions, including six offering theological courses, one offering a degree course in humanism, and Nyenrode Business University. There are both full-time and part-time courses, as well as dual courses combining learning and working.

University students are entitled to complete their studies under the old system. Each university may set a reasonable period within which they may do so.

University master’s degree courses

Master’s degree courses at Dutch universities are academic in character and last one or two years. As a rule, students are eligible for a year’s financial support. However, two years’ financial assistance may be granted at the Minister’s discretion, for instance for certain courses in science, technology and education. It is expected that in future this arrangement will also apply to research programmes at master’s degree level and to courses which have proven to take longer than one year to complete.

Master’s programmes vary in focus, and may prepare the student for:
a career in business or society
the teaching profession or
an academic career (for instance via a PhD).

Eurydice - the information network on education in Europe

Date: 2009
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