Your decision on which type of higher education
institution is right for you depends largely on what your study
objectives are. You must be quite clear in your own mind about these
before being able to select the most suitable institution.
The university
Technical Universities
Fachhochschule Institutions
Colleges of Art and Music
Other University Status Institutions
The University
Since the days of the higher education reformer Wilhelm von Humboldt
(1767-1835) the principle of the "indivisibility of research
and teaching" has prevailed at universities in Germany. Accordingly,
German universities are not merely institutions which provide
education and training, but are also always places at which independent,
pure and applied research is pursued. "Pure education and
science" itself demands that students engage in strict academic
work. Consequently, the length of studies is higher than in many
other countries. Universities award the academic degrees of Diplom
and Magister Artium as well as the doctorate. They have the right
to confer the habilitation, the professorial teaching qualification,
and can qualify university professors. The new Higher Education
Act (HRG) opened up opportunities for completing degree courses
with internationally compatible qualifications, i.e. Bachelor's
and Master's degrees. Universities are increasingly making use
of this opportunity.
University faculties and schools incorporate the following study
fields: medicine, science, engineering, arts and humanities, law,
theology, economics and social sciences, and agriculture and forestry.
The broad range of disciplines offered within the faculties and
schools facilitates interdisciplinary study or respectively specialisation,
right up to the advanced theoretical fields of a particular science.
Many universities have significant libraries and archives which
support student studies and personal focuses.
Although university studies are based on firm regulations, most
disciplines do provide opportunities for students to pursue independent
and individual research interests.
Technical Universities
Originally, and as the name implies, the technical universities
restricted their teaching to technical and engineering disciplines.
However, in the course of time, they have developed into more
comprehensive higher education institutions. Hence, students can
now also study arts and humanities degree courses at the technical
universities. Nevertheless, the focus of their activities continues
to be directed towards engineering and science.
Fachhochschule Institutions
Students are increasingly deciding to study at one of Germany's
Fachhochschule institutions, particularly because the studies
are shorter and have a more practical focus than is the case in
university studies with their greater research focus. The term
Fachhochschule is often translated as university of applied sciences
to reflect that higher educational and practical nature.
Colleges of Art and Music
The education and training provided by the colleges of art and
music in Germany aim to prepare students for careers as professional
artists or musicians as well as teachers in artistic subjects.
Studies at a college of music or art differ substantially from
those at a university.
Other University Status Institutions
Apart from the above-mentioned types of higher education institution,
Germany also has colleges of education at which teachers are trained
for primary schools, lower secondary schools, special needs schools,
and, in some cases, standard secondary schools and the lower grammar
school classes. In general, however, teacher training has been
integrated into the university structure.
The comprehensive universities developed when a university, a
teacher training college, a Fachhochschule and, in some cases,
a college of art and music were merged to form a single institution.
Consequently, comprehensive universities provide students with
greater choice and an opportunity to change their degree courses
and degrees while still studying.
Germany also has a number of higher education institutions which
focus on very specific subject areas, such as the schools of medical
and veterinary science in Hanover (Medizinische Hochschule and
Tierärztliche Hochschule) or the medical university in Lübeck
(Medizinische Universität). The Deutsche Sporthochschule
in Cologne (sport) and the Kunsthochschule für Medien in
Munich (art and media) train highly-qualified experts. The Filmhochschule
in Munich and Filmhochschule in Potsdam-Babelsberg as well as
the Filmakademie in Ludwigsburg offer degree courses which cover
the whole range of film, TV and media studies. Finally the Hochschule
für Verwaltungswissenschaften in Speyer offers postgraduate
degree courses in administrative sciences for German civil servants,
whereby foreign students are regularly enrolled in courses, for
example, educators from developing countries.
Besides the state-maintained institutions, there are also several,
generally smaller universities maintained by other organisations,
for example, church institutions. And last but not least, students
can choose to attend a small number of privately-maintained universities
which charge tuition fees, however.