According to a pass rate analysis for the current academic year, VUB “generation students” – students registered in higher education in Flanders for the first time – passed 54.4% of their exams in the first session. The figure for the previous year was 51.7%. According to the university, this progress is an encouraging sign that academic teaching is slowly recovering after the challenges brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Initially, study efficiency (the number of courses students pass compared to the total number of courses) among generation students in the first session was relatively stable, at 63.4% in 2017-2018 and 62.3% in 2018-2019 and 2019-2020. In the following two years, the pandemic had a negative impact on pass rates, which fell to 61.2% in 2020-2021 and 51.7% in 2021-2022. The last academic year marked a turning point, however, with the number of students passing in the first session rising by 3 percentage points.
“Generation students can once again take classes, integrate in social and academic life at their university and enjoy a connected student life in normal circumstances, things they were lacking during the pandemic,” says Nadine Engels, vice-rector for Education and Student Affairs. “While we’re not yet at the level we were five years ago, I’m convinced we are catching up. With our strong teaching policy, we will do everything in our power to maximise every student’s chances of success.”
After the second session, the number of generation students passing is expected to be higher.
Bachelor and master’s students
The pass rates of undergraduate and graduate students also show a positive trend. Among bachelor students, the total pass rate for the first session was 62.2%, while for master’s students the rate was 83.3%. Both groups show a slight improvement compared to the previous academic year, when the rate was 61.9% for bachelor and 82.5% for master’s students. Although they are yet to reach the success rate of five years ago – 70.4% and 86.5% respectively – the university believes this positive trend will also continue for this group of students, thanks to high-quality teaching.