Half of Migrants Fail Basic German Language Standard Test

BERLIN, GERMANY - NOVEMBER 11: Recently-arrived immigrants, including from countries such
Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Recently revealed figures have shown that efforts to teach newly arrived immigrants the German language are struggling, with only half of the migrants passing basic language standard tests.

The figures come after a written request from populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) MP René Springer and show that only 51.5 percent of the 172,471 migrants who took part in their first German course could reach the “B1” language level target, Die Welt reports.

The B1 level is regarded as the minimum for migrants to be able to cope with using the German language in an independent way in their everyday lives by the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF).

Federal Government Integration Commissioner Annette Widmann-Mauz stressed the importance of seeing migrants pass the standard, saying, “it’s not just a tick on a paper, but empowers people to establish a social and professional footing.”

Opponents of the government, such as the integration spokeswoman for the Green Group, Filiz Polat, have criticised the figures, though Polat blamed the lack of positive results on BAMF, insisting it was not the refugees who were the problem.

The government has promised to make “quality improvements” to the language courses but Polat said so far there have only been promises and no concrete action taken.

A lack of German-language skills has also been seen in other areas, including in German schools with high migration-background populations. For example, in the city of Duisburg, it was reported that only 8.2 percent of children from migration backgrounds spoke fluent German.

Dr Ralf Krumpholz, the city’s Assistant Minister for Integration, said the situation was even worse, revealing that 16.4 percent of the children spoke no German whatsoever.

In the German capital of Berlin, police also say they are having issues with language fluency among new recruits from migration backgrounds.

Tanja Knapp, the head of Berlin’s Police Academy, recommended the city drop English courses and focus on German ones instead, saying, “if the basic required level of German is too low, then the focus should be on German.”

Follow Chris Tomlinson on Twitter at @TomlinsonCJ or email at ctomlinson(at)breitbart.com

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