https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2019/08/30/what-finland-is-really-doing-improve-its-acclaimed-schools/
Finland has been paid outsized attention in the
education world since its students scored the highest among dozens of
countries around the globe on an international test some 20 years ago.
And
while it is no longer No. 1 — as the education sector was hurt in the
2008 recession, and budget cuts led to larger class sizes and fewer
staff in schools — it is still regarded as one of the more successful
systems in the world.
In an effort to improve,
the Finnish government began taking some steps in recent years, and some
of that reform has made for worldwide headlines. But as it turns out,
some of that coverage just isn’t true.
A few years ago, for example, a change in curriculum sparked stories that Finland was giving up teaching traditional subjects. Nope.
You can find stories on the Internet saying Finnish kids don’t get any homework. Nope.
Even amid its difficulties, American author William Doyle, who lived there and sent his then-7-year-old son to a Finnish school, wrote in 2016 that they do a lot of things right:
What is Finland’s secret? A whole-child-centered, research-and-evidence based school system, run by highly professionalized teachers. These are global education best practices, not cultural quirks applicable only to Finland.
Here
is a piece looking at changes underway in Finnish schools by two people
who know what is really going on. They are Pasi Sahlberg and Peter
Johnson. Johnson is director of education of the Finnish city of
Kokkola. Sahlberg is professor of education policy at the University of
New South Wales in Sydney. He is one of the world’s leading experts on
school reform and is the author of the best-selling “Finnish Lessons: What Can the World Learn About Educational Change in Finland?”
Finland has been in the spotlight of the education
world since it appeared, against all odds, on the top of the rankings of
an international test known as PISA,
the Program for International Student Assessment, in the early 2000s.
Tens of thousands visitors have traveled to the country to see how to
improve their own schools. Hundreds of articles have been written to
explain why Finnish education is so marvelous — or sometimes that it
isn’t. Millions of tweets have been shared and read, often leading to
debates about the real nature of Finland’s schools and about teaching
and learning there.
We have learned a lot about
why some education systems — such as Alberta, Ontario, Japan and
Finland — perform better year after year than others in terms of quality
and equity of student outcomes. We also understand now better why some
other education systems — for example, England, Australia, the United
States and Sweden — have not been able to improve their school systems
regardless of politicians’ promises, large-scale reforms and truckloads
of money spent on haphazard efforts to change schools during the past
two decades.
Among these important lessons are:
- Education systems and schools shouldn’t be managed like business corporations where tough competition, measurement-based accountability and performance-determined pay are common principles. Instead, successful education systems rely on collaboration, trust, and collegial responsibility in and between schools.
- The teaching profession shouldn’t be perceived as a technical, temporary craft that anyone with a little guidance can do. Successful education systems rely on continuous professionalization of teaching and school leadership that requires advanced academic education, solid scientific and practical knowledge, and continuous on-the-job training.
- The quality of education shouldn’t be judged by the level of literacy and numeracy test scores alone. Successful education systems are designed to emphasize whole-child development, equity of education outcomes, well being, and arts, music, drama and physical education as important elements of curriculum.
Besides these useful lessons
about how and why education systems work as they do, there are
misunderstandings, incorrect interpretations, myths and even deliberate
lies about how to best improve education systems. Because Finland has
been such a popular target of searching for the key to the betterment of
education, there are also many stories about Finnish schools that are not true.
Part of the reason reporting and research often
fail to paint bigger and more accurate picture of the actual situation
is that most of the documents and resources that describe and define the
Finnish education system are only available in Finnish and Swedish.
Most foreign education observers and commentators are therefore unable
to follow the conversations and debates taking place in the country.
For example, only very few of those who actively comment on education in Finland have ever read Finnish education law, the national core curriculum
or any of thousands of curricula designed by municipalities and schools
that explain and describe what schools ought to do and why.
The
other reason many efforts to report about Finnish education remain
incomplete — and sometimes incorrect — is that education is seen as an
isolated island disconnected from other sectors and public policies. It
is wrong to believe that what children learn or don’t learn in school
could be explained by looking at only schools and what they do alone.
Most efforts to explain why Finland’s schools are
better than others or why they do worse today than before fail to see
these interdependencies in Finnish society that are essential in
understanding education as an ecosystem.
Here are some of those common myths about Finnish schools.
First,
in recent years there have been claims that the Finnish secret to
educational greatness is that children don’t have homework.
Another
commonly held belief is that Finnish authorities have decided to scrap
subjects from school curriculum and replace them by interdisciplinary
projects or themes.
And a more recent notion is
that all schools in Finland are required to follow a national
curriculum and implement the same teaching method called
“phenomenon-based learning” (that is elsewhere known as “project-based
learning”).
All of these are false.
In
2014, Finnish state authorities revised the national core curriculum
(NCC) for basic education. The core curriculum provides a common
direction and basis for renewing school education and instruction. Only a
very few international commentators of Finnish school reform have read
this central document. Unfortunately, not many parents in Finland are
familiar with it, either. Still, many people seem to have strong
opinions about the direction Finnish schools are moving — the wrong way,
they say, without really understanding the roles and responsibilities
of schools and teachers in their communities.
Before
making any judgments about what is great or wrong in Finland, it is
important to understand the fundamentals of Finnish school system. Here
are some basics.
First, education providers,
most districts in 311 municipalities, draw up local curricula and annual
work plans on the basis of the NCC. Schools though actually take the
lead in curriculum planning under the supervision of municipal
authorities.
Second, the NCC is a fairly loose regulatory
document in terms of what schools should teach, how they arrange their
work and the desired outcomes. Schools have, therefore, a lot of
flexibility and autonomy in curriculum design, and there may be
significant variation in school curricula from one place to another.
Finally,
because of this decentralized nature of authority in Finnish education
system, schools in Finland can have different profiles and practical
arrangements making the curriculum model unique in the world. It is
incorrect to make any general conclusions based on what one or two
schools do.
Current school reform in Finland aims at those same overall goals
that the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development — which
gives the PISA exams every three years to 15-year-olds in multiple
countries — as well as governments and many students say are essential
for them: to develop safe and collaborative school culture and to
promote holistic approaches in teaching and learning. The NCC states
that the specific aim at the school level is that children would:
- understand the relationship and interdependencies between different learning contents;
- be able to combine the knowledge and skills learned in different disciplines to form meaningful wholes; and
- be able to apply knowledge and use it in collaborative learning settings.
All
schools in Finland are required to revise their curricula according to
this new framework. Some schools have taken only small steps from where
they were before, while some others went on with much bolder plans. One
of those is the Pontus School in Lappeenranta, a city in the eastern part of Finland.
The Pontus School is a new primary school and
kindergarten for some 550 children from ages 1 to 12. It was built three
years ago to support the pedagogy and spirit of the 2014 NCC. The
Pontus School was in international news recently when the Finnish Broadcasting Company reported that parents have filed complaints over the “failure” of the new school.
But
according to Lappeenranta education authorities, there have been only
two complaints by parents, both being handled by Regional Authorities.
That’s all. It is not enough to call that a failure.
What
we can learn from Finland, again, is that it is important to make sure
parents, children and media better understand the nature of school
reforms underway.
“Some parents are not
familiar with what schools are doing,” said Anu Liljestrom,
superintendent of the education department in Lappeenranta. “We still
have a lot of work to do to explain what, how and why teaching methods
are different nowadays,” she said to a local newspaper. The Pontus
School is a new school, and it decided to use the opportunity provided
by new design to change pedagogy and learning.
Ultimately, it is wrong to think that reading, writing and arithmetic will disappear in Finnish classrooms.
For
most of the school year, teaching in Finnish schools will continue to
be based on subject-based curricula, including at the Pontus School.
What
is new is that now all schools are required to design at least one
week-long project for all students that is interdisciplinary and based
on students’ interests. Some schools do that better more often than
others, and some succeed sooner than others.
Yes,
there are challenges in implementing the new ideas. We have seen many
schools succeed at creating new opportunities for students to learn
knowledge and skills they need in their lives.
It
is too early to tell whether Finland’s current direction in education
meets all expectations. What we know is that schools in Finland should
take even bolder steps to meet the needs of the future as described in
national goals and international strategies. Collaboration among
schools, trust in teachers and visionary leadership are those building
blocks that will make all that possible.
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