The Children Must Play
While observing recess outside the Kallahti Comprehensive School on
the eastern edge of Helsinki on a chilly day in April 2009, I asked
Principal Timo Heikkinen if students go out when it’s very cold.
Heikkinen said they do. I then asked Heikkinen if they go out when it’s
very, very cold. Heikkinen smiled and said, “If minus 15
[Celsius] and windy, maybe not, but otherwise, yes. The children can’t
learn if they don’t play. The children must play.”
In comparison to the United States and many other industrialized nations, the
Finns have implemented a radically different model of educational
reform—based on a balanced curriculum and professionalization, not
testing. Not only do Finnish educational authorities provide students
with far more recess than their U.S. counterparts—75 minutes a day in
Finnish elementary schools versus an average of 27 minutes in the
U.S.—but they also mandate lots of arts and crafts, more learning by
doing, rigorous standards for teacher certification, higher teacher pay,
and attractive working conditions. This is a far cry from the U.S.
concentration on testing in reading and math since the enactment of No
Child Left Behind in 2002, which has led school districts across the
country, according to a survey by the Center on Education Policy, to significantly narrow their curricula. And the Finns’ efforts are paying off: In December, the results from the 2009 Program for International Student Assessment (PISA),
an exam in reading, math, and science given every three years since
2000 to approximately 5,000 15-year-olds per nation around the world,
revealed that, for the fourth consecutive time, Finnish students posted
stellar scores. The United States, meanwhile, lagged in the middle of
the pack.
In his State of the Union address, President Obama outlined his plans
for reforming U.S. public education, including distributing competitive
grants, raising test scores, and holding teachers accountable for
student achievement. But there is much Finland can teach America’s
reformers, and the rest of the world, about what outside of testing and
rigid modes of management and assessment can make a nation’s schools
truly excellent.
Finland’s schools weren’t always so successful. In the 1960s,
they were middling at best. In 1971, a government commission concluded
that, poor as the nation was in natural resources, it had to modernize
its economy and could only do so by first improving its schools. To that
end, the government agreed to reduce class size, boost teacher pay, and
require that, by 1979, all teachers complete a rigorous master’s
program.
Today, teaching is such a desirable profession that only one in ten
applicants to the country’s eight master’s programs in education is
accepted. In the United States, on the other hand, college graduates may
become teachers without earning a master’s. What’s more, Finnish
teachers earn very competitive salaries: High school teachers with 15
years of experience make 102 percent of what their fellow university
graduates do. In the United States, by contrast, they earn just 65
percent.
Though, unlike U.S. education reformers, Finnish authorities haven’t
outsourced school management to for-profit or non-profit organizations,
implemented merit pay, or ranked teachers and schools according to test
results, they’ve made excellent use of business strategies. They’ve won
the war for talent by making teaching so appealing. In choosing
principals, superintendents, and policymakers from inside the education
world rather than looking outside it, Finnish authorities have likewise
taken a page from the corporate playbook: Great organizations, as the
business historian Alfred Chandler documented, cultivate talent from
within. Of the many officials I interviewed at the Finnish Ministry of
Education, the National Board of Education, the Education Evaluation
Council, and the Helsinki Department of Education, all had been teachers
for at least four years.
The Finnish approach to pedagogy is also distinct. In grades seven
through nine, for instance, classes in science—the subject in which
Finnish students have done especially well on PISA—are capped at 16 so
students may do labs each lesson. And students in grades one through
nine spend from four to eleven periods each week taking classes in art,
music, cooking, carpentry, metalwork, and textiles. These classes
provide natural venues for learning math and science, nurture critical
cooperative skills, and implicitly cultivate respect for people who make
their living working with their hands.source : http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/82329/education-reform-Finland-US
COMMENT :
wow! proud of the meaningful words that can describe and thumbs up to the learning system in the country of Finland. a comfortable learning, fun, and not stressful for the students. according to the news I've heard on television, there is very much a learning system in a country different from Indonesia. where each class there are 3 teachers who taught and guided by a teacher friendly with the best university graduates and 10 best performing in the campus, the student sector in any class a maximum of only 20, it is intended to create an intensive learning. in addition there was tiu-free dressing and not prosecuted verseragam with many rules as in Indonesia: (and more fun, if there is a national test of students in Finland students are free to choose subjects that diujiankan for himself, but only the Finnish language that required the country's . hear it so much fun :) such a system that must be emulated by the government of Indonesia to improve the quality of education in Indonesia. :)
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