Research Paper- Finland

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    Joseph Spinetto

    English 1130 Megan Keaton

    4/9/13

    A Comparison of The United States and Finland Education Systems

    In recent years, Finland has achieved tremendous success in the assessment of its

    education system. They are a small country but take education more seriously than most

    other countries. In the 2009 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA),

    Finland bested all other countries in reading and led the standings in science in 2006

    (Huffington Post). The 2009 results came as the U.S. government sought to shock the

    American schooling system out of average performance. In states such as Alabama,

    Mississippi, Arizona and California, fewer than 25% of students are scoring below

    proficiency. In reading, most states scored between 20% and 35% at the students

    respective levels. Washington had a staggering percentage of just 12% (Guggenheim). So

    why is the Finnish way so successful, and how can the United States follow suit? Many

    studies have been conducted on Finlands approach to education and why it is so

    successful. In this paper, I will examine the differences in teachers, government interaction

    and funding for each of the two systems.

    Pasi Sahlberg is an education official in Finland and is also the author of the article

    Lessons from Finland. She asks the same question How did a country with an

    undistinguished education system surge to the head in just a couple of decades? (Sahlberg

    1). The teachers are one of the main factors she points to as being the reason for this

    sudden aggrandizement to the top. The Finnish system does not employ external

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    standardized student testing to drive the performance of schools or a rigorous inspection

    system of schools and teachers. Instead, the Finnish system relies on the expertise and

    professional accountability of teachers who are knowledgeable and committed to their

    students and communities (Sahlberg 1). Teaching is consistently the most admired

    profession in opinion polls of high school graduates, but teaching is not an easy career to

    pursue (Sahlberg 2). Only about 5,000 of about 20,000 applicants will be accepted after

    given rigorous tests that assess not only knowledge, but also interpersonal skills. Once in

    the program, the teachers are put on the requirement tract for a masters degree in one

    subject and one or two minor subjects; preschool and kindergarten teachers must have a

    bachelors degree. This program can take five to seven and a half years to complete

    (Sahlberg 3). The programs are nationally coordinated to ensure coherence and success.

    The United States is not up to par with these standards. In a study conducted by Kelli

    Randolph and Dylinda Wilson-Younger, Ph. D., multiple states within the United States only

    require that teachers have two years of college education with no minors what so ever. The

    No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), put in place by the Bush administration in 2001,

    reinforced this (Randolph, Wilson Younger 5). A study done in the United States mentioned

    in the documentary called Waiting for Supermandirected by Davis Guggenheim, states

    thatbad teachers only cover 50% of the curriculum set by the states, whereas a good

    teacher can cover 150% (Davis Guggenheim). This means the students in these

    classrooms progress three times as fast. Another study from the National Center for

    Education Statistics found thathigh school math and science students of teachers with

    subject-specific training have greater achievement (Brady). Many U.S. school systems

    http://nces.ed.gov/pubs97/97535l.pdfhttp://nces.ed.gov/pubs97/97535l.pdf
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    defer to teachers with higher degrees when they hire faculty, and teachers are required to

    have some kind of state certification along with a bachelors degree. However, the precise

    certification requirements vary, depending on how teachers enter the profession and what

    state they teach in suggests Heather Brady in her article entitled The U.S.s low standards for

    Teacher Training. Schools try to hire more qualified teachers, but there is a concept

    enforced by the teachers unions call tenure. This means that once a teacher is hired, they

    cannot be fired based on the way they teach. This gives bad teachers a way to stay and not

    change the way they teach. This also ensures equality to the teachers by not being paid

    based on merit but instead by strict contract. Michelle Rhee was appointed to be chancellor

    of the Washington D.C. school system from 2007 until 2010. She came up with a new way of

    payroll for teachers. She wanted for tenure to be killed and instead for teachers to be paid

    based on merit. Good teachers would be paid almost two times more than bad teachers and

    some teachers would be making in the six-figure range. Once it was time to vote on the

    concept, the teacher unions stepped in and a vote was not even considered (Guggenheim).

    In Finland, the central government has only limited influence on how the teachers

    should teach. There are no standardized tests or set curriculums in Finland. Teachers are

    given more autonomy and responsibility for students assessment and curriculum

    (Sahlberg 7). The first reason for this is Finlands high priority for personalized learning

    and creativity. The progress of each student is judged more against his or her individual

    development and abilities rather than against statistical indicators. Second, education

    authorities insist that curriculum, teaching and learning (rather than testing) should drive

    teachers practice to improve both teachers and students work throughout the academic

    http://www2.ed.gov/teachers/become/programs/edpicks.jhtmlhttp://wdcrobcolp01.ed.gov/Programs/EROD/org_list.cfm?category_cd=SEAhttp://wdcrobcolp01.ed.gov/Programs/EROD/org_list.cfm?category_cd=SEAhttp://wdcrobcolp01.ed.gov/Programs/EROD/org_list.cfm?category_cd=SEAhttp://wdcrobcolp01.ed.gov/Programs/EROD/org_list.cfm?category_cd=SEAhttp://www2.ed.gov/teachers/become/programs/edpicks.jhtml
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    year. Last but not least, the reason for less governmental control is the act of determining

    students academic performance should be seen as a responsibility of the school and

    teacher, not external assessors. It is felt that teachers are the best judges of how their own

    students are progressing in school (Sahlberg 8). These methods are supported in the study

    conducted by Asiye Toker Gokce and Cevat Celep, comparing the educational systems of

    Europe. They saw that the education goals of Finland were to teach children to carry a

    sense of responsibility, creativity and peaceful relations with the people and be compatible

    with the Finnish society (Gokce, Celep 6). This is different than any of the other schools

    that were used in their research because of the major focus on creativity and self-

    fulfillment.

    In the United States, the central government maintains a high level of involvement

    in the way we educate our children. Within the last decade one of the biggest changes made

    has been the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB). In the study mentioned earlier by Kelli

    Randolph and Dylinda Wilson-Younger Ph.D., they did research on the NCLB Act to find the

    pros and cons from the beginning until today. The reason for the Act was to close the

    achievement gap between students by making schools more accountable. To do this, the

    NCLB Act requires any schools receiving any types of federal funding to administer some

    type of standardized test to their students every year (Randolph 1). The reason for this

    testing is to measure student achievement and to make sure students are meeting the core

    requirements established by their states. Looking back at Finland, this is the complete

    opposite of what they are doing.

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    The NCLB Act also tried to reform the budget the schools were using. To receive

    Title 1 funds, the schools must be showing AYP or adequate yearly progress. AYP is

    defined, as there must be reasonable and establish guidelines for continuous and

    substantial progress each year. In an effort to improve test scores to meet the AYP, many

    states have had to cut out their arts programs and in many cases have cut nonessential

    subjects such as social studies, foreign language, health, and science. The courses listed as

    being nonessential are the ones Finland is trying to incorporate the most at the younger

    ages. Today, a new initiative released by the Obama administration called Race to the Top

    is part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The Act plans to give four billion

    dollars to 19 states that have robust plans that address the four key areas of K-12

    education (White House). These areas include development of rigorous standards and

    better assessments, adoption of better data systems to provide schools, teachers, and

    parents with information about student progress, support for teachers and school leaders

    to become more effective, and to increase emphasis and resources for the turn around of

    lower performing schools. In all of those areas, none of them support bringing funding back

    to the arts or the so-called nonessential courses. The act has had positive actions too

    though. In 2012, the program invested nearly $400 million in schools to create new

    models to personalize learning for students (White House). This is on track to be more

    similar to the Finnish way of educating and could raise our nation back to the top with

    more money invested. The article submitted by the White House does not tell where

    exactly the money goes. It says it will go to education, but that could be to the teacher

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    unions, the construction of new schools, or a wide variety of other forms within education.

    It is unlike Finland because it does not go directly to the classroom.

    The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) made

    multiple books called Reviews of National Policies for Education. They made one for Finland

    that thoroughly evaluates each part of the education process. In the book, they describe

    how most of the funding allotted to the schools goes directly to the classrooms (OECD 155).

    Even though the funding percentage for education is relatively high, the Finnish Ministry of

    Education plans to double the public funding for teacher professional development by

    2016.

    The Finnish education system is definitely not perfect. No system in the world can

    be labeled as perfect. Everyone has their own opinions and will continue to voice those

    opinions from war to education policy. Finland has developed a unique and successful

    system with what they have. America is continuing to try new things to keep a high

    standard we hold ourselves to. Americas system is also not perfect. We need to watch

    these rising nations and try to incorporate what has been successful for them and learn

    from them. America is 25th in the world in math, and 23rd in the world in science, but when

    our students were asked where they think they are ranked, we are number one

    (Guggenheim). Americans fill 50 of every 125 highly skilled jobs in America

    (Guggenheim). People from around the world occupy the rest because there are not enough

    people coming out of our education system, smart enough to fill them. We need to open our

    eyes and realize the competition we are up against. We need to start making the changes

    necessary to be the best. From the teachers all the way down to the future students,

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    everything matters when it comes to the future of the world. Education is the window to

    the future.

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    Works Cited

    Randolph, Kelli, and Dylinda Wilson-Younger. "Is No Child Left Behind Effective For

    All Students?" Parents Don't Think So." Online Submission (2012): ERIC. Web. 24 Mar.

    2013.

    Sahlberg, Pasi. "Lessons From Finland: Where The Country's Education System Rose

    To The Top In Just A Couple Decades." Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed For

    Quick Review 77.3 (2011): 18-24. ERIC. Web. 24 Mar. 2013.

    Gokce, Asiye Toker, and Cevat Celep. "A Comparison Of Educational Systems Of

    Turkey, Malta, Ireland, Spain, Sweden, Portugal, Finland, Greece, Belgium, The Netherlands

    And Denmark." Online Submission (2011): ERIC. Web. 24 Mar. 2013.

    Finland: Higher Education. Paris: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and

    Development, 1995. Print.

    "Race to the Top." The White House. The White House, 31 Mar. 2013. Web. 31 Mar.

    2013. Web.

    "Finland Schools' Success Story: Lessons Shared At California Forum." Huffington

    Post. (2012): n. page. Web. 9 Apr. 2013.

    Waiting for "Superman. Dir. Davis Guggenheim. Perf. Geoffrey Canada, Michelle Rhee

    and Bill Strickland. Paramount Vantage, 2010. DVD.