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Finland's schools to focus less on teaching subjects

 
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nomad soul



Joined: 31 Jan 2010
Posts: 11454
Location: The real world

PostPosted: Wed Mar 25, 2015 5:05 am    Post subject: Finland's schools to focus less on teaching subjects Reply with quote

Why Finland won't be teaching 'math' and 'history' anymore
By Alexander LaCasse, Christian Science Monitor | 24 March 2015
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-finland-wont-teaching-math-history-anymore-165505521.html

Finland will be making drastic changes to an already successful education system. Why now? And will this model change the way other countries go about educating their children?

Despite having an education system that does not rely on standardized test scores, Finnish students perform extremely well on exams that are given to students all over the developed world. But now Finland is looking to overhaul its education system and will now focus on more on "topics" and less on subjects, according to The Independent.

The Finns are calling this "phenomena" teaching. The Independent cites an example of a student enrolling in vocational courses who may choose to take lessons in "cafeteria services." In this example, the adolescent student would study math elements and languages – for serving foreign customers – while working on writing and communication capabilities. Students who are on a more academic track might take a course on the European Union, which would combine elements of history, economics, and foreign languages.

“What we need now is a different kind of education to prepare people for working life," Pasi Silander, Helsinki's city manager told The Independent. “We therefore have to make the changes in education that are necessary for industry and modern society.”

There has been some pushback from Finnish teachers, who currently have a great deal of independence on how they teach their respective courses. It is a very competitive profession – all teachers hold Master's degrees and are far better compensated than their American counterparts, according the the New Republic. Finnish teachers earn 102 percent of what their fellow university graduates make in salary, contrasted with the 65 percent pay American teachers receive compared to college graduates in other professions, according to the report.

Early signs indicate that this new method of education is benefiting student outcomes, The Independent reported. Helsinki schools are already devoting some time to this new style of learning, and current plans call for instituting this type of schooling across the country by 2020, according to the report.

Finland's deviation on educational standards may come as a surprise to some – because Finland trails only Singapore and China in performance on the Program for International Student Assessment, a standardized test given to 15 year olds in 65 of the world's most developed countries. Finland has served as a model for other countries looking to improve their education systems. Teachers from the United Kingdom have made the trip to study and observe Finnish schools. And Americans who are pushing for educational reform often point to the Finns as a model that encourages students to play as they learn. Students in Finland get 15 minutes of recess in between lessons, and students are not administered standardized tests until they are in high school.

The idea of combining subjects to better facilitate learning is nearly a century old. American philosopher and educational reformer John Dewey thought that schooling should better reflect real life. This educational approach was attempted in American schools; once before World War II and again in the 1970's with the "Open Classroom" movement, the Washington Post reported. However, it was abandoned after it was found not to be compatible with an American public school model which expected students to have a certain level of knowledge to be able to move onto the next grade. Combining subjects in this fashion required teachers to have an extensive knowledge of all subjects they were teaching, and some teachers struggled to generate assignments that would placate to a wide range of students' strengths and interests.

With the results looking positive in the early trial runs at Helsinki schools, Finland's new education model looks to be succeeding where previous efforts to combine studies have failed. However, the success of this schooling method will ultimately come down on the country's highly skilled teachers' performance if phenomena learning is to become a tried and true means of education.

(End of article)
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buravirgil



Joined: 23 Jan 2014
Posts: 967
Location: Jiangxi Province, China

PostPosted: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:36 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I found this of interest as well, but a criticism of the reportage is its sensationalism by the international media market, such as

    Radical new plan, Washington Post
    Won't be teaching math and history anymore, CSM,
    Finland Scraps Subjects, Huffington Post,
    Finland Schools Ditch 'Subjects', Inquistir
    Finland to Overhaul, KeylownaNow

From a source claiming to be a Finn:

    As a Finn, I can confirm that most of the education related articles about Finland are complete BS. This is mostly because the so called "journalists" can't be bothered to verify absolutely anything these days. Let's just say that nothing's really changed and someone from the local education committee of Helsinki is just trying to put frosting on a turd and sell it as a cake.

And from another poster in that discussion
    HOWEVER the education articles about Finland are largely not written by Finnish journalists. To them there is nothing special in the education. there really isn't. what's fascinating is how badly other countries f*** up education and devote hundreds of hours yearly only patriotic s*** rather than education. USA, 3rd world countries etc particularly fall into this, in those the school system is supposed to "install values" or s*** like that through old brainwashing techniques, like reciting the oath to the nation, teaching respect for the teacher etc etc. all time that could be spent on educating the kids(and the teachers).

    that's whats different from finnish schools to others, that they at least TRY to focus on educating facts and not trying to just mold your feelings. flag raising bull****? "know your place", "brick in the wall" b***** via school uniforms? yeah, none of that b****t and who your parent is has zero effect on your grades. incidentally, teachers only gain respect if they deserve it and work for it - automatic teacher respect culture died out decades ago in finland now - which is a strange thing in some countries, like in asia. in thailand teachers are respected, yet they do bullshit like drink beer whilst in class "because it's hot" - the school works more as an authority respect attitude adjustment camp than as a SCHOOL - and then as result even the highly educated are too stupid to understand why it's bad.


Maybe later I'll try to find a Finnish source because, despite lousy coverage, I think the topic (Finland's education policy/procedures in general) is great.
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