The Young Turks on the Finnish school system:
- The Young Turks: Finland’s Revolutionary Education System
I think at one point in the video he said something misleading about the tests, as if the kids below the age of 16 weren’t being tested at all. There are regular tests in schools, of course, but kids don’t take standardized, national tests before the 9th grade (age 16). Even the kids in the 9th grade are given standardized tests only on some subjects and it’s not a big deal for the kids themselves (the scores don’t matter any more than any regular test you take) — more like a random diagnostic probe into the system. Not all schools even participate in all the tests, or vary their participation from one year to the next. (My information might be a bit dated on this one, though.)AldenG wrote:How well do you think Cenk Uygur understood and correctly reported what he was talking about, Jukka?
These international reports and news stories give so much praise it’s semi-embarrassing. They’re birds-eye view studies of the big picture, but nothing is ever quite that rosy in mundane everyday schoolwork. Or at least it feels there would yet be much room for improvement. For example, teachers (while required to acquire a university-level pedagogical degree themselves) are not paid too well, and are often overworked. Despite of all the fuss about school bullying, many schools still seem to be slow at recognizing it and inefficient at dealing with it. All too many kids are assigned to a single class in order to reduce expenses. Some schools struggle with problems related to the facilities (mold problem in the school building, too small a building for the present generation of kids). Little cozy village schools are being closed down in the name of efficiency and savings, etc.AldenG wrote:I've gotten the impression here in FF that not everyone with kids in the system agrees with the glowing international reports.
Actually there is quite many more of them, especially in Helsinki, but most of them follow pretty ordinary curriculum.Jukka Aho wrote: Another thing mentioned in the video is the lack of private schools. There actually is at least one private school in Finland (Anna Tapion koulu, which is also a boarding school, no less.)
Couple of the things that come to my mind:AldenG wrote: I've gotten the impression here in FF that not everyone with kids in the system agrees with the glowing international reports.
I was trying to think of privately funded “normal” (or “elite”) schools not subscribing to any specific pedagogic or religious ideology, and I kind of filtered out the latter category in my mind, thinking it more as “ideological” than “private” (as in “elite”, “for the more well-offs”) as such. But you’re right, of course.Rip wrote:Actually there is quite many more of them, especially in Helsinki, but most of them follow pretty ordinary curriculum.Jukka Aho wrote: Another thing mentioned in the video is the lack of private schools. There actually is at least one private school in Finland (Anna Tapion koulu, which is also a boarding school, no less.)
http://www.yksityiskoulut.fi/yksityisko ... tyiset.htm
http://stadindemarit.fi/uutiset-politii ... i-tunteita
It felt a bit like he was going through some facts he read somewhere without truly understanding the big picture, like he was doing a presentation in school. But I suppose you can't except more from a tv host.AldenG wrote:How well do you think Cenk Uygur understood and correctly reported what he was talking about, Jukka?
I believe we were lionized years ago.And how well do you think primary education in Finland matches or lives up to the characterizations and global lionization it has recently enjoyed?