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Susan Ochshorn

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Fishing Naked in Finland: What've PISA Scores Got to Do With It?

Posted: 11/30/11 05:53 PM ET

Finland is the mecca of education reformers across the globe. Just before we all gorged on our turkeys and stuffing, Michael Mulgrew, head of the United Federation of Teachers, turned down an invitation for a free, but politically imprudent, pilgrimage from Manhattan Media CEO and mayoral hopeful Tom Allon. Diane Ravitch, of course, had already been there and done that, waxing poetic on the virtues of Finnish education, earlier this fall, in her Education Week blog, "Bridging Differences," with Deborah Meier. Since 2001, when the PISA (Program for International Student Assessments) results went public, this Nordic nation's 15-year-olds have ranked at or near the top of all industrialized nations in reading, science, and mathematics. And we haven't yet stopped talking about it.

Why Finland? Everyone's been in the business of deconstruction, including the Finns, who originally expressed some puzzlement about the ingredients of their success, and then in the spirit of 21st century innovation, launched a web site to meet the world's demand for answers. Here are a few to chew on. First, teachers are highly qualified. Second, they have tremendous autonomy. Third, the teaching profession commands respect, with only one in ten aspiring educators snagging a coveted spot in what are generally regarded as rigorous teacher preparation programs. Next, when teachers do meet their students, in formal school, they're older than most of their primary peers in industrialized countries, and little emphasis on grades is the norm in the early years of schooling. Finally, standardized tests don't make an appearance until very late in the game.

But, wait, there's more.

Recently, I listened and watched, as Judith Wagner, a preschool director and professor of child development at California's Whittier College, did a nifty bit of cultural exporting at "Nordic Perspectives on Caring and Teaching in Early Childhood," a symposium convened by the American-Scandinavian Foundation and the Child Development Institute of Sarah Lawrence. What if I told you that preschoolers have been known to cast a rod into the water, in their birthday suits. That four-year-olds climb trees -- sometimes with eyes closed -- out of the sight of adults. That toddlers eat with knives and forks. Or that preschools are filled with art, and spaces, known as pillow rooms, to which little ones may retreat, alone, for some quiet time.

Shocking, isn't it? And nearly impossible to imagine in our homeland, where three-year-olds ride their scooters encased in armor, where climbers -- not of the arboreal variety -- are made of plastic and grounded in rubber, where a law suit is always a motion away, where parents of college students, not to mention preschoolers, hover, like helicopters, over their progeny, and where teachers, partners in anxiety, hardly dare to leave a child unsupervised, lest some horrific calamity ensue.

The Finns share with their fellow Nordic people a strong commitment to children and a childhood based on egalitarianism, freedom, compromise, and democracy -- the bedrock of the Scandinavian ethos. Reverence for childhood, as a discrete period of development, not as a mere prelude to adulthood, runs deep. Respect for children's views and thinking is paramount. Early childhood, especially, is seen as a time for play and exploration, a vision enshrined in policy as well. Here's a tidbit, courtesy of Pentti Hakkarainen, of the University of Oulu, from the National Curriculum Guidelines on Early Childhood Education and Care in Finland:

Children play for the sake of playing, and at best, play can give them deep satisfaction. Although children do not play in order to learn, they learn through play....Children use everything they see, hear, and experience as elements in their play. When they play, they imitate and create new things...

In early childhood, certain kinds of free play are linked to high creativity. A white paper from the Alliance for Childhood, an advocacy group based in Maryland, highlights the research of Kyung Hee Kim, who analyzed nearly 300,000 scores, of children and adults, on the Torrance creativity test, known as a predictor of future innovation among students. Creativity scores in the United States, Kim told Newsweek, in 2010, had been declining since 1990, with the dip most "serious" from kindergartners through sixth-graders. An ill omen for a society dead set on fostering innovation.

As the U.S. adopts its own national Common Core Standards, with their lack of attunement to young children's unique developmental needs, a look at the Land of the Midnight Sun might prove enlightening. A few years ago, the Danes witnessed a slippage of their 4th graders' PISA math scores. Ever communal and democratic, a group of stakeholders in one of the nation's school districts called a meeting to discuss strategy. The consensus: let the children play more. Wouldn't you know that the scores went up?

 
 
 
Finland is the mecca of education reformers across the globe. Just before we all gorged on our turkeys and stuffing, Michael Mulgrew, head of the United Federation of Teachers, turned down an invita...
Finland is the mecca of education reformers across the globe. Just before we all gorged on our turkeys and stuffing, Michael Mulgrew, head of the United Federation of Teachers, turned down an invita...
 
 
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joeyfoto
“Écraser l'infamie!”
10:53 AM on 12/04/2011
Why are so many of the best places so bloody cold?
Is enlightenment a function of suffering the misery of endless winters?
10:48 AM on 12/03/2011
With family connections going back to 1500 in Finland, I am certain that this examination of differences in Finnish educational accomplishments and U.S. ones oversimplifies, and it is clear the writer is seeking possible excuses for this country's spiraling downward educational process. I would suggest the writer look more closely at the demographic changes and the impacts of "mainstreaming" where the teacher must address the lowest common denominator in class first and look less at how they "play." And then it just might be clear what the differences are.
05:35 PM on 12/02/2011
Very insightful piece. Too bad only a few will read it, e.g., preaching to the choir. I wish the information you present was required reading or required reporting on the 5 o'clock news.
05:34 PM on 12/02/2011
Just want to underline this: we Finns don't let our kids to play as much as they want in order to raise them achieve great goals at school. At least I don't, and I don't know anybody who does. We let them play because it's their right to do so. They're children, not small adults. Putting them through tests and valuations would be devastating to their right to enjoy life care-free and feeling loved unconditionally. (Apolozisies for my poor English.)
06:08 PM on 12/02/2011
I believe all my kids have plenty time to play and yes right to do so, school days might be quite long but vacations are longer than in Finland I believe. I still believe it is important to teach your kid to be responsible about her school work, after all education is the best way to succeed in life.
04:49 AM on 12/04/2011
There are only a few places in the world with longer school vacations than Finland: e.g. 2,5 months summer break.
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joeyfoto
“Écraser l'infamie!”
10:56 AM on 12/04/2011
Menna Waris wrote: "Just want to underline this: we Finns don't let our kids to play as much as they want in order to raise them achieve great goals at school. At least I don't, and I don't know anybody who does. We let them play because it's their right to do so. They're children, not small adults. Putting them through tests and valuations would be devastatin­g to their right to enjoy life care-free and feeling loved unconditio­nally. (Apolozisi­es for my poor English.)"

#3 Fanned for making a very important point about life.

PS. You English is just fine,,,jt
03:07 PM on 12/02/2011
The Finnish education system has two major advantages over American one:
a.) All basic education is free (from Primary to College/University).
b.) A free meal is served every day n Primary-, Secondary and High School. It's not gourmet, bur something eatable anyway.
But of course, in USA this would be called communism. I think it's human dignity.
Anyway, these two factors are much more significant when talking about PISA results than "fishing naked" or any other "scandalous behavior".
02:52 PM on 12/02/2011
A Finn raising kids in US.. I think that hovering over your kids here in US is very taxing to everyone. You are running around like headless chicken and your kids do not get any breathing room from their organized activities. This same thing happens in the school. Parents and supervisors hover over the teachers and kids to perform better. The notion that teachers and schools in Finland have an autonomy and power to make localized decisions have very long way to happen in US. The trust is not there. Ultimately in US it is parent's responsibility to make sure that their kids get the best teachers, best programs, best school systems. This trust that the school system takes care of your kids is the same notion that your society and country takes somewhat care of you too. Here in US people do not trust governmental organizations regardless how good teacher your kids have. The standardized tests are created to make sure that everyone is doing their job and you can prove it by showing the statistics. Tests are not for kids - they are for the helicopter parents, local school boards and business communities. These scores are very important factor in politics and business. The best school system are one of the best advertisements for real estate companies, companies to attract good employees and cities by themselves to improve the rankings in best cities to live. So, kids test scores are very important point in complex US society.
12:49 PM on 12/02/2011
I'm a Finn doing a Ph.D. at an Ivy League school. When around 5yo. my parents let me chop wood without supervision. I would climb trees and rocks. In primary school, when I came home from school I ran out to play. During the summer I would spend the whole day fishing, playing and running around the forest.

I've been laughing at all the garbage that american teens have to endure with. When I was a teen I would go to school, come home, spend an hour max doing homework. I would just go out to play soccer/hockey with friends, hang out, or stay home playing games. Sports was disorganized without coaching and just done for the fun of it. I did not have to bother with community service, and formally joining clubs at school. I did thinks I liked if I wanted and when I wanted.

Speaking to undergrads, they have been doing all kinds of garbage outside of school, so they can put it on college applications. College admissions are destroying the life of bright teens by killing creativity. Instead of exploring interests based on a whim, they have to build some kind of a portfolio of themselves. Unfortunately, society values this behavior of being accomplished, while in reality they are destroying their youth, not enjoying the freedom while they still have it. Everyone has plenty of years as an adult, when they won't have time for anything except work and taking care of their family.
12:01 PM on 12/02/2011
You cannot never copy Finnish school system unless you copy the language too. Words are written and spoken in the same way, there is no spelling competitions due to that. About half of the kids know how to read before they go to first class due to easy reading. Finnish language gives enormous advantage and explains parly why Swedish speaking students (in Finland) do less well in PISA, dispate having less students per classroom.
11:56 AM on 12/02/2011
I know what I'm doing this friday!
11:52 AM on 12/02/2011
as a Finn who moved to US and now a mother of five I strongly disagree. There is many early childhood programs in US and play is huge part of the education. If wearing a helmet while riding a bike is sheltering your child then I am overprotective. My kids climb trees and play at the creek with their "plain American" friends. They use forks and knives even at preschool. And why on earth would someone climb trees eyes closed??? Seriously. I don't remember my teachers being that "soft" if I missed my homework. Whole story made all my Finnish friends laugh.
03:14 PM on 12/02/2011
"Whole story made all my Finnish friends laugh."

How old are you? Born in 50's? 60's? 70's? Finnish education system has not always been the same it is now. You know it as well as I do.
11:48 AM on 12/02/2011
tommi from Finland.
Interesting article on Finnish education and I agree with most of it. Children need to be children and play with some rules (to feel safe). To me, this kind of article always leaves out a few things (important??).

#1 every 45min of education, you have to go out for a 15 min. break and let your brain reboot(in Finland).
#2 no standardized tests(In Finland).
#3 no junk food in schools

One thing I heard many times over the years in the USA (lived there for 6 1/2yrs.), that really caught my ear was don't ever tell children she/he can't do something. This is Bull...(meaning slightly older children, not toddlers or etc.)
If you are a responsible parent, you should know your child well enough to encourage she/he to a certain field of study or hobby where the child can thrive. But, as a young child, encourage them to do as many things as possible (different hobbies and interests) until they are old enough to really know what their interests are and for what activities they are best suited.
10:41 AM on 12/02/2011
I climbed my trees with my eyes open though...and went fishing with clothes on =)
07:35 PM on 12/01/2011
Spot on!!!! When I make learning fun and meaningful for my 7th and 8th graders, they always do well and learn!!
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Rae Pica
09:31 AM on 12/01/2011
Fabulous piece, Susan -- although it made me want to weep with frustration. I'm afraid that, as with the childhood obesity crisis and so many other societal ills, we will not act until it is too late. We can ill afford to have creativity scores dropping in this country!
12:29 PM on 12/02/2011
There's room in Finland... :-)
02:01 PM on 12/03/2011
Yes, welcome to Finland, especially from United States :)
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Pavane
I pick my battles and walk from the rest.
11:52 PM on 11/30/2011
Well, they can have their great scores. WE have Bush's No Child Left Behind and Obama's Race to the Top.THAT will show the world who's boss. Especially when we really get into teaching Creationism as science and throw out that silly theory, Evolution.

And since the Republicans want to eliminate all the safety nets too, why ... we can toughen our kids up by starving them as well. But let them play? Nah. And let's beat up the teachers too.