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The Finland Phenomenon: Inside the World’s Most Surprising School System

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The Finland Phenomenon from documentary filmmaker, Bob Compton, follows Dr. Tony Wagner through Finland’s extraordinary school system. It’s a short, to-the-point documentary, but it had quite an effect on me, if only because it illustrates so succinctly why our recent approach to education reform is so wrong-headed.

In Finland there are no standardized tests. In fact, there is really very little testing at all. Finnish teachers are not monitored or rated based on test scores, and teachers (as well as their students) have a great deal of autonomy. It is a system built on trust, and the film really drives home the notion that trust – rather than faux accountability – leads to real results, leads to teachers and students and members of government all wanting to live up to the trust given to them rather than simply scraping by.

But trust is something that a society has to work at, and that is tied inextricably to demographics, population size, and history. And the United States simply doesn’t compare to Finland on the trust scale.

 

In Finland there is a certain base-level of quality that every school is require to meet. Teachers are treated as professionals and teaching is an exclusive, competitive field. All students have free transportation and free meals.

Every school is staffed by excellent teachers, and teaching is a profession that excellent people want to enter. Teaching is a life-long career, unlike American schools where 50% of teachers drop-out before five years. Finnish teachers follow a basic national curriculum, but are free to develop their own and use their own teaching methods. They also work as mentors with newer and student teachers.

In America, we have nothing even close to this level of commitment to our poorest students. In the modern reform system and in the old status quo, money flows up to the top and rarely trickles back down. This is represented also in our lack of commitment to vocational education. The Finland Phenomenon illustrates the extraordinary effort the Finnish school system has placed in its vocational track. Fully 40% of Finnish students forego the academic track to learn a skill in their high school years. And these are not under-funded shop classes, but rather high-tech, hands-on classrooms taught by industry professionals who are also teaching professionals.

I’d heard of the successes of Finland’s schools before, but this film really highlighted the gap in vision between Finland and the United States. At the same time, it revealed a certain common ground that I think is important. Unlike the strict, uniform approach to education you might find in a country like Japan, Finland emphasizes a more free-wheeling, creative, and self-driven approach to teaching and learning. These are all qualities Americans have in spades. We should capitalize on those qualities, not subvert them by testing everything to death.

If we can draw one lesson from the film, it is that America has the right DNA for a phenomenal education system, we just haven’t tapped into it yet. Finland has, and so can we.

 

Thanks to Forbes for this wonderful insight.

 

 

Language as a Window Into Human Nature

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How the mind works by examining the way we use words. By looking closely at everyday speech psychologist Steven Pinker paints a vivid picture of the thoughts and emotions that populate our mental lives.

Steven Pinker is Harvard College Professor and Johnstone Family Professor in the Department of Psychology at Harvard University. Until 2003, he taught in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences at MIT. He conducts research on language and cognition, writes for publications such as the New York Times, Time, and Slate, and is the author of seven books, including The Language Instinct, How the Mind Works, Words and Rules, and The Blank Slate.

 

Last Updated ( Monday, 14 February 2011 13:30 ) Read more...
 

Finland's Lessons To The World

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Looking back to its agrarian economy era back in the 30's, Finland has shown a remarkable growth and progress ever since. During the 50s decade, most of the population and more or less 40 per cent of output were still in the primary sector.

During the 70's, Finland was already considered a stable and mature economy compared to its neighbor countries.

Nowadays, according to Newsweek Finland was awarded an Honorable mention as best country in the world. Reasons: best high income, best education.

And according to the World Economic Forum, Finland is considered to be in the first 6th place of the top richest countries around the world, key factors that make it considered a rich country is the fact Finland is an Innovation driven country but also Efficiency driven and with a very poor or zero corruption rates among others.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 17 August 2010 12:40 ) Read more...
 

The Manager of the Future: Time to Go Back Home

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The Manager of the Future should ponder “instruction rather than education” quoting a renown philosophy from the previous century whom I base my writings. Going to a renown Business School and get the highest grades will not be enough at all, trying to orient all the Managerial thought process to just a flat analytic or following pure and cold rational data is not enough nowadays.

It has proved to be a wrong method and it has proved to be not enough, facts and figures are everywhere.

How can you be a successful Manager (CEO) with a very poor Self-Management? Self-Culture and Self-knowledgement is the key and axis to be cogitated and appraised. Self-Management and Self-Culture are a traveling, a reaching, a finding and a winning: Learn how to organize your mind as soon as possible, in that way you will be able to organize your desk. Then make a rational assessment of your overall current situation and act.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 29 June 2010 05:35 ) Read more...
 
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