Why Are Finland's Schools Successful?
The country's achievements in education have other nations doing their homework
- By LynNell Hancock
- Photographs by Stuart Conway
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2011, Subscribe
"This is what we do every day," says Kirkkojarvi Comprehensive School principal Kari Louhivuori, "prepare kids for life." Stuart Conway
It was the end of term at Kirkkojarvi Comprehensive School in Espoo, a sprawling suburb west of Helsinki, when Kari Louhivuori, a veteran teacher and the school’s principal, decided to try something extreme—by Finnish standards. One of his sixth-grade students, a Kosovo-Albanian boy, had drifted far off the learning grid, resisting his teacher’s best efforts. The school’s team of special educators—including a social worker, a nurse and a psychologist—convinced Louhivuori that laziness was not to blame. So he decided to hold the boy back a year, a measure so rare in Finland it’s practically obsolete.
Finland has vastly improved in reading, math and science literacy over the past decade in large part because its teachers are trusted to do whatever it takes to turn young lives around. This 13-year-old, Besart Kabashi, received something akin to royal tutoring.
“I took Besart on that year as my private student,” Louhivuori told me in his office, which boasted a Beatles “Yellow Submarine” poster on the wall and an electric guitar in the closet. When Besart was not studying science, geography and math, he was parked next to Louhivuori’s desk at the front of his class of 9- and 10-year- olds, cracking open books from a tall stack, slowly reading one, then another, then devouring them by the dozens. By the end of the year, the son of Kosovo war refugees had conquered his adopted country’s vowel-rich language and arrived at the realization that he could, in fact, learn.
Years later, a 20-year-old Besart showed up at Kirkkojarvi’s Christmas party with a bottle of Cognac and a big grin. “You helped me,” he told his former teacher. Besart had opened his own car repair firm and a cleaning company. “No big fuss,” Louhivuori told me. “This is what we do every day, prepare kids for life.”
This tale of a single rescued child hints at some of the reasons for the tiny Nordic nation’s staggering record of education success, a phenomenon that has inspired, baffled and even irked many of America’s parents and educators. Finnish schooling became an unlikely hot topic after the 2010 documentary film Waiting for “Superman” contrasted it with America’s troubled public schools.
“Whatever it takes” is an attitude that drives not just Kirkkojarvi’s 30 teachers, but most of Finland’s 62,000 educators in 3,500 schools from Lapland to Turku—professionals selected from the top 10 percent of the nation’s graduates to earn a required master’s degree in education. Many schools are small enough so that teachers know every student. If one method fails, teachers consult with colleagues to try something else. They seem to relish the challenges. Nearly 30 percent of Finland’s children receive some kind of special help during their first nine years of school. The school where Louhivuori teaches served 240 first through ninth graders last year; and in contrast with Finland’s reputation for ethnic homogeneity, more than half of its 150 elementary-level students are immigrants—from Somalia, Iraq, Russia, Bangladesh, Estonia and Ethiopia, among other nations. “Children from wealthy families with lots of education can be taught by stupid teachers,” Louhivuori said, smiling. “We try to catch the weak students. It’s deep in our thinking.”
The transformation of the Finns’ education system began some 40 years ago as the key propellent of the country’s economic recovery plan. Educators had little idea it was so successful until 2000, when the first results from the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), a standardized test given to 15-year-olds in more than 40 global venues, revealed Finnish youth to be the best young readers in the world. Three years later, they led in math. By 2006, Finland was first out of 57 countries (and a few cities) in science. In the 2009 PISA scores released last year, the nation came in second in science, third in reading and sixth in math among nearly half a million students worldwide. “I’m still surprised,” said Arjariita Heikkinen, principal of a Helsinki comprehensive school. “I didn’t realize we were that good.”
In the United States, which has muddled along in the middle for the past decade, government officials have attempted to introduce marketplace competition into public schools. In recent years, a group of Wall Street financiers and philanthropists such as Bill Gates have put money behind private-sector ideas, such as vouchers, data-driven curriculum and charter schools, which have doubled in number in the past decade. President Obama, too, has apparently bet on competition. His Race to the Top initiative invites states to compete for federal dollars using tests and other methods to measure teachers, a philosophy that would not fly in Finland. “I think, in fact, teachers would tear off their shirts,” said Timo Heikkinen, a Helsinki principal with 24 years of teaching experience. “If you only measure the statistics, you miss the human aspect.”
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Related topics: Child Education Finland
Additional Sources
“The Children Must Play: What the United States could learn from Finland about education reform” by Samuel E. Abrams, The New Republic, January 28, 2011
“Once a Leader, U.S. Lags in College Degrees” by Tamar Lewin, The New York Times, July 23, 2010
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Comments (149)
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I picked up on the "43% of Finns go to vocational school" for high school. Just curious--are they included in the testing data? Because results would certainly be skewed if not. I agree there is WAY too much emphasis on standardized testing in the US. We also make the error of looking to schools to fix major societal problems--poverty, teen pregnancy, drug use, divorce, etc.
Posted by joe on May 17,2012 | 01:57 PM
Great story, meticulously researched and very informative. Would like to know about Finnish teacher salaries, professional development, and whether or not they have teachers unions--and how these factors contribute to their success, if at all.
Posted by Marion Jacobson on May 16,2012 | 09:51 PM
well if anything needs help, its chesterfield county in VA, USA. I Have to retake my trig class because my teacher doesn't allow us to do our problems, she does them. I got help from my brother paol and he was AMAZING!!! he walked me through exactly what to do and then i was fine. if teachers would take one more second to actually teach instead of sit on their computers then i think the world would be a WAYYYY more educated place.
Posted by Michael on May 15,2012 | 02:50 PM
I think that standardized testing that teachers in the US are forced to spend most of the school year preparing our children for just doesn't seem to be helping our children.
Posted by Natasha Gonell on April 30,2012 | 10:10 AM
Insprational story. Hope Australians educators take note and implement changes
Posted by Maria Harris on April 27,2012 | 12:50 AM
I really liked to read this article. I have learned many important things about Finnish education system. I am amazed. Hope one day my coutry and America can take advantage from Finnish system since I am tired of taking standardized tests. Also, I am going to use this topic for my presentation :)
Posted by Mehtap on April 18,2012 | 11:28 PM
Finland is a sparsely-populated and a very rural nation with long distnces between towns and has one of the world's coldest climates. So, what would work in Finland may not work in much of the world.
Posted by Christopher W. Clem on April 11,2012 | 01:20 PM
hi, i want to take inscription to the university. help me please.
Posted by bilala yamfu prince-olga on April 11,2012 | 06:28 AM
we finns are just cleverer ;)
Posted by lil on April 7,2012 | 12:29 PM
To Lily, who posted in January: The reasons behind those two "races" testing better than African- Americans and Latinos are that many of these minorities did not have the luxuries of education. In the early 1800s, it was almost impossible for an African-American to receive any kind of education. Pretty much, any "race" that was considered inferior to White Americans were forced to be in this position because they were not allowed schooling. As for Asians, that has to do more with the culture and countries they grew up in. I just wanted to inform you that if you look for scientific information to back up your claim, there will not be any because there is no such thing as "race" biologically. It is a social construct.
Posted by Gabrielle on April 1,2012 | 03:45 PM
What does it mean to be successful? Unemployment rate in Finland until recently was around 20% -- and Finns are among the folks who suffer much from depression. And what do we benefit if we gain the whole world but lose our own soul?
Posted by Enoch on March 27,2012 | 01:34 AM
Hi! I've just read the article and I found this article helpful and mind-opening. I live in the country where scores of students' weekly or monthly examination are valued more than their hidden talents or capabilities. We study, we don't learn. We memorize materials that sometimes we don't fully understand. Both teachers and students are haunted to achieve the so-called satisfying numbers, resulting in such amount of stress and pressure among the both parties. While in Finland, I think ambiance play a great deal in there. If you come to school light-hearted, get a 15 minutes break in between lessons, and come home with barely a homework, it's not magical you'll love school and therefore able to absorb your lesson better.
Posted by Eyusa on March 19,2012 | 12:36 AM
It sounds lovely, there in Finland. I teach in an inner city public school in Buffalo. I don't know about the poverty levels in Finland, but being in the third poorest city in the US, the difficult, multi-faceted issues that children and families endure here are part of the reasons that students have trouble in becoming educated in math and reading. They come into kindergarten not able to get along with other students, not able to learn, and have parents and guardians with their own crisises-in education, economics, housing, nutrition, drug and alcohol struggles. Not to say that every student comes from a critically dysfunctional family setting(and you can see daily the students who shine because their home lives are stable), but there are enough to determine that the high school drop out rate hovers at around 50%. Social services does try to address the needs of the mostly African-American population, but it is too little too late. We teachers continue to do what we do during the 6 hours we have them in our care, but the state standarized testing has everyone scrambling trying to address students' literacy and mathematics weaknesses. And play has no part in it, sadly enough. Our students get physical 2 times out of our 6 day cycle. I would love to begin a recess revival-teachers and administrators say there is not enough time since we have to push reading and math for the better part of most days. It is a conundrum of what to do. I want the kids in Buffalo to have a bright future-and they are our most precious resource.
Posted by melinda on March 8,2012 | 10:25 AM
As a teacher in the U.S., I am always interested and open minded towards learning better practices. However, if we want standardization, then we should settle for mediocrity. If we want to make better students and teachers, improving our education system in the process, we need to be open minded, study what works, and figure out how to make it work for us. The system is broken. Too much regulation and testing has killed the creativity in students. Without creativity, problem solving skills begin to dissipate. The zest for learning disappears because our lessons become militarized and lack interest and color. Impersonal attitudes pervade the school system because we just do what we must to survive. In essence, the U.S. education system is in survival mode bringing the engine to a slow halt. So I have no problem learning about systems that work. I just wish that the powers that be would read them with a thoughtful mindset. I want a better school. The students want a better school. In order to see that, though, we are going to have to care enough as a society to make education, not testing, a priority.
Posted by Denise on February 29,2012 | 12:09 AM
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