Why Are Finland's Schools Successful?
The country's achievements in education have other nations, especially the United States, doing their homework
- By LynNell Hancock
- Photographs by Stuart Conway
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2011, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
In another classroom, two special education teachers had come up with a different kind of team teaching. Last year, Kaisa Summa, a teacher with five years’ experience, was having trouble keeping a gaggle of first-grade boys under control. She had looked longingly into Paivi Kangasvieri’s quiet second-grade room next door, wondering what secrets the 25-year-veteran colleague could share. Each had students of wide-ranging abilities and special needs. Summa asked Kangasvieri if they might combine gymnastics classes in hopes good behavior might be contagious. It worked. This year, the two decided to merge for 16 hours a week. “We complement each other,” said Kangasvieri, who describes herself as a calm and firm “father” to Summa’s warm mothering. “It is cooperative teaching at its best,” she says.
Every so often, principal Arjariita Heikkinen told me, the Helsinki district tries to close the school because the surrounding area has fewer and fewer children, only to have people in the community rise up to save it. After all, nearly 100 percent of the school’s ninth graders go on to high schools. Even many of the most severely disabled will find a place in Finland’s expanded system of vocational high schools, which are attended by 43 percent of Finnish high-school students, who prepare to work in restaurants, hospitals, construction sites and offices. “We help situate them in the right high school,” said then deputy principal Anne Roselius. “We are interested in what will become of them in life.”
Finland’s schools were not always a wonder. Until the late 1960s, Finns were still emerging from the cocoon of Soviet influence. Most children left public school after six years. (The rest went to private schools, academic grammar schools or folk schools, which tended to be less rigorous.) Only the privileged or lucky got a quality education.
The landscape changed when Finland began trying to remold its bloody, fractured past into a unified future. For hundreds of years, these fiercely independent people had been wedged between two rival powers—the Swedish monarchy to the west and the Russian czar to the east. Neither Scandinavian nor Baltic, Finns were proud of their Nordic roots and a unique language only they could love (or pronounce). In 1809, Finland was ceded to Russia by the Swedes, who had ruled its people some 600 years. The czar created the Grand Duchy of Finland, a quasi-state with constitutional ties to the empire. He moved the capital from Turku, near Stockholm, to Helsinki, closer to St. Petersburg. After the czar fell to the Bolsheviks in 1917, Finland declared its independence, pitching the country into civil war. Three more wars between 1939 and 1945—two with the Soviets, one with Germany—left the country scarred by bitter divisions and a punishing debt owed to the Russians. “Still we managed to keep our freedom,” said Pasi Sahlberg, a director general in the Ministry of Education and Culture.
In 1963, the Finnish Parlia-ment made the bold decision to choose public education as its best shot at economic recovery. “I call this the Big Dream of Finnish education,” said Sahlberg, whose upcoming book, Finnish Lessons, is scheduled for release in October. “It was simply the idea that every child would have a very good public school. If we want to be competitive, we need to educate everybody. It all came out of a need to survive.”
Practically speaking—and Finns are nothing if not practical—the decision meant that goal would not be allowed to dissipate into rhetoric. Lawmakers landed on a deceptively simple plan that formed the foundation for everything to come. Public schools would be organized into one system of comprehensive schools, or peruskoulu, for ages 7 through 16. Teachers from all over the nation contributed to a national curriculum that provided guidelines, not prescriptions. Besides Finnish and Swedish (the country’s second official language), children would learn a third language (English is a favorite) usually beginning at age 9. Resources were distributed equally. As the comprehensive schools improved, so did the upper secondary schools (grades 10 through 12). The second critical decision came in 1979, when reformers required that every teacher earn a fifth-year master’s degree in theory and practice at one of eight state universities—at state expense. From then on, teachers were effectively granted equal status with doctors and lawyers. Applicants began flooding teaching programs, not because the salaries were so high but because autonomy and respect made the job attractive. In 2010, some 6,600 applicants vied for 660 primary school training slots, according to Sahlberg. By the mid-1980s, a final set of initiatives shook the classrooms free from the last vestiges of top-down regulation. Control over policies shifted to town councils. The national curriculum was distilled into broad guidelines. National math goals for grades one through nine, for example, were reduced to a neat ten pages. Sifting and sorting children into so-called ability groupings was eliminated. All children—clever or less so—were to be taught in the same classrooms, with lots of special teacher help available to make sure no child really would be left behind. The inspectorate closed its doors in the early ’90s, turning accountability and inspection over to teachers and principals. “We have our own motivation to succeed because we love the work,” said Louhivuori. “Our incentives come from inside.”
To be sure, it was only in the past decade that Finland’s international science scores rose. In fact, the country’s earliest efforts could be called somewhat Stalinistic. The first national curriculum, developed in the early ’70s, weighed in at 700 stultifying pages. Timo Heikkinen, who began teaching in Finland’s public schools in 1980 and is now principal of Kallahti Comprehensive School in eastern Helsinki, remembers when most of his high-school teachers sat at their desks dictating to the open notebooks of compliant children.
And there are still challenges. Finland’s crippling financial collapse in the early ’90s brought fresh economic challenges to this “confident and assertive Eurostate,” as David Kirby calls it in A Concise History of Finland. At the same time, immigrants poured into the country, clustering in low-income housing projects and placing added strain on schools. A recent report by the Academy of Finland warned that some schools in the country’s large cities were becoming more skewed by race and class as affluent, white Finns choose schools with fewer poor, immigrant populations.
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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









Comments (194)
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Finnish people deserve this great honour of being the nation with the best system of education. This I strongly belive is as a result of the respecvt accorded the teachers and also the tremendous role the government plays in ensuring that the common citizen of Finland is educated to be alble to contribute to national development. The alphabet of the finnish language is far smaller than that of the English Language which contributes to speedy and interested learning process. By Mohamed Kamara.
Posted by Mohamed Kamara on April 17,2013 | 11:23 AM
Correction to my last post: This fundamental difference has an enormous impact... (not impacts). A description of the costs of English spelling is given here: http://improvingenglishspelling.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/costs-of-english-spelling.html The 3,700 common English words with one or more unpredictable letters are listed here: http://englishspellingproblems.blogspot.com/2010/11/english-spelling-rules.html
Posted by Masha Bell on April 16,2013 | 03:58 AM
All those who have been impressed by Finland's superior results in international comparisons, and have tried to find the reasons for them, have persistently failed to notice the unique educational advantage which the Finns gave their children after gaining independence from Sweden: they modernised their spelling system. Finish has 38 sounds and spells them with just 38 graphemes (which are single letters or combinations like ai or ch). This enables Finnish pupils to learn to read and write exceptionally quickly. English has 44 sounds and uses 91 main spellings for them, but 80 of them have variants, such as for the 'e' of 'bed, bet, bend' in 'head, said, friend, many, leopard'. For this reason English has ended up with a total of 205 graphemes. But for beginning readers life is made even harder by 69 of them being used for more than one sound (e.g. 'man – many; 'sound – soup, touch') - http://englishspellingproblems.blogspot.co.uk/2013/01/english-spelling-system.html . Because of this, English-speaking children need at least three years to acquire elementary reading and writing skills, while the Finns manage it in 6 months or less. This fundamental difference has an enormous impacts on all other aspects of education, including costs. English-speaking pupils are disadvantaged by Anglophone adults continuing to tolerate a spelling system which has become extremely learner-unfriendly over the past 350 years. Emulating Finnish schooling practices cannot make a difference to educational standards in the US without fundamental changes to English spelling habits.
Posted by Masha Bell on April 13,2013 | 12:01 PM
This is a wonderful article. I have read it many times. I founded a preschool in Georgia and we teach very much in this style. Children are not measured against each other and are taught in an organic fashion (the way they learn). Children learn so much between the ages of 3 to 5. Science has told us the importance of preschool education and yet it does not seem to be a major focus of Finnish model. I'm curious to understand more. I understand why they are so successful, however. Real Teachers are creative and Intrinsically motivated to help their students to achieve. Our testing methods are so detrimental. Teachers feel compelled to even lie about children's scores to keep their jobs. In th US we value money and competition. Sadly, this does not work for our educational system. We treat our schools like they are mini corporations. It is so sad - the answer to many of pur problems are right before us and yet we choose to ignore them. At our peril. Thank you for this article.
Posted by Suzanne Darley on April 9,2013 | 09:29 AM
@Victoria, They definitely have unions. Here's the teacher's union website: http://www.oaj.fi/portal/page?_pageid=515,452376&_dad=portal How does this not get in the way? I don't know.
Posted by Anthony on March 21,2013 | 06:37 PM
Remember Finland started their education reform 40 years ago. What I would like to know it what were the steps for their reform?
Posted by HLR on March 20,2013 | 02:43 PM
@Jamie, commenting on on December 5,2012. Just to correct the misunderstanding about PISA: the tested students are 15-year-olds, not High School graduates, so it is not a comparison between 17-year-old Americans and 19-year-old Finns or whomever. (http://www.oecd.org/pisa/aboutpisa/) Other than that I find it hard to comment on your entry as there is not that much factual information. As my personal opinion I would say the Finns would need to learn from Americans (and a few other nations, as well) to not be so committed to the Law of Jante.
Posted by Ellinor on March 19,2013 | 02:30 AM
Actually, Victoria, there is a teachers' union which advocates for teachers from day care to university. see http://www.oaj.fi/portal/page?_pageid=515,452376&_dad=portal
Posted by Joe on March 19,2013 | 11:13 AM
i want to be part
Posted by fannycia on March 13,2013 | 04:36 PM
Yes. My mom visited Finland and always returned convinced they had the right approach and unbiased pragmatism. There are many policies that make this a reality. Example: university and maybe high-school teachers are required to study and live abroad for at least one year before teaching anyone about whatever reality, and multiple languages are common. This is the reality of a global society, which we are not. We are a fear-based, for profit society, not so profoundly dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge and free access to information. Education can be subverted by the perception/reality of hypocrisy. And why would you believe in those who don't care about you? Health care is excellent and socialized, not a way to financially exploit and bankrupt those without insurance or fail to provide care. Did you know no dental care exists in Obamacare-mandated insurance purchase? Check out Finland's health care.
Posted by pedro on March 10,2013 | 02:07 PM
As a school administrator for 15 years, I find this article very stimulating. It is about time we woke up and realized that our teachers are the foundation of our nation. They impact the future generations more than anyone else and we treat them like second class citizens many of whom live in poverty or take second jobs to make ends meet. Finland on the other hand values and respects their educators and puts money and effort into developing them. Do you think that makes a difference in a teachers perspective and attitude towards their job and the children they spend 7 hours a day with? Wake up America !!!
Posted by Robert Lofthouse on March 10,2013 | 11:52 AM
If you are not in Finland and want this for your child, seek Waldorf education. It's very much like this philosophy and really works!
Posted by hugh broughton on February 28,2013 | 02:55 PM
This is a beautifully upsetting wonderful thing
Posted by ryan on February 20,2013 | 06:24 AM
I think this was a valuable quote "“If you only measure the statistics, you miss the human aspect.” The US is so statistic and money focused they have forgotten about the human aspect, which really should be what everything is all about.
Posted by PBScott on February 18,2013 | 05:55 AM
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