http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2014/07/25/five-u-s-innovations-that-helped-finlands-schools-improve-but-that-american-reformers-now-ignore/
Finnish educator and scholar Pasi Sahlberg is one of the world’s leading experts on school reform and educational practices. The author of the best-selling “Finnish Lessons: What Can the World Learn About Educational Change in Finland?”and
a former director general of Finland’s Center for International
Mobility and Cooperation, Sahlberg is now a visiting professor of
practice at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. He has written a
number of important posts for this blog, including “What if Finland’s great teachers taught in U.S. schools,” and “What the U.S. can’t learn from Finland about ed reform.”
In
this post Sahlberg writes about what constitutes real education
innovation, a topic that was the subject of a recent eport by the
Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development, about which I wrote and questioned here. Sahlberg
notes how U.S. innovation has helped many successful education systems
around the world even as Americans ignore those very same reforms. This
is important reading.
By Pasi Sahlberg
An intriguing
question whether innovation in education can be measured has an answer
now. The Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development in its
recent report “Measuring Innovation in Education: A New Perspective,
Educational Research and Innovation” measures Innovation in Education in
22 countries and 6 jurisdictions, among them the U.S. states Indiana,
Massachusetts and Minnesota.
One conclusion of the OECD’s
measurement of innovation between 2003 and 2011 is that “there have been
large increases in innovative pedagogic practices across all countries …
in areas such as relating lessons to real life, higher order skills,
data and text interpretation and personalization of teaching.” The
United States did not do very well when compared to other participating
countries overall. “Not surprising,” some commented, pointing to tougher
accountability measures and an obsession with standardized testing in
most parts of the country.
It was surprising, however, to see the
OECD’s list of the top five U.S. “innovations in pedagogic practice”:
1) more observation and description in secondary school science lessons;
2) more individualized reading instruction in primary school
classrooms;
3) more use of answer explanation in primary mathematics;
4) more relating of primary school lessons to everyday life; and
5)
more text interpretation in primary lessons. “Innovation in
organizational policy and practice” included mostly different aspects of
student assessment and testing. Good innovation sometimes means doing
less of something in order to make time for experimentation with new
pedagogical strategies.
An
interesting observation that anyone interested in what current
high-performing school systems have in common is that they all, some
more than the others, have derived critical lessons from abroad.
Singapore, one of the most successful reformers and highest performers
in global education, has been sending students to study education in
U.S. universities and encouraged university professors to collaborate in
teaching and research with their American colleagues. Japan, Hong Kong
and South Korea have done the same. More recently China has also
benefited from education innovation from the United States and other
Western education systems. Even those running school systems above the
49th parallel in North America admit that U.S. research and
innovation have been instrumental in making education in Canada
world-class.
Finland is no exception. If you want to discover the
origins of the most successful practices in pedagogy, student
assessment, school leadership, and school improvement in Finland, you
only need to visit some schools there and have a conversation with
teachers and principals. Most of them have studied psychology, teaching
methods, curriculum theories, assessment models, and classroom
management researched and designed in the United States in their initial
teacher education programs. Primary school teacher education syllabi in
Finnish universities include scores of books and research articles
written by U.S. scholars. Professional development and school
improvement courses and programs often include visitors from the U.S.
universities to teach and work with Finnish teachers and leaders. So
common is the reliance on U.S. ideas in Finland that some have come to
call the Finnish school system a large-scale laboratory of American
education innovation.
The relatively low overall rating of
“innovation in education” in the United States raises an interesting
question: Where are all those great ideas in the United States that
other countries have been able to utilize to improve the performance of
their school systems during the last century? It is interesting that,
according to the OECD, the United States exhibits only modest innovation
in its education system but, at the same time, it is the world leader
in producing research, practical models and innovation to other
countries.
Five significant American educational ideas have been instrumental in accelerating Finland’s success in teaching and learning:
John Dewey’s Philosophy of Education
The
roots of Finland’s pedagogical ideas date back to the 1860s when Uno
Cygnaeus, who is sometimes referred as the father of basic education in
Finland, said that in an ideal classroom, pupils speak more than the
teacher. He was also a fan of practical aspects of education and
insisted that both boys and girls must learn all the practical skills
that people need in everyday lives. It is understandable that the
pragmatic, child-centered educational thinking of John Dewey has been
widely accepted among Finnish educators. Dewey’s philosophy of education
forms a foundation for academic, research-based teacher education in
Finland and influenced also the work of the most influential Finnish
scholar professor Matti Koskenniemi in the 1940s. All primary school
teachers read and explore Dewey’s and Koskenniemi’s ideas as part of
their courses leading to the master’s degree. Many Finnish schools have
adopted Dewey’s view of education for democracy by enhancing students’
access to decision-making regarding their own lives and studying in
school. Some visitors to Finland, among them the late Seymour Sarason,
have observed that the entire Finnish school system looks like John
Dewey’s laboratory school in the U.S.
2. Cooperative Learning
Unlike
in most other countries, cooperative learning has become a pedagogical
approach that is widely practiced throughout Finnish education system.
Finland’s new 9-year comprehensive launched in early 1970s was built on
an idea of regular small-group learning of students coming from
different family backgrounds. But it was the national curriculum reform
in 1994 that brought cooperative learning as it is known now to most
Finnish schools. Before that, all the main researchers and trainers of
cooperative learning, including David Johnson, Roger Johnson and
Elizabeth Cohen, had visited Finland to train trainers and teachers on
their methods of teaching. Their books and articles were translated into
Finnish and shared openly with all schools. The 1994 National
Curriculum included a requirement that all schools design their own
curricula in a way that would enhance teaching and learning according to
constructivist educational ideas. Although cooperative learning was not
mentioned as an obligatory pedagogical practice in schools, there were
several recommendations for teachers to include elements of cooperative
learning into their regular teaching. Ever since, cooperative learning
has become an integral part of initial teacher education in Finland and
one of the most popular themes in professional development of teachers
and school leaders in Finland.
3. Multiple Intelligences
The
spirit of 1970s school reform in Finland included another idea that
derives from U.S. universities and scholars: development of the whole
child. The overall goal of schooling in Finland was to support child’s
holistic development and growth by focusing on different aspects of
talent and intelligence. After abolishing all streaming and tracking of
students in the mid-1980s, both education policies and school practices
adopted the principle that all children have different kinds of
intelligences and that schools must find ways how to cultivate these
different individual aspects in balanced ways. Howard Gardner’s Theory
of Multiple Intelligences became a leading idea in transferring these
policy principles to school practice. Again, the 1994 National
Curriculum emphasizes that school education must provide all students
with opportunities to develop all aspects of their minds. As a
consequence, that curriculum framework required that all schools have a
balanced program, blending academic subjects with art, music, crafts,
and physical education. This framework moreover mandated that all
schools provide students with sufficient time for their self-directive
activities. Gardner’s influence has also been notable in the Finnish
system by conferring a broader definition of “talent.”. Today, Finnish
teachers believe that over 90 percent of students can learn successfully
in their own classrooms if given the opportunity to evolve in a
holistic manner.
4. Alternative Classroom Assessments
Without
frequent standardized and census-based testing, the Finnish education
system relies on local monitoring and teacher-made student assessments. A
child-centered, interaction-rich whole-child approach in the national
curriculum requires that different student assessment models are used in
schools. Furthermore, primary school pupils don’t get any grades in
their assessments before they are in fifth grade. It was natural that
Finnish teachers found alternative student assessment methods
attractive. And it is ironic that many of these methods were developed
at U.S. universities and are yet far more popular in Finland than in the
United States. These include portfolio assessment, performance
assessment, self-assessment and self-reflection, and assessment for
learning methods. Teacher education programs in Finland include elements
of study of educational assessment and evaluation theories and also
provide all students with practical knowledge and skill of how to use
alternative student assessment methods in the classroom.
5. Peer Coaching
Another
surprising aspect of Finnish education is that it lacks much of that
change knowledge that is normally expected to guide policy-makers and
education authorities in planning and implementing desired reforms in
education. Research and development of system-wide educational reform
and change hasn’t belonged to the academic repertoire of Finnish
academia. The number of research papers related to that field has
therefore remained minimal. Instead, Finnish education experts have
relied on foreign sources of expertise and knowledge. A good example of
an innovation designed in the U.S. is peer coaching that evolved in the
1980s and 1990s as a result of research and development work of Bruce
Joyce and his colleagues. He also visited Finland to train trainers and
education leaders on how the impact of professional development of
teacher can be enhanced. Peer coaching—that is, a confidential process
through which teachers work together to reflect on current practices,
expand, improve, and learn new skills, exchange ideas, conduct classroom
research and solve problems together in school—became normal practice
in school improvement programs and professional development in Finland
since the mid-1990s.
For
me, just like for many of my Finnish colleagues, the United States is
home to a great deal of educational research and innovation. Why doesn’t
this show in international comparisons, like the recent review of
innovation in education by the OECD? We visitors to the United States
often wonder why innovations that have brought improvement to all
successful education systems have not been embedded in the U.S. school
system. One reason may be that the work of the school in the United
States is so much steered by bureaucracies, test-based accountability
and competition that schools are simply doing what they must do in this
situation. Many visitors from the United States to Finland conclude
their observations by saying that Finnish education looks like the U.S.
education in the 1970s and 1980s.
My message to my colleagues in
the United States is: This is the only education system in the world
that is self-sufficient in terms of ideas, knowledge, research and
innovation—and financial resources. All others, more or less, depend on
knowledge and ideas generated in the United States. It is hard to accept
the conclusion of the OECD’s measurement that the greatest American
innovation in organizational policy and practice is student assessment,
including standardized testing.
The question should not be: “How
to have more innovation in education?” The real question is: “How to
make the best use of all existing educational ideas that are somewhere
in American schools and universities?” The answer is not to have more
charter schools or private ownership of public schools to boost
innovation.
The lesson from the most successful education systems
is this: Education policies should not be determined by mythology and
ideology but guided by research and evidence from home and abroad.
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