General classroom practices in Finland may be unfamiliar to teachers in the United States. At age 6, children have the option of attending one year of government-provided pre-primary school, and 96% of students attend. Class sizes are limited to 20 and recommended to have no more than 12 students. At age seven, all students begin nine years of mandatory basic education before
entering upper secondary school for three years of either vocational or general education. A school-leaving certificate, awarded after the successful completion of basic education, allows students to enter upper secondary school. Normative assessment takes place in early comprehensive school to identify students with possible learning disabilities and need for special education support. Students are not placed in different classes by ability level; instead, all students are in the same classroom and an additional teacher is present in the classroom to assist struggling students. The assessment system of Finland is based around improving instruction, and the majority of the assessment is formative, or used to improve instruction and learning. Student assessment in Finland takes place in three arenas: within classroom practices, as the final comprehensive assessment of student progress at the culmination of basic education, and during the matriculation examination to serve as a criterion for college admission. Further, the national curriculum is evaluated through the help of an external evaluator and using data from a national standardized assessment, and teachers and schools use self-evaluation to improve education locally.
Formative assessment within the classroom encourages student growth and self-assessment. The national curriculum specifies the criteria for classroom assessment during the course, and it is the teacher’s responsibility to carry out assessment of students’ conduct and schoolwork along this national criteria. Yearly assessment, based on a variety of student work, provides feedback to students about progress in learning and suggestions for improvement. The high-stakes final assessment of basic education, contained in the National Curriculum, requires student work samples from 2 years and is conducted by the subject teacher. A final type of assessment that is not included in the National Curriculum is the matriculation examination, the only high-stakes standardized test taken by students. The matriculation examination is administered upon completion of upper secondary school if the student intends to complete further education. In sum, Finland’s assessment practices result in
fewer formal assessments and fewer pressures for teachers merely to prepare students for a narrow examination.
With the attention the United States has directed at international assessments, some consideration should be paid to the policies of high scoring nations. Although the United States should not leap into educational policies mirroring those of Finland, the differences in the countries’ policies are
dramatic. On the other hand, teachers in the United States are subject to stringent requirements regarding curriculum and assessment. Policymakers in the United States might benefit from a consideration of the policy differences in Finland and the effect these policies may have on student performance. After all, if Finland is able to score so highly on international assessments with their hands-off policies, what does that mean for the rigid policies and high-stakes testing in the United States? Maybe adopting some of their policies about assessment and education could benefit the children of the United States.
References
Bergen, K. S. (2015). Developing Person Through
Childhood, 7th Edition. New York, NY: Worth Publishers.
Hendrickson, K. (2013). Assessment in Finland: A
Scholarly Reflection on One Country’s Use of Formative, Summative, and
Evaluative Practices . Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 33-43.
Thank you for Sharing about Finland's educational system. It is sure one system that works which alot of countries can learn from.
ReplyDeleteI agree that individual potential should be considered but I am also concerned about how to evaluate what one's potential actually is. Your post makes me think...
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