Tuesday 11 January 2011

Finland - a snippet about its education system

Finland generally places around the top in various league tables of international educational performance. That podcast that I listened to the other day mentioned that a Finnish student will learn about an extra year's worth of stuff compared to an Australian student, even though they go to school for the same amount of time. They just better at this learning stuff.

Here is something worth knowing though - "tracking" students into academic sheep and vocational goats:


Expansion of education and changes in the structure of schooling — for instance, a shift toward later tracking — appear to have contributed to increases in intergenerational mobility in Sweden and Finland. On the other hand, in the United States and United Kingdom mobility seems to have stagnated and possibly decreased in recent decades despite educational advance.

and


It’s worth noting that both Sweden and Finland have (Finland more rigidly than Sweden) have education divided into those academic and vocational streams from 15 onwards. As we know very well, the UK abandoned this (and sure, perhaps 11 was too young to be making the distinction) and the US hasn’t really ever had it.
Here's where I start wondering.... when Finland is compared to other countries, are we comparing the entire Finnish education system (academic and vocational), or are we just looking at the academic side of things?

It would be easy for Finland to top the scores if they'd already screened out all the non-academic plumbers and gasfitters and were only putting the academic-minded kids through the Maths and English exams that make up these international tables.

Just a thought....

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Here's where I start wondering.... when Finland is compared to other countries, are we comparing the entire Finnish education system (academic and vocational), or are we just looking at the academic side of things? "

PISA-testing is done to the 9th graders, who are still in comprehensive school.

And not to put the vocational education down, kids gratuating as plumbers and electricians and hairdressers and such, have all the same possibilities to apply for universities and polytechnics as the kids who chose the academical path. (The 120 credits of vocational degree still include 40 credits of "academical studies" such as Finnish, English, Swedish, Math, Civics and so on. And of course some of the courses are made to help them with their area of study - like enviromeltal chemistry, forest related biology, elecrical physics or business maths...)

Boy on a bike said...

Thanks for the update.

I'm not saying vocational students ar stupid - just that they are not academic. Some of us are into reading books and stuff - and others aren't.