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Finnish schoolchildren have been
ranked highest in the world measured by combined learning results
in science, mathematics and literacy.
This was the conclusion of the periodical extensive
comparative study of learning among children and adolescents under
the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) conducted
in 30 member states of the OECD and 27 other countries in 2006.
The 2006 PISA study emphasized science, in which Finnish fifteen-year-olds
scored the highest by a wide margin ahead of — Japan, Hong
Kong and Korea. Finland's score of 563 points was also the highest
total ever recorded in a PISA study. In reading comprehension, Finland
ranked second after Korea, and in mathematics Finland also ranked
second, losing out to China by only one point. The Finnish scores
in these areas were 50 to 60 points higher than the OECD average,
which is about 500.
Published in December 2007, the PISA study involved
389,750 randomly chosen pupils, aged 15, in 57 countries. The Finnish
sample consisted of 4,714 pupils at 155 schools, of which 144 were
Finnish-speaking and 11 Swedish-speaking.
The study demonstrates that the particular strength
of the Finnish school system is that it guarantees equal learning
opportunities for all regardless of social background. Tuition is
free for everyone, and there is little variance in performance among
schools. The PISA study also shows that learning differences among
pupils in Finland are not as great as in many other countries and
that the percentage of pupils with poor learning capacity is very
low. An adequate level of competence (level 2 out of 6) or higher
was achieved by 95.9% of the participating Finnish pupils in science,
by 95.2% in literacy and by 94.1% in mathematics. Almost half of
the participating Finnish pupils reached level 4 or higher in all
these areas.
Top results cost-effectively
In the 2006 PISA tests Finnish youngsters came
top in science.
There are other factors, too, that explain the high performance
of Finnish pupils. Security and motivation are fostered among the
youngest schoolchildren by having the same teacher to take them
through the first grades and by not measuring their performance
by numbers. Compulsory school education begins at the age of seven,
and until then children are free to enjoy a childhood at play. Instead
of promoting comparison among pupils, an important objective of
the Finnish school system is to support and guide pupils with special
needs. Very few pupils are required to repeat a school year. Special
attention has been paid to making the school environment pleasant
and motivating. Teachers are a key factor, and Finnish teachers
have high academic qualifications. Teacher-pupil relationships are
open and cordial in Finnish schools. The costs of this school system
are close to the European average, as is the number of lessons;
the system can thus be considered highly cost-effective.
Earlier PISA studies were conducted
in 2000, when the focus was on reading, and in 2003, with emphasis
on mathematics. Finland is the top country when the rankings of
all PISA studies are combined. The country's success in the PISA
process has generated considerable international interest, and other
international studies have produced similar findings. The Finnish
school system has been described in numerous international seminars,
and thousands of visitors, notably teachers and politicians, from
all over Europe and further afield have visited Finland to see schools
at work.
Salla Korpela,
journalist
salla.korpela
@ kolumbus.fi
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