Is it valid to compare Finland (whose ENTIRE population is ~5.4 Million) school systems with the US (where 49.8 Million students will attend school in 2012) systems?
it's definitely different... here's more from the google article I came across...
"Its school system has roughly the same number of teachers as New York Citys but far fewer students, 600,000 compared with New Yorks 1.1 million. Finnish students speak Finnish and Swedish and usually English," the New York Times said.
There are obvious challenges to adapting what works in a racially-homogenous, prosperous little country to the United States, but the New York Times story suggests that Finland could be an excellent model for individual states.
The fact that we have more race, ethnicity and economic heterogeneity, and we have this huge problem of poverty, should not mean we dont want qualified teachers the strategies become even more important, said Stanford professor Linda Darling-Hammond in the story. Thirty years ago, Finlands education system was a mess. It was quite mediocre, very inequitable. It had a lot of features our system has: very top-down testing, extensive tracking, highly variable teachers, and they managed to reboot the whole system.
It's different here, but does that mean it HAS to be harder to do what Finland does? I don't see why it would.
I especially like the 'no formal instruction until 7yo' (NYS starts K at 4yo and 5yo), and K means instruction and homework... and many pre-K's are like K in that regard.
I think we try to teach too much, too soon. I liken it to trying to teach a 6 month old baby to walk. No matter how much you try to 'teach' the baby to walk, some will walk at 9 months, some at 1 year, some at 15 months, etc. You could have sat there and picked your nose all day instead of trying to teach the baby to walk, and you'd have the exact same outcome. BUT, if we did that, you'd have parents of the 9 month old walkers saying how "their" method is the best, because their child walked early, knim??
I recall a friend telling me about a study she read, where if you waited to teach 'higher' math until the kid was about 14 or 15yo, it would take 1.5 years to teach them what takes us from 4th grade until 12th grade to teach them, because the kids will be completely ready at 14yo and not bogged down w/ hating math, feeling bad about math, etc.
Finland obviously does just fine in math (better than the US), and they don't start formal studies until 7yo, and I didn't look up when they start "math" on paper (but 7yo would be the earliest I assume). Our kids are doing math on paper in pre-K, so 3yo's and 4yo's. Just like trying to teach a 6 month old to walk. It's not working!