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David Sirota
David Sirota
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The Finland Phenomenon

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When I heard the news last week that the Department of Education is aiming to subject 4-year-olds to high-stakes testing, all I could do is shake my head in disbelief and despondently mutter a slightly altered riff off "The Big Lebowski's" Walter Sobchak.

Four-year-olds, dude.

You don't have to be as dyspeptic as Walter to know this is madness. According to Stanford University's Linda Darling-Hammond, who headed President Obama's education transition team, though we already "test students in the United States more than any other nation," our students "perform well below those of other industrialized countries in math and science." Yet the Obama administration, backed by corporate foundations, is nonetheless intensifying testing at all levels, as if doing the same thing and expecting different results is innovative "reform" rather than what it's always been: insanity.

In light of this craziness, it's no wonder we're being out-educated by countries going in the opposite policy direction.

Though bobo evangelists like David Brooks insist — without data, of course — that reduced testing "leads to lethargy and perpetual mediocrity," Hammond notes that "nations like Finland and Korea — top scorers on the Programme for International Student Assessment" have largely "eliminated the crowded testing schedules used decades ago when these nations were much lower-achieving."

Finland's story, recounted in the new documentary "The Finland Phenomenon," is particularly striking. According to Harvard's Tony Wagner, the country's modernization campaign in the 1970s included a "transforming of the preparation and selection of future teachers."

"What has happened since is that teaching has become the most highly esteemed profession (in Finland)," says Wagner, who narrates the film. "There is no domestic testing ... because they have created such a high level of professionalism, they can trust their teachers."

The inherent parallels between Finland and the United States make the former's lessons indisputably relevant to us.

As Wagner says, Finland is a fellow industrialized country "rated among the highest in the world in innovation, entrepreneurship and creativity." And though Finland is more racially homogenous than America, Wagner points out that "15 percent of the population speaks a second language" — meaning the country's schools face some of the same cross-cultural challenges as our schools.

That said, for all the similarities, Finland finds its comparative success in how it chooses to differ from us.

Where Finland rejects testing, nurtures teachers, and encourages its best and brightest to become educators, we fetishize testing, portray teachers as evil parasites and financially encourage top students to become Wall Streeters.

Just as important, Finland's tax and social welfare system have made it an economically equal society, and its education quality doesn't vary across class lines. By contrast, America's low taxes and meager social safety net have made it the industrialized world's most stratified nation — and our Separate And Unequal education system is better funded and better performing in rich neighborhoods, and grossly underfunded and therefore underperforming in poor areas.

This is the ugly secret that America's education "reformers" seek to hide.

As Joanne Barkan reports in Dissent magazine, data overwhelmingly show that "out-of-school factors" like poverty "count for twice as much as all in-school factors" in student achievement. But because economic inequality enriches wealthy titans like Wal-Mart's Walton family, and because those same titans fund education policy foundations and buy politicians, the national education debate avoids focusing on economics. Instead, it manufactures a narrative demonizing teachers and promoting testing as a panacea.

It's certainly a compelling fairy tale. Unfortunately for "reformers," Finland, Korea and other successes prove the story's dishonesty — and too bad for America's kids that those successes are being willfully ignored.

David Sirota is a best-selling author of the new book "Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live In Now." He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com, follow him on Twitter @davidsirota or visit his website at www.davidsirota.com.

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Comments

4 Comments | Post Comment
David, this is a very misleading piece. First of all, I agree with you that our students are exhausted by testing, but how else can we measure learning? Once upon a time, kids failed classes and grades if they didn't learn. Now we have to wonder if the tests are valid. Case in point, Florida, where teachers corrected tests to better feather their nests. I too want teachers to be the pillars of every community, but because of the very unions you support, the bad ones are regarded exactly the same as the superior ones.
Other factors your piece left out of Finland's success is their incredibly stringent immigration laws. Illiterates are not allowed to even enter their country let alone attend their schools. And finally, who becomes a teacher in Finland? Is it the bottom 30% of their high school graduates like here in the U.S.? No, it is the top five percent of the graduating class. THAT is where we need to focus our education reform, at the teaching colleges and universities level. Let's try that, where only the best and the brightest are allowed to become teachers, instead of the bottom of the barrell. If that were the case, our teachers would once again be revered and respected.
Comment: #1
Posted by: mamatoby
Sat Jul 9, 2011 7:58 AM
P.S. I support abolishing the Department of Education, the very institution recomending testing 4 year olds. Too many thinkers, no enough doers.
Comment: #2
Posted by: mamatoby
Sat Jul 9, 2011 8:04 AM
mamatoby-stole some of my thunder but when one compares countries like Japan, Singapore and Finland with the United States they always leave out the important things. For example education in these counries and indeed most of the world views education as a priviledge not a right. Furthermore while they test much less frequently when they do test the results determine what track the students will be placed in-they don't care about 'diversity'. They seperate students based on achievement and there is no whining about it. Those two things are among the most important differences which NEVER gets any mention-and the rel question is-WHY?
Comment: #3
Posted by: James Brown
Mon Jul 11, 2011 9:57 AM
The two previous responders seem to have missed an important point: testing limits creativity, flexibility, and engagement. It's a constant reminder to many kids that they have failed. It's used by union-bashing adults to disparage the teaching profession to the point that few wish to enter the field. Principals now come into buildings with hand-held electronic devices that, in a few clicks of buttons, report if a teacher has veered away from the same-chapter/same-page "curriculum" to explore a bird's nest a student has found on the way to school. Students have begun looking for the instant gratification of "doing good" because everything they are suppose to do will be reflected in test scores. Tests have become an end to themselves; kids finish one then move on to another, never wondering "What do I want to be when I grow up?" Better teaching colleges? No way will that "improve" education if the best and brightest can't be lured into the profession. Tracking kids? Do it the right way and the best will soar without being held back and lower-performing students will not be discouraged by constantly being reminded they're at the bottom of the stack. The crime is shoving all resources into the best classrooms and doing little or nothing in the classrooms where kids struggle more. The simple step is this: You take each child where he/she is and stretch that child as far as she/he can go -- without snapping the rubber band. Testing guarantees a lot of snapped rubber bands, and if you remember, snapped rubber band against a thumb nail or finger hurts like hell.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Ed in Oregon
Mon Jul 11, 2011 3:54 PM
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