Why Finland's Education System is the Best Education in the World???
It is great to know
that there is the best education in the WORLD. Why? Because we can learn how
one country can manage the system well, such as the teachers, the students, the
schools, and so much more about education.
What about Indonesia? Is possible Indonesia be the best system in the world one day? There is nothing impossible. I believe that, but the mindset of Indonesia should be changed before. It is not easy to change more than 200 billion people in Indonesia.
Now, I want to show you how Finland can be the best system education in the world…
1) Finnish children don’t
start school until they are 7.
2) They rarely take exams
or do homework until they are well into their teens.
3) The children are not
measured at all for the first six years of their education.
4) There is only one
mandatory standardized test in Finland, taken when children are 16.
5) All children, clever
or not, are taught in the same classrooms.
6) Finland spends around
30 percent less per student than the United States.
7) 30 percent of children
receive extra help during their first nine years at school.
8) 66 percent of
students go to college.
9)
The difference between weakest and strongest students is the smallest in the
World.
10)
Science classes are capped at 16 students so that they may perform practical
experiments in every class.
11) 93 percent of Finns
graduate from high school.
12)
43 percent of Finnish high-school students go to vocational schools.
13)
Elementary school students get 75 minutes of recess a day in Finnish versus an
average of 27 minutes in the US.
14)
Teachers only spend 4 hours a day in the classroom, and take 2 hours a week for
“professional development”.
15)
Finland has the same amount of teachers as New York City, but far fewer
students.
16)
The school system 100% state funded.
17)
All teachers in Finland must have a master degree, which is fully subsidized.
18)
The national curriculum is only broad guidelines.
19)
Teachers are selected from the top 10% of graduates.
20)
In 2010, 6,600 applicants vied for 660 primary school training slots.
21)
The average starting salary for a Finnish teacher was $29,000 in 2008.
22)
However, high school teachers with 15 years of experience make 102 percent of
what other college graduates make.
23)
There is no merit pay for teachers.
24)
Teachers are given the same status as doctors and lawyers.



























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