I am a CPS teacher conducting Fulbright
research on the teaching and learning of mathematics in Finland. I have taught
middle school mathematics and science for sixteen years with CPS and I collaborated
with teachers as an instructional coach the last four years. Since 2000, Finland
has been among the world’s top achievers in literacy, mathematics, and science
on the Program for International
Student Assessment
(PISA). Since I left for sabbatical in January, CPS has decided to implement
several strategies that diametrically oppose both Finland’s successful
approaches, as I have observed them, as well as recognized international
research on the strategies that Finland uses to ensure that teaching and
learning of mathematics occurs at high levels. I am concerned that by moving
forward in the opposite direction of these successful approaches, CPS could do
more harm than good to the quality of mathematics education in Chicago. Proven
successful strategies include:
NO Standardized Testing
Finland
uses several methods to gauge how schools and students are performing. For
example, the National Board of Education checks learning periodically by
administering a test to a random sample of students. Students are not tested in every
subject, in every grade, every year. In addition, there are optional annual assessments that
teachers and schools can choose to administer anonymously to compare
their school to the national average. Students’ names with scores are not
reported, nor ranked. Finnish educators are responsible for assessing their own
students’ learning and do not understand why Chicago requires so many standardized tests that have been identified as narrowing the curriculum and
instruction. According
to the 2011-2012 CPS assessment calendar there are potentially over 30
instructional days for some form of standardized test at the 8th
grade level; whereas, Finland has none. Eliminating even half of these tests for the district would result in regained
instructional time for kids and substantial savings with less test administration.
Small Class Size
Based on classroom observations as
well as interviews with teachers and principals, I submit that one of the most
effective strategies that has contributed to Finland’s success is a smaller class
size compared to Chicago. Every middle school class I have visited has 18-24
students. Furthermore, I have observed that almost every mathematics teacher here
presents the day’s concept then touches base with each student 1, 2 or 3
times during class. Recently, in Chicago I have had classes of 33, 35 and even
37 students. With fewer
students in a class,
CPS teachers, like Finnish teachers, would be able to know their students better and support
their range of learning needs.
Trust Teachers
Finnish teachers are trusted to
create, instruct, and evaluate the teaching and learning. Both teachers and
principals say that they are successful because they are trusted as educators
to design lessons that work for their students. In addition to this respect and
autonomy, teachers and the teachers union are consulted by the National Board
of Education whenever reforms are designed. When I talk to Finnish teachers,
principals, and policy makers here, they have a difficult time comprehending
why CPS does not involve teachers more in deciding what is needed for kids to
be successful. As Chicago plans for a new school year, Central Office could
make steps towards demonstrating some trust by giving schools the autonomy to
design their instructional programs (including the length
of the day )
that will meet the needs of all learners.
Slow, Consistent
Approach
Forty
years ago, Finland was not performing at its
current level but they made equity of education a top priority, developed their
structures, and stayed the course. During my twenty years as a CPS teacher, I
have lost count of the annual initiatives that have come and gone. The next
school year, Chicago teachers will continue the monumental tasks of transitioning
to the national Common Core State Standards curriculum, following a comprehensive CPS Framework for
Teaching , effectively
implementing a longer school day, and learning a new CPS teacher evaluation system (that will include students' performance on
standardized tests). Recently, numerous local, national, and international educators stressed the
importance for districts to have both research and evidence-based decisions for
school reform initiatives.CPS leadership plans to implement yet again many new frameworks for the new school year. Chicago should slow down, study top performing countries’ educational systems, test our students less, and trust our teachers more. Instead of advancing more policies opposite those of top performing countries, Chicago should follow these countries' lead, give back control over teaching and assessment to teachers and thus return the focus to our students’ learning.
Robert Reynolds, NBCT/Mathematics
Distinguished Fulbright Teacher
Mary Gage Peterson Elementary
SchoolFor more information (links):
Time: Beyond the Classroom: An Analysis of a Chicago Public School Teacher's Actual Workday
Testing (please endorse): National Resolution Against Standards High-Stakes Testing
PISA: Finland's Slow and Steady Reform for Consistently High Results (Chpt 5)
Reform: What the U.S. Can Learn from Finland's School Reform
Dr. Pasi Sahlberg’s (Finnish educator & author) blog: Finnish Education Reform
Rob Reynolds’ blog: Mathematics the Finnish Way
Great article, Rob! Is this something that you submitted to the Chicago Trib?
ReplyDeleteHello Rob, I am a teacher in Chicago with the LEARN Charter School Network and am looking to apply for a Fullbright Award and would like to conduct research in Finland around Math instruction....sounds familiar, huh? Is it possible for us to connect about your experience in Finland? I would like to hear about your project, the process of application, and your experience as a whole.
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