Dear Friends
 
I am copying below an invaluable article from the City A.M. today (December 10, 
2012). It is an eye-opener to everyone of us, not to just our
policy-makers. The website is www.cityam.com/forum:LessonsfromFinland...
 
bhuban
 
Lessons from Finland: How we can reform maths teaching in schools
Monday 10th December 2012, 1:46am 
DAVID BURGHES 
THE UK’s educational standards remain low. Our pupils have fallen behind those 
in Germany and have been overtaken by peers in Poland. The last round of OECD 
tests for 15 year olds showed that the UK’s position in literacy, science and 
maths has fallen again.
The coalition has attempted to reverse this decline and has put fresh emphasis 
on liberalising schooling, introducing a new curriculum, and reviewing the exam 
system. But the vital position of maths remains uncertain. Simon Jenkins, the 
columnist, recently said he regrets the “millions [spent on] teaching maths to 
reluctant pupils”. Jenkins is wrong. Maths is important and necessary to lead a 
full adult life. Better maths teaching would also offer long-term benefits for 
the UK in a highly competitive world. 
A number of factors are holding back maths teaching in England. Despite 
significant investment, and evidence that skills have improved, many still do 
not reach an adequate standard when they leave primary school. The quality of 
teachers’ is particularly problematic. The highest maths qualification for the 
majority of those entering the profession is a C grade at GCSE. The majority of 
secondary school teachers remain in post for less than five years, when 
research suggests it takes five years for a teacher to become expert.
This leads to children not being fully stretched at primary school. They enter 
secondary school, where there is a similar shortage of adequately-trained 
teachers, and become either bored or fail to cope. This results in low numbers 
taking maths at university, and the cycle continues with not enough 
well-qualified young people entering teaching.
It may seem easier to concentrate on secondary school maths, but for long-term 
improvements we must solve the problem at its root in primary schools. And the 
solution may be found in evidence from three high-performing education systems 
– Finland, Japan and Singapore.
Take Finland. The country has managed to attract huge numbers of 
highly-qualified young people to teaching. Compared to Britain’s relatively 
small annual intake, Finland’s ratio of applicants for training is 
approximately 10:1, even though the job isn’t particularly well-paid. This is 
partly because the national curriculum allows freedom for teachers to use their 
own preferred methods – with beneficial results. In many cases, student-focused 
activities form a substantial part of lessons. They develop or apply 
mathematical thinking to problems set by their teacher, and take responsibility 
for their learning through extra work for the most able and extra support for 
the least.
Japan has similar characteristics. Again, Japanese primary school teachers have 
considerably higher levels of maths ability. And like Finland, the official 
Japanese course of study is commendably brief, with teachers again having 
freedom to innovate.

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