hye im afiqah from Malaysia, i would like to know more about education at Findland, can u suggest me on of people there that i can contact to ask some questions?
I wish my country India too have same education system where education gives priority to developing oneself as a true human. I salute this nation for their great effort and for the outstanding education system.
@@Ilove_abhi Philippine education way too worse, i doesn't value the knowledge anymore but only for grades and students were subjected to overload units which is really exhausting and detrimental for our welfare
Education in the Philippines have already caused a lot of suicides.... We have a competitive and stressful environment that causes a lot of mental breakdowns...I experience them often and if only I can afford to live in Finland, I would love to study there😭
@Beatszoid but here in Finland we don’t compete. The goal of teacher is we learned. Immigrants here have 3 years integration so that we can survive and have a good life like the finnish. If you are permanent resident here, you have the right to study for free..As one of those immigrants living here. I am grateful to tge government and most of all less racism.
My parents - pay lakhs of fees to make me study at school Me - understand nothing in school. Have to rely on youtube videos especially for maths and physics
1) No standardized testing/all graded on an ind system 2) All teachers required to have a master’s degree 3) Cooperation without competition 4) Make the basics a priority; make the school environment equitable 5) Students start school at an older age at age 7 (Let a kid be a kid) 6) Professional options outside a college degree that are equally advantageous/Various vocational education options 7)Wake up later for school and end by two or 2:45 pm 8) Consistent instruction from the same teacher 9) A more relaxed environment/ more caring and enjoyment and relaxation 10) Less homework required
I have school from 8-2pm. I have so much homework, so much stress, and very low free time. When i grow up, im moving to finland, and I will send my kids to those school.
I am here for an exchange program at the university. I studied before in Poland and Scotland and what I am getting from the education system here is so different, more enjoyable, better. I'm considering moving here one day :)
YES I would love for my son to attend university in Finland and my grandchildren to attend school. I love the concept of starting school at age 7. Actually I love the whole concept. Especially no standardized testing.
I do feel people some are missing the point... we should not be looking to move to Finland, but bring the best bits of Finland to our own countries, particularly their education system! Although if someone has kids, I do think this is a wise option. I've thought much of my life... after my own education, that if I had kids, I think I'd wish to do this myself, and considering what I've seen here, well it certainly seems more than ever that this is a legitimate option!
There is only 1 reason for it's success. Well funded and well respected. It is amazing how good teachers can perform when you don't expect them to work for half the national median salary.
Hi everyone Gary from Trinidad and Tobago love your Educational program I hope one day our education in Trinidad and Tobago could reach your standards thank you for sharing 😊
I am becoming a teacher in America and my college talked about Finland and how they wish America had this system. I am learning Finnish and how to one day live and work in Finland. I hope its in my late 20s to early 30s when I get there. Also in America we are just starting to get the start schools at later dates but so far not many states are doing this and I think so far 2 states have made it a law to do so.
You can learn swedish too, its our official language too and usually easier to learn to english teacher. And we have international schools too which teach in English
If every education was like Finland's education system there would be alot more kids wanting to learn and less suicide rates. Teachers would have less stress because everyone is working together to ensure the success and well being for students and staff.
l am from Ethiopia l love it the educational system of Finland government we Ethiopian have less educational system in the world . l have a great intent to learn in Finland but l think l can`t to do so because ..............
Wow! Wow!.....This is just mind blowing.... I will like to study in Finland,I love the country so much and always dream of traveling there......in future,I will love my kids to study in Finland.
Indian educational system should change Hey students let's not wait for the change but let's b the change.We can change our educational system we have to b United.
I've always love finnish education it was from a friend ,and i used to take course about the finnish system how they learn ,how they think,they creat the real people in the world,and this year i was able to build a small school ,just for 20 students and applying the finnish system school ,and the students love it,because we corporate and value education and larning not competition ,this is why many student drop out of school every year because of the competion the students get bored . I love Finnish school ,from Madagascar 🇲🇬
Well, in Iran we have entrance exam to continue studying in university and is such a difficult process to pass, full of stress. the less the number of high quality universities and the more the number of students want to study there. also studying is the first step of your life then there is jobless..
I wish I could go to a school in Finland. Everything is different from Greece's educational system. From having no standardized testing and free meals, until less stress and homework. Also the difference in the schedule. In my country we start school at 8:15, what is so tiring as students who live far away from school have to wake up at 6 to get ready and travel to school ( it happens on my village). Additionally, we are seven hours on the same chair, while seven different teachers (change every 45 minutes with changing subjects) are just talking and expecting us to learn everything they said. And , most of the students have a variety of lessons after school , in order to pass their exams and be "successful" , even if they do not learn in reality,just memorising. Educational system in my country makes us feel like only our grades is the reason we value in life, having good grades to have a good job later. Best but not least, they expect us to do every single exercise they give us, without asking if we can, for example if anything happened and we are not feel well or have too much to study. And if you failed, if you failed you are such a tragedy to society, like "look her son has better grades than you, you are nothing".That makes students feel that they are going to school for the grades, not the knowledge. I wish I was on Finland.
In my country you must be at school from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM or 5:00 PM (depends on the school), 8 hours of total time sitting on the chair and listening to the teacher, with 2 times rest (10 minutes/ 1 hour for lunch), arriving at my home at 6:00 PM, doing sport while beeing exhausted and doing every exercise they give us, then only getting 6 sometimes 5 hours of sleep a night, that's life
The most important thing is teacher's training and discussions on how to make things better... Also same teacher for 6 years... Starting school at age 7.. Learning environment... School's environment... I hope may our Pakistan have such resources to provide these things... Like same lunch...for all students.. It looks like a dream school in the world...
Meanwhile in Sweden... - "What the eff are we going to do now since our Finnish neighbors has the guts to continue embarrassing us with their successful results , while we are just declining in every PISA rating ? "The politician : -" Let´s change the grading system." "Yeah , i know we tried it several times before , but it doesn´t mean that it doesn´t work". "Let´s just try a system we didn´t use before ...like...namely, eehm...namely...egyptian letters , for instance , that has to be the answer". The teacher : -" We have to have more and longer meetings so that we can discuss the subject." "And because we are so busy with meetings we have to give more homework for the students." "The parent : _"Don´t ask me , I´m not a politician , nor a teacher , why would I have a clue ?" "The student : "Don´t interrupt , I´m busy with all the tech stuff you provided."
Hi there. Im fromt he Philippines. Im a science teacher for 30 years. Im amazed how the educational system in Finland outstand the others. Very interesting to know that! My daughters will be in college in 2 years.. How do we get them study in Finland? Hoping for some insights. Thank you
I wish Vietnamese education was like that. In Vietnam, children study too much. They just learn and learn but don't apply. They often forget about it when they are in high school.
Yes but less because they’re doing it in school. Less pressure for pupils. In vocational courses like distance Studying/learning have a time frame so that the students have enough time to do the assignments task and teachers also give extra tutorials and helping to do the assignments if you didnot understand it.
If this system can be applied worldwide then there won't be stressed and depressed kids. Learning is perennial but sadly some don't get the chance to experience this. Department of Education Worldwide you should consider this system.
I began the Second Grade, in Jackson Heights, Queens, New York, in Sep 1961. As I learned my Multiplication Tables, I felt sorry for my First Grade Teacher, Sister Petrina Michael, at Blessed Sacrament Elementary School. I thought my First Grade Teacher only knew enough to teach First Grade. Perhaps my seven year old brain thought that, because, in Second Grade, we were given a new Teacher ---- Sister Saint Joan of Arc. Now, in this Video, we see, at the 7:30 mark, one difference between the Finnish School System and the American one. In Finland, often Students have the SAME Teacher for SIX years, From the First Grade, to the Sixth Grade. I can see why, in Finland, you need a Masters Degree before beginning to teach at all. Whereas in America, we usually have a different teacher every year. The one exception was in 1966 to 1968: We had the same Teacher, Sister Lucy Ann (who later was Sister Ann Neale) for Seventh and Eighth Grade Home Room. (However, each year, we had two other teachers for subjects like Math And Science. I considered all of my Grade School Teachers (both Nuns and Lay Teachers) to be very good.
I remember the news about the original OECD report about Finland that stated that Finland had nothing to develop but its human capital - not minerals, not energy, not oil, not capital, not material resources which other countries hadn't in greater abundance. I remember this from the 1960's and it really shook the Finns to the core. The OECD concluded: education was the way to prosperity in Finland, if at all. The country's only chance to develop. The country that then became a role-model for Finland's school-system was Sweden. But as Sweden historically was Finland's greatest rival, the emulation had to be very cautious, and so it was adapted wisely, incrementally and not to obviously. It turned out to be a great road to success, as Finns step back a little and first let Sweden test anything outrageous ("new math" for example) and only implement aspects that had been successful in Sweden first. Simultaneously preserving all traits that Finns considered common sense. Punishments were for example totally abandoned a few generations ago. Classrooms were open for anyone to sit in and observe (but not to disturb). School attendance is not compulsary, only learning is obligatory (level of knowledge is tested) and is the responsibility of the parents. Kindergarten has differentiated fees, but common schools have no fees for children 7-16 years old. Lunch is provided. The few privately owned schools are regulated the same way as all others. These latter can be established for children of special language backgrounds, like Russian, German, English and French. Available only in Helsinki as far as I know. For the Swedish speaking minority there are parallel Swedish schools for free operating just like those in Finnish, and belong to the legal rights of the minorities, but they come with a greater stress on learning enough Finnish to be practically bilingual in any future job. I think other countries should take notice of the financial motives for developing a school system like Finland did. When teachers and parents speak about it, it sounds like it would only be for the love of children, but for many politicians it was developed for the love of money, as this school system is very profitable in the long run. They have learned and done the math.
Great to know Finnish practices, but is it really feasible to adopt these all over the world... Coz every country has set up own policies and standards for it. Yet few international and national schools can adapt few practices if the educators are well trained.
Why it would be? Every country can change their educational system. Sure, it would take a lot of work and lot of money, but there ain't a single country who couldn't do it, if they really would want to.
How the world is surprised that Finland simply does the right things. I mean it's not the method the world has to learn but keeping to the methods despite the politicians constant attacks on education.
A standardized test as a tool on its own is not a bad thing. The problem comes when that test is tied to funding and used to punish schools, teachers, and students. In the US, education departments have used standardized tests to force schools to teach children how to take the test. Therefore class assignments and exams are formatted the same as the standardized test. Teachers are forced to do this and reprimanded if they dare to use their own creativity to teach their students. I’m curious to know what the results would be if a Finnish student took a US standardized test. I’d guess they’d do very well as it really only requires good critical thinking skills since they are all multiple choice with some short writing. Finland also has the advantage of its government and people valuing education and its teachers. In the US, teachers are treated as little more than babysitters. The profession is also treated with disdain as many see teaching as what someone does as a last resort. Many in the US believe that teaching is easy and anyone can do it.
According to the results of studies (PISA-2018, TIMSS-2019, PIRLS-2011, ICILS-2013), based on the average score of students, the best school education systems in the world are: 1. Singapore - 586 points 2. China - 579 points 3. Republic of Korea - 556 points 4. Japan - 554 points 5. Finland - 532 points 6. Russia - 529 points 7. Poland - 527 points 8. Ireland - 526 points 9. Estonia - 525 points 10. Canada - 523 points - PISA - International Student Assessment Program - PIRLS - International Study of the Quality of Reading and Comprehension of Text - TIMSS - International Study of the Quality of Mathematics and Science Education - ICILS - International Study of Computer and Information Literacy TOP-10 in terms of the total number of gold medals at international olympiads in mathematics, physics and chemistry is as follows: 1. China - 384 2. Russia/USSR/CIS - 374 (237/133/4) 3. USA - 239 4. South Korea - 219 5. Taiwan - 164 6. Hungary - 162 7. Romania - 154 8. Germany - 123 9. Vietnam - 120 10. Iran - 117 International Student Olympiads are actually the only objective tool for comparing the competitiveness of university students at the global level. Unlike school education, there is no global student assessment systems like PISA, ILSA or PIRLS. Top 10 countries by number of weighted wins at international student olympiads: 1. Russia - 61.35 2. China - 27.88 3. USA - 27.84 4. Poland - 22.82 5. Netherlands - 18.85 6. Great Britain - 17.00 7. Spain - 13.86 8. Canada - 10.51 9. Belgium - 9.98 10. Croatia - 8.90 The largest Olympiad is the ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC). It has the widest geographical coverage, in it students from more than 100 countries of the world take part. Over the past 10 years, universities from Russia have won this Olympiad and once won a university from China.
Hey “AfterSchoolTv” can you give me right to share this video in social media Pls it’s very necessary in India to make aware of true education system to the people and schools also
I want to know the kids do what until the age of 7. It seems a pleasant learning environment. I believe that some principles can be adopted in Mauritius. I don't know about the standardised testing as the education system is based on it. The PSAC, NCE, the Cambridge SC and HSC are difficult to replace. I think that Finland is a highly-developed which do not need international education certificate as in Mauritius. There are some items which are also present in Mauritius such as free books, health care and compulsory education there are many things to be done such as nurturing cooperation instead of competition but this might be difficult as there are elite schools and the laureates system which can help kids to pursue expensive studies, which will not be available without this financial help. I believe that more value should be put on vocational training.
You people shud be very lucky ..😪here in africa im in a middle class school but i am forced to wake up at 4am and sleep at 10pm 😪that depends with if i washed my clothes or else if i dint id wash them till12 am .the breaks we have are very short we shave once in two weeks with the shittiest barbers you can ever find in this world 🤦♂️..the food is very bad that you have to buy bread and survive on it the best high quality meal is rice and beans 🤦♂️and yes ik this is bording school and yud ask my parents why wud they take me there but its simple because 85precent of our schools here are that way and everyone has adopted it 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️the worst part is that you are whipped for anything even standing up in class when the teacher is not around and the whiping is not standard but also the teacher can literally beat you up with his fists and kicks you can also get whipped on your back and no one cares IT IS SLAVERY HERE ! Consider yourself lucky 😭😭😭😭😭😭
two cats where are u from?i am from Kenya and I have to wake up at 5am every day school starts at 6am and ends 5:30pm or 6:00pm.i stayed until 1 or 2pm doing homework.we have 6 days of school and only one day and yet we spend that one day doing a bunch of assignments. we almost spend 12 hours in school.we have about 3 exam in a month.whenever I go school I feel like some robot.everything is about competation and how A u have collect.u just have to be perfect at everything .if u fail at one exam the teachers will tell u that u don't have a bright fiture.sometimes I want to kill my self because of school.
i really hope that our indian educational system too focused on our overall development as a human being rather than focusing on marks and percentages. It gives unecessary stress and we learn only how to score marks which is totally useless. I love finland's educational system!!
After watching this video it makes me think that Finland school would be best place to learn for students Compare to my country education system which valuese grades more than learning Finnish school which valuse learning would be much better
Not that it has anything to do with Finland being a remote country, full of natural resources, and with good relationships with their neighbors. With insignificant military expenses (=more money to the real economy), and low population (=low unemployment rates), Finland has it good. Everyone will get a well-paid job, no matter how much he/she studies.
You are right that there is a low population since much of the country is farmland or forrest. However, Finland doesn’t have a ton of natural resources. I assume that you’re thinking of Norway which has a bunch of oil. As for good relations with their neighbors, that’s just false. While the situation is good with the other Nordic and Scandinavian countries, Finland and Russia have been at each others necks for hundreds of years. Their military is not insignificant and every eligible man is ready to be called up if needed, but they don’t unnecessarily spend money by the trillions like they do in the US. I agree that Finland has it good, but that’s because they have created systems that work. At the end of the day, it’s a capitalist society with a government that helps its people.
Compare this with South African schools of the past. Learners were beaten by canes, sticks and rulers, learners played a game were they hit each other. Learners were hit for having long hair, for walking on the grass whole classes were hit together for talking, children were forced to participate in Sports and very small and overweight children were humiliated,girls that chewed gum were humiliated by the gum placed in their hair and they were forced to put ice on it to make it hard. Boys were emotionally black mailed to play a sport called rugby.Once a teacher punched my friend until he cried but he still got promoted to principal. One deputy principal hit boys and girls FIVE times on their hands for small infringements, he was punished by God so his daughter burned to death in hot water, then he had several nervous breakdown s . Learners were indoctrinated with an ideology called Afrikaner Nationalism .They were forced to attend ceremonies where the flag was raised and they were forced to sing patriotic songs. To make everything worse they hid behind religion as they were religious hypocrites The result was a society of sadistic and aggressive adults who internalized and rationalized their abuse, a society of people with psychological problems, personality disorders and even sexual abnormalities.
Finland, I wish my country Rwanda had the same education system, you will be shocked seeing a 3-7 years old kind waking up at 6am to go to school and spending all those tiresome hours studying, and competing for grades at such a young age, I feel like it would be better if we learned from experience and practices rather than only theories and tests. This video made me want to cry.
Not me crying because I have a quiz and I wished I lived in Finland. I too wants a school that values learning, actual learning where students fully understand lessons and can apply them in real life. Have long term retention of the lessons learned in school. I just wish and it sucks how I am wasting a lot of time in school and learning nothing. I do review but tests are just like pouring rain. We have seatworks in class and homework at home. I mean my brain needs rest. Every county should adapt this system where schools actually care about the well being of students, wonder of they're still healthy or stress free. Schools nowadays only focus on competition, ranking and such. Tests are very literal. Word per word. Factual information and not real life applications. Factual is basic and burns a whole lot of time but the understanding is shallow. God, I want to make a fcking thesis for how shallow education systems are incompetent.
TOP-20 of the best educational systems in the world: 1. Russia 2. Singapore 3. Japan 4. Netherlands 5. UK 6. Finland 7. South Korea 8. USA 9. Australia 10. Canada 11. Switzerland 12. Poland 13. Germany 14. Sweden 15. Bulgaria 16. Austria 17. Czech Republic 18. China 19. Denmark 20. Hungary This TOP is based on the ratings below. Ranking of countries by average score based on international studies PISA, TIMSS, PIRLS, ICILS, PIAAC: 1. Singapore 2. China 3. Japan 4. South Korea 5. Finland 6. Russia 7. Netherlands 8. Estonia 9. Poland 10. Canada 11. Czech Republic 12. Sweden 13. Norway 14. UK 15. Australia Ranking of countries by the total number of gold medals received at the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO), International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI), International Physics Olympiad (IPhO), International Chemistry Olympiad (IChO), International Linguistic Olympiad (IOL / ILO), International Olympiad in Economics (IEO), International Biology Olympiad (IBO), International Geography Olympiad (IGeo), International Science Olympiad (IJSO), International Olympiad in Astronomy and Astrophysics (IOAA), International Geoscience Olympiad (IESO), International Astronomical Olympiad (IAO), International Philosophical Olympiad (IPO): 1. China - 649 gold medals - 229 silver medals - 125 bronze medals - 1003 total 2. Russia - 467 - 376 - 208 - 1051 3. USA - 430 - 360 - 161 - 951 4. South Korea - 411 - 327 - 187 - 925 5. Romania - 262 - 469 - 416 - 1147 6. Hungary - 205 - 417 - 370 - 992 7. Thailand - 197 - 333 - 239 - 769 8. Singapore - 197 - 258 - 196 - 651 9. Vietnam - 192 - 289 - 272 - 753 10. Iran - 189 - 363 - 196 - 748 11. India - 183 - 341 - 238 - 762 12. Poland - 181 - 371 - 420 - 972 13. Germany - 176 - 372 - 350 - 898 14. Bulgaria - 162 - 330 - 460 - 952 15. Japan - 148 - 260 - 137 - 545 Ranking countries by proportion of people aged 25 to 64 with a tertiary education: 1. Russia 2. Canada 3. Israel 4. Japan 5. Luxembourg 6. South Korea 7. USA 8. Australia 9. Finland 10. Norway 11. UK 12. Ireland 13. Switzerland 14. Sweden 15. Estonia Ranking of countries by proportion of tertiary-educated people aged 25 to 34 who completed a 4-year or higher degree (bachelor's degree): 1. Russia 2. Lithuania 3. Switzerland 4. South Korea 5. Netherlands 6. Luxembourg 7. Belgium 8. Poland 9. UK 10. Finland 11. Japan 12. Ireland 13. Denmark 14. Greece 15. Australia Top-15 countries by number of weighted wins (total points) at International Student Olympiads: 1. Russia - 61.35 2. China - 27.88 3. USA - 27.84 4. Poland - 22.82 5. Netherlands - 18.85 6. Great Britain - 17.00 7. Spain - 13.86 8. Canada - 10.51 9. Belgium - 9.98 10. Croatia - 8.90 11. Ukraine - 8.80 12. Germany - 8.27 13. Czech Republic - 8.20 14. Australia - 7.17 15. Israel - 6.68 When assessing the success of students' performance at the Olympiads using a weighted score, not only the number of victories of students and student teams is taken into account, but also the level of competition at each of the Olympiads. The advantage is given to those who took part in the Olympiads with the widest country coverage. Ranking of countries in the world based on the Global Skills Index for 2019-2022 provided by Coursera: 1. Switzerland 2. Austria 3. Belgium 4. Germany 5. Finland 6. Sweden 7. Netherlands 8 . Bulgaria 9. Denmark 10. Luxembourg 11. Russia 12 . Norway 13 . France 14. Cameroon 15. Singapore Ranking of countries in the world by the number of gold medals received at WorldSkills competitions: 1. South Korea 2. Switzerland 3. Japan 4. Brazil 5. China 6. Austria 7. France 8. Singapore 9. Russia 10. Italy 11. UK 12. Ireland 13. Germany 14. Finland 15. Australia Most of the winners of the Olympiads go to work in science and make a significant contribution to its development. For example, IMO record holders are significantly more likely than others to win the Fields Medal, the Abel Prize, the Wolf Prize, the Clay Prize for Research, awards that recognize groundbreaking research in mathematics; European Mathematical Society Prize for Young Researchers; one of the awards of the American Mathematical Society (Blumenthal Prize in Pure Mathematics, Bocher Prize in Analysis, Cole Prize in Algebra, Cole Prize in Number Theory, Fulkerson Prize in Discrete Mathematics, Steele Prize in Mathematics or Veblen Prize in Geometry and Topology ), recognizing research in specific mathematical fields, as well as the Knuth Prize, the Gödel Prize (the last two awards are awarded for research in the field of theoretical computer science), and the Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics. Also, the winners of the Olympiads make a huge contribution to the development of economic sectors. For example, Russian Olympiad winners (and Russia is the world leader in math and programming Olympiads) were the founders and pioneers of some of the most visited sites and popular applications in the world. The education system in Finland is not the most in the world, it is in 6th place. She did not take 1st place in any of the ratings.
It’s NOT the system , the kids have AMBITION to achieve something for themselves , and AMBITIOUS TEACHERS !! The level of intelligence? That’s another question mark !
In self-study we learn things we could not otherwise discover during classes. Personally, it helps me learn more significant stuff. Well, it also depends on the learning style of each student but self-study is really great. ☺️
Here in Finland we don’t to compete each other in school. The most important we learned.
America should follow the Finnish school systems.
hye im afiqah from Malaysia, i would like to know more about education at Findland, can u suggest me on of people there that i can contact to ask some questions?
U r lucky
Nice,
@@rachealmurphy6715 fax we need this
As an immigrant here in Finland, I can tell it is the best! The way teachers teaching.
Lucky...
Hey ana can I ask you something
That's a dream of many people, Having a good educational opportunity.
you lucky
I don't know why but this made me cry :((
I-I just can't believe the dedication to children
And there's no pressure!
It made you cry because wtf why is this not our children’s experience
I wish my country
India too have same education system where education gives priority to developing oneself as a true human.
I salute this nation for their great effort and for the outstanding education system.
@@AfterSchoolTV im from Finland and i Want all people have it
@@GaemingStudios you are so lucky man
Indian education system sucks
@@Ilove_abhi Philippine education way too worse, i doesn't value the knowledge anymore but only for grades and students were subjected to overload units which is really exhausting and detrimental for our welfare
@@glenndondublado8359 sadsad : (
@@glenndondublado8359 true i hate philippine education system
Education in the Philippines have already caused a lot of suicides.... We have a competitive and stressful environment that causes a lot of mental breakdowns...I experience them often and if only I can afford to live in Finland, I would love to study there😭
true
When I grow up, I'm gonna move to Finland so that my children can have better education without stress
That’s a good idea
True 🥺
Yes
Me too
At least my country isn't as bad as Americas education system, I live in New zealand
This video feels like a good dream...
I know... I know
Hi welcome to a dream that is everyday for us
: (
Try to study in Indian schools you'll die of competition ....there are 1.4 billion people and opputunities are very less...it makes me cry
yes
Government should bring this in India it will be Nice.
@@Rhymingstarz Won't make an economic difference.
@Beatszoid but here in Finland we don’t compete. The goal of teacher is we learned. Immigrants here have 3 years integration so that we can survive and have a good life like the finnish. If you are permanent resident here, you have the right to study for free..As one of those immigrants living here. I am grateful to tge government and most of all less racism.
I'm at indonesia i have to start at 6:45 AM in the morning until 3:00 PM
Im crying, my hands are shaking
Encouraging critical thinking is a thing of the past here in America. I am happy for you in Finland that you are enjoying life as we once did.
school in america: sitting for 8 hours, being quiet, and taking test
*this is why alot of people drop out in america*
In India Aswell
right and no breaks in my school
i dropped out and im making 10k a month i still hate them for what they did to me draining me of my individuality for corporate profit
itsjustjahliyah and some drop BY
the school too...with a gun
My parents - pay lakhs of fees to make me study at school
Me - understand nothing in school. Have to rely on youtube videos especially for maths and physics
this is so good to know,i wish i can take my kids to learn in finland
Ya
1) No standardized testing/all graded on an ind system 2) All teachers required to have a master’s degree 3) Cooperation without competition 4) Make the basics a priority; make the school environment equitable 5) Students start school at an older age at age 7 (Let a kid be a kid) 6) Professional options outside a college degree that are equally advantageous/Various vocational education options 7)Wake up later for school and end by two or 2:45 pm 8) Consistent instruction from the same teacher 9) A more relaxed environment/ more caring and enjoyment and relaxation 10) Less homework required
❤
I have school from 8-2pm. I have so much homework, so much stress, and very low free time. When i grow up, im moving to finland, and I will send my kids to those school.
Gl learning the language
@@lucid5615 if u know english u will be able to live pretty much everywhere
8-2?! Try 7-3:30
@@prodrt1 Try France. :D
@@alejandro5546 lol I would be happy to finish at 3 pm I usually do 7am to 5-6 pm in France
i want to learn finnish to move there and live there to offer my children in the future a fun and efficient education
We have REALLY big taxes
@@jere-iv5vs Taxes depends.
If you make 1250€ your taxes are 11%
2500 is 22%
3300 is 30%
4500 is 36%
6000 is 39%
We have second official language too which is sweden, its usually easier to learn so maybe start with it
When I grow up I'm a play hockey in Finland why? Because they have the best fans
I love how there's no best school in in their country :))
Every school is best :))
Nice video. It’s always nice to hear which things are better than others.
When I heard no standerized test my heart skip a beat!
No standards that's so cool now i know where i should've belong is finland
I am here for an exchange program at the university. I studied before in Poland and Scotland and what I am getting from the education system here is so different, more enjoyable, better. I'm considering moving here one day :)
YES I would love for my son to attend university in Finland and my grandchildren to attend school. I love the concept of starting school at age 7. Actually I love the whole concept. Especially no standardized testing.
I do feel people some are missing the point... we should not be looking to move to Finland, but bring the best bits of Finland to our own countries, particularly their education system!
Although if someone has kids, I do think this is a wise option.
I've thought much of my life... after my own education, that if I had kids, I think I'd wish to do this myself, and considering what I've seen here, well it certainly seems more than ever that this is a legitimate option!
There is only 1 reason for it's success. Well funded and well respected. It is amazing how good teachers can perform when you don't expect them to work for half the national median salary.
Hi everyone Gary from Trinidad and Tobago love your Educational program I hope one day our education in Trinidad and Tobago could reach your standards thank you for sharing 😊
Watching this make me mad at America for having such a stupid school system
Bro wtf u complaining 😒about American Edu System , But haven't experienced Indian education system.
I am becoming a teacher in America and my college talked about Finland and how they wish America had this system. I am learning Finnish and how to one day live and work in Finland. I hope its in my late 20s to early 30s when I get there.
Also in America we are just starting to get the start schools at later dates but so far not many states are doing this and I think so far 2 states have made it a law to do so.
You can learn swedish too, its our official language too and usually easier to learn to english teacher. And we have international schools too which teach in English
If every education was like Finland's education system there would be alot more kids wanting to learn and less suicide rates. Teachers would have less stress because everyone is working together to ensure the success and well being for students and staff.
Adults watching this: hmm its really upsetting that America's schools don't let children have fun and passion
Children: MOM I WANNA GO TO FINLAND
Yep
l am from Ethiopia l love it the educational system of Finland government we Ethiopian have less educational system in the world . l have a great intent to learn in Finland but l think l can`t to do so because ..............
Wow! Wow!.....This is just mind blowing.... I will like to study in Finland,I love the country so much and always dream of traveling there......in future,I will love my kids to study in Finland.
I definitely want to go to Finland now
Indian educational system should change
Hey students let's not wait for the change but let's b the change.We can change our educational system we have to b United.
I am going to Finland in next few days and I will start college there, Thanks for the information.
I've always love finnish education it was from a friend ,and i used to take course about the finnish system how they learn ,how they think,they creat the real people in the world,and this year i was able to build a small school ,just for 20 students and applying the finnish system school ,and the students love it,because we corporate and value education and larning not competition ,this is why many student drop out of school every year because of the competion the students get bored . I love Finnish school ,from Madagascar 🇲🇬
Indian educational system left the world
Well, in Iran we have entrance exam to continue studying in university and is such a difficult process to pass, full of stress. the less the number of high quality universities and the more the number of students want to study there. also studying is the first step of your life then there is jobless..
Wait wait wait, did he just say they finish school at 2:45 AM?! AM!
He meant PM.
They Finnish
@@sierrahhofzon3878 God damnit
@@sierrahhofzon3878 oh that was the worst i ever saw
well its AM somewhere on the planet i guess. LMAO
It's an utopian dream for many students globally, especially for us Indian students
I wish I could go to a school in Finland. Everything is different from Greece's educational system. From having no standardized testing and free meals, until less stress and homework. Also the difference in the schedule. In my country we start school at 8:15, what is so tiring as students who live far away from school have to wake up at 6 to get ready and travel to school ( it happens on my village). Additionally, we are seven hours on the same chair, while seven different teachers (change every 45 minutes with changing subjects) are just talking and expecting us to learn everything they said. And , most of the students have a variety of lessons after school , in order to pass their exams and be "successful" , even if they do not learn in reality,just memorising. Educational system in my country makes us feel like only our grades is the reason we value in life, having good grades to have a good job later. Best but not least, they expect us to do every single exercise they give us, without asking if we can, for example if anything happened and we are not feel well or have too much to study. And if you failed, if you failed you are such a tragedy to society, like "look her son has better grades than you, you are nothing".That makes students feel that they are going to school for the grades, not the knowledge. I wish I was on Finland.
In my country you must be at school from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM or 5:00 PM (depends on the school), 8 hours of total time sitting on the chair and listening to the teacher, with 2 times rest (10 minutes/ 1 hour for lunch), arriving at my home at 6:00 PM, doing sport while beeing exhausted and doing every exercise they give us, then only getting 6 sometimes 5 hours of sleep a night, that's life
We are the same in Vietnam
The most important thing is teacher's training and discussions on how to make things better...
Also same teacher for 6 years...
Starting school at age 7..
Learning environment...
School's environment...
I hope may our Pakistan have such resources to provide these things...
Like same lunch...for all students..
It looks like a dream school in the world...
Thanks. You are doing a good job. I thought you will speak on Degree or Masters program in Finland and scholarship
@@AfterSchoolTV Thanks, Thanks.
I would definitely like to adopt
the Finish learning style
Yes!! Thats the right education system.
haha... I'm here because I need to prepare for an expo essay for my finals... ironic.
Meanwhile in Sweden...
- "What the eff are we going to do now since our Finnish neighbors has the guts to continue embarrassing us with their successful results , while we are just declining in every PISA rating ?
"The politician : -" Let´s change the grading system." "Yeah , i know we tried it several times before , but it doesn´t mean that it doesn´t work". "Let´s just try a system we didn´t use before ...like...namely, eehm...namely...egyptian letters , for instance , that has to be the answer".
The teacher : -" We have to have more and longer meetings so that we can discuss the subject." "And because we are so busy with meetings we have to give more homework for the students."
"The parent : _"Don´t ask me , I´m not a politician , nor a teacher , why would I have a clue ?"
"The student : "Don´t interrupt , I´m busy with all the tech stuff you provided."
Hi there. Im fromt he Philippines. Im a science teacher for 30 years. Im amazed how the educational system in Finland outstand the others. Very interesting to know that! My daughters will be in college in 2 years.. How do we get them study in Finland? Hoping for some insights. Thank you
I wish Vietnamese education was like that. In Vietnam, children study too much. They just learn and learn but don't apply. They often forget about it when they are in high school.
Excellent video!
Thank you very much!
excellent . i love this country. i want to go there one day.
2:45 pm, not am. 7:12.
Luv from India
Finland does have home work if someone didnt know
Yes but less because they’re doing it in school. Less pressure for pupils. In vocational courses like distance Studying/learning have a time frame so that the students have enough time to do the assignments task and teachers also give extra tutorials and helping to do the assignments if you didnot understand it.
Yes, I’d like to study in Finland 🇫🇮 , is there any possibility to do it ?
If this system can be applied worldwide then there won't be stressed and depressed kids. Learning is perennial but sadly some don't get the chance to experience this. Department of Education Worldwide you should consider this system.
Cooperation without competition n let the kid be kid at its age😂😂😂😂❤❤❤❤❤. We srilankan ever never realize these
I will send my child to finland
i NEED to learn Finnish now
It's hard
I'm in Sierra Leone.can it be possible to continue my education in Finland?
Please I want to study In Finland
I began the Second Grade, in Jackson Heights, Queens, New York, in Sep 1961.
As I learned my Multiplication Tables, I felt sorry for my First Grade Teacher, Sister Petrina Michael, at Blessed Sacrament Elementary School.
I thought my First Grade Teacher only knew enough to teach First Grade.
Perhaps my seven year old brain thought that, because, in Second Grade, we were given a new Teacher
---- Sister Saint Joan of Arc.
Now, in this Video, we see, at the 7:30 mark, one difference between the Finnish School System and the American one.
In Finland, often Students have the SAME Teacher for SIX years, From the First Grade, to the Sixth Grade.
I can see why, in Finland, you need a Masters Degree before beginning to teach at all.
Whereas in America, we usually have a different teacher every year.
The one exception was in 1966 to 1968: We had the same Teacher, Sister Lucy Ann (who later was Sister Ann Neale)
for Seventh and Eighth Grade Home Room. (However, each year, we had two other teachers for subjects like Math And Science.
I considered all of my Grade School Teachers (both Nuns and Lay Teachers) to be very good.
I remember the news about the original OECD report about Finland that stated that Finland had nothing to develop but its human capital - not minerals, not energy, not oil, not capital, not material resources which other countries hadn't in greater abundance. I remember this from the 1960's and it really shook the Finns to the core. The OECD concluded: education was the way to prosperity in Finland, if at all. The country's only chance to develop.
The country that then became a role-model for Finland's school-system was Sweden. But as Sweden historically was Finland's greatest rival, the emulation had to be very cautious, and so it was adapted wisely, incrementally and not to obviously. It turned out to be a great road to success, as Finns step back a little and first let Sweden test anything outrageous ("new math" for example) and only implement aspects that had been successful in Sweden first. Simultaneously preserving all traits that Finns considered common sense.
Punishments were for example totally abandoned a few generations ago. Classrooms were open for anyone to sit in and observe (but not to disturb).
School attendance is not compulsary, only learning is obligatory (level of knowledge is tested) and is the responsibility of the parents.
Kindergarten has differentiated fees, but common schools have no fees for children 7-16 years old. Lunch is provided. The few privately owned schools are regulated the same way as all others. These latter can be established for children of special language backgrounds, like Russian, German, English and French. Available only in Helsinki as far as I know.
For the Swedish speaking minority there are parallel Swedish schools for free operating just like those in Finnish, and belong to the legal rights of the minorities, but they come with a greater stress on learning enough Finnish to be practically bilingual in any future job.
I think other countries should take notice of the financial motives for developing a school system like Finland did. When teachers and parents speak about it, it sounds like it would only be for the love of children, but for many politicians it was developed for the love of money, as this school system is very profitable in the long run. They have learned and done the math.
Great to know Finnish practices, but is it really feasible to adopt these all over the world... Coz every country has set up own policies and standards for it. Yet few international and national schools can adapt few practices if the educators are well trained.
Why it would be? Every country can change their educational system. Sure, it would take a lot of work and lot of money, but there ain't a single country who couldn't do it, if they really would want to.
basically i find heaven in terms of school or learning years in Finland
How the world is surprised that Finland simply does the right things.
I mean it's not the method the world has to learn but keeping to the methods despite the politicians constant attacks on education.
If any school in Pakistan starts like this.. I think it would be most demanded school in educated and elite class of our country
noo... moment the school at the minute 3:58 was in Prague in street Belgicka not far away from my previous house, please do not cheat!
A standardized test as a tool on its own is not a bad thing. The problem comes when that test is tied to funding and used to punish schools, teachers, and students. In the US, education departments have used standardized tests to force schools to teach children how to take the test. Therefore class assignments and exams are formatted the same as the standardized test. Teachers are forced to do this and reprimanded if they dare to use their own creativity to teach their students.
I’m curious to know what the results would be if a Finnish student took a US standardized test. I’d guess they’d do very well as it really only requires good critical thinking skills since they are all multiple choice with some short writing.
Finland also has the advantage of its government and people valuing education and its teachers. In the US, teachers are treated as little more than babysitters. The profession is also treated with disdain as many see teaching as what someone does as a last resort. Many in the US believe that teaching is easy and anyone can do it.
What is the official Language they teach in school in Finland ?
According to the results of studies (PISA-2018, TIMSS-2019, PIRLS-2011, ICILS-2013), based on the average score of students, the best school education systems in the world are:
1. Singapore - 586 points
2. China - 579 points
3. Republic of Korea - 556 points
4. Japan - 554 points
5. Finland - 532 points
6. Russia - 529 points
7. Poland - 527 points
8. Ireland - 526 points
9. Estonia - 525 points
10. Canada - 523 points
- PISA - International Student Assessment Program
- PIRLS - International Study of the Quality of Reading and Comprehension of Text
- TIMSS - International Study of the Quality of Mathematics and Science Education
- ICILS - International Study of Computer and Information Literacy
TOP-10 in terms of the total number of gold medals at international olympiads in mathematics, physics and chemistry is as follows:
1. China - 384
2. Russia/USSR/CIS - 374 (237/133/4)
3. USA - 239
4. South Korea - 219
5. Taiwan - 164
6. Hungary - 162
7. Romania - 154
8. Germany - 123
9. Vietnam - 120
10. Iran - 117
International Student Olympiads are actually the only objective tool for comparing the competitiveness of university students at the global level. Unlike school education, there is no global student assessment systems like PISA, ILSA or PIRLS.
Top 10 countries by number of weighted wins at international student olympiads:
1. Russia - 61.35
2. China - 27.88
3. USA - 27.84
4. Poland - 22.82
5. Netherlands - 18.85
6. Great Britain - 17.00
7. Spain - 13.86
8. Canada - 10.51
9. Belgium - 9.98
10. Croatia - 8.90
The largest Olympiad is the ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC). It has the widest geographical coverage, in it students from more than 100 countries of the world take part. Over the past 10 years, universities from Russia have won this Olympiad and once won a university from China.
Those are not needed by the majority. Doesn't solve the actual problem
Hey “AfterSchoolTv” can you give me right to share this video in social media Pls it’s very necessary in India to make aware of true education system to the people and schools also
Yes, you can share them the link to the video. Regards.
Please can anyone assists me with an email address or details of any teacher or school in Finland
I want to know the kids do what until the age of 7. It seems a pleasant learning environment. I believe that some principles can be adopted in Mauritius. I don't know about the standardised testing as the education system is based on it. The PSAC, NCE, the Cambridge SC and HSC are difficult to replace. I think that Finland is a highly-developed which do not need international education certificate as in Mauritius. There are some items which are also present in Mauritius such as free books, health care and compulsory education there are many things to be done such as nurturing cooperation instead of competition but this might be difficult as there are elite schools and the laureates system which can help kids to pursue expensive studies, which will not be available without this financial help. I believe that more value should be put on vocational training.
Please,o would love to go to Finland to study....I want to be a teacher,how do I go about it....I need help please please 🙏
You people shud be very lucky ..😪here in africa im in a middle class school but i am forced to wake up at 4am and sleep at 10pm 😪that depends with if i washed my clothes or else if i dint id wash them till12 am .the breaks we have are very short we shave once in two weeks with the shittiest barbers you can ever find in this world 🤦♂️..the food is very bad that you have to buy bread and survive on it the best high quality meal is rice and beans 🤦♂️and yes ik this is bording school and yud ask my parents why wud they take me there but its simple because 85precent of our schools here are that way and everyone has adopted it 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️the worst part is that you are whipped for anything even standing up in class when the teacher is not around and the whiping is not standard but also the teacher can literally beat you up with his fists and kicks you can also get whipped on your back and no one cares IT IS SLAVERY HERE ! Consider yourself lucky 😭😭😭😭😭😭
two cats where are u from?i am from Kenya and I have to wake up at 5am every day school starts at 6am and ends 5:30pm or 6:00pm.i stayed until 1 or 2pm doing homework.we have 6 days of school and only one day and yet we spend that one day doing a bunch of assignments. we almost spend 12 hours in school.we have about 3 exam in a month.whenever I go school I feel like some robot.everything is about competation and how A u have collect.u just have to be perfect at everything .if u fail at one exam the teachers will tell u that u don't have a bright fiture.sometimes I want to kill my self because of school.
are they better than singapore or south korea?? pls someone answer this.. Thanks
If I ever have kids, we're moving to Finland! LOL.
Excellent approach to teaching and learning.
Love that point no.8
We are exam based school .our intellengence depend upon the grades that ww score on exam and test.we get so much stress on exam and test
Superb !
Thanks a lot
Nice video
i really hope that our indian educational system too focused on our overall development as a human being rather than focusing on marks and percentages. It gives unecessary stress and we learn only how to score marks which is totally useless. I love finland's educational system!!
After watching this video it makes me think that Finland school would be best place to learn for students
Compare to my country education system which valuese grades more than learning Finnish school which valuse learning would be much better
What is Finland education administration system
Not that it has anything to do with Finland being a remote country, full of natural resources, and with good relationships with their neighbors. With insignificant military expenses (=more money to the real economy), and low population (=low unemployment rates), Finland has it good. Everyone will get a well-paid job, no matter how much he/she studies.
You are right that there is a low population since much of the country is farmland or forrest. However, Finland doesn’t have a ton of natural resources. I assume that you’re thinking of Norway which has a bunch of oil. As for good relations with their neighbors, that’s just false. While the situation is good with the other Nordic and Scandinavian countries, Finland and Russia have been at each others necks for hundreds of years. Their military is not insignificant and every eligible man is ready to be called up if needed, but they don’t unnecessarily spend money by the trillions like they do in the US.
I agree that Finland has it good, but that’s because they have created systems that work. At the end of the day, it’s a capitalist society with a government that helps its people.
Nope 😂
Nice One. I am from Asia
Thanks and welcome
Compare this with South African schools of the past. Learners were beaten by canes, sticks and rulers, learners played a game were they hit each other. Learners were hit for having long hair, for walking on the grass whole classes were hit together for talking, children were forced to participate in Sports and very small and overweight children were humiliated,girls that chewed gum were humiliated by the gum placed in their hair and they were forced to put ice on it to make it hard. Boys were emotionally black mailed to play a sport called rugby.Once a teacher punched my friend until he cried but he still got promoted to principal. One deputy principal hit boys and girls FIVE times on their hands for small infringements, he was punished by God so his daughter burned to death in hot water, then he had several nervous breakdown s . Learners were indoctrinated with an ideology called Afrikaner Nationalism .They were forced to attend ceremonies where the flag was raised and they were forced to sing patriotic songs. To make everything worse they hid behind religion as they were religious hypocrites
The result was a society of sadistic and aggressive adults who internalized and rationalized their abuse, a society of people with psychological problems, personality disorders and even sexual abnormalities.
So my dream is to set a private highschool that actually teaches useful stuff so pleae give me ideas for my system
Less stress over tests and adding more creativity classes and making students asa good human being rather than a robot who mugs all books
I would definitely love it miss sophie if can take it in account
Mee too
Finland, I wish my country Rwanda had the same education system, you will be shocked seeing a 3-7 years old kind waking up at 6am to go to school and spending all those tiresome hours studying, and competing for grades at such a young age, I feel like it would be better if we learned from experience and practices rather than only theories and tests. This video made me want to cry.
We are the same in Vietnam
Any country adopt these qualities that country become another finland..
I wann study there so much
Me too, but at least my country edication systmen probably not as strict as the american education system
my guy turned into a robot near the end XD
Not me crying because I have a quiz and I wished I lived in Finland. I too wants a school that values learning, actual learning where students fully understand lessons and can apply them in real life. Have long term retention of the lessons learned in school. I just wish and it sucks how I am wasting a lot of time in school and learning nothing. I do review but tests are just like pouring rain. We have seatworks in class and homework at home. I mean my brain needs rest. Every county should adapt this system where schools actually care about the well being of students, wonder of they're still healthy or stress free. Schools nowadays only focus on competition, ranking and such. Tests are very literal. Word per word. Factual information and not real life applications. Factual is basic and burns a whole lot of time but the understanding is shallow. God, I want to make a fcking thesis for how shallow education systems are incompetent.
Tf didn't notice I wrote so long. Just wanted to get that off. Please Philippines adapt this!! I'm brain dead.
Philippines school system 👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎
TOP-20 of the best educational systems in the world:
1. Russia
2. Singapore
3. Japan
4. Netherlands
5. UK
6. Finland
7. South Korea
8. USA
9. Australia
10. Canada
11. Switzerland
12. Poland
13. Germany
14. Sweden
15. Bulgaria
16. Austria
17. Czech Republic
18. China
19. Denmark
20. Hungary
This TOP is based on the ratings below.
Ranking of countries by average score based on international studies PISA, TIMSS, PIRLS, ICILS, PIAAC:
1. Singapore
2. China
3. Japan
4. South Korea
5. Finland
6. Russia
7. Netherlands
8. Estonia
9. Poland
10. Canada
11. Czech Republic
12. Sweden
13. Norway
14. UK
15. Australia
Ranking of countries by the total number of gold medals received at the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO), International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI), International Physics Olympiad (IPhO), International Chemistry Olympiad (IChO), International Linguistic Olympiad (IOL / ILO), International Olympiad in Economics (IEO), International Biology Olympiad (IBO), International Geography Olympiad (IGeo), International Science Olympiad (IJSO), International Olympiad in Astronomy and Astrophysics (IOAA), International Geoscience Olympiad (IESO), International Astronomical Olympiad (IAO), International Philosophical Olympiad (IPO):
1. China - 649 gold medals - 229 silver medals - 125 bronze medals - 1003 total
2. Russia - 467 - 376 - 208 - 1051
3. USA - 430 - 360 - 161 - 951
4. South Korea - 411 - 327 - 187 - 925
5. Romania - 262 - 469 - 416 - 1147
6. Hungary - 205 - 417 - 370 - 992
7. Thailand - 197 - 333 - 239 - 769
8. Singapore - 197 - 258 - 196 - 651
9. Vietnam - 192 - 289 - 272 - 753
10. Iran - 189 - 363 - 196 - 748
11. India - 183 - 341 - 238 - 762
12. Poland - 181 - 371 - 420 - 972
13. Germany - 176 - 372 - 350 - 898
14. Bulgaria - 162 - 330 - 460 - 952
15. Japan - 148 - 260 - 137 - 545
Ranking countries by proportion of people aged 25 to 64 with a tertiary education:
1. Russia
2. Canada
3. Israel
4. Japan
5. Luxembourg
6. South Korea
7. USA
8. Australia
9. Finland
10. Norway
11. UK
12. Ireland
13. Switzerland
14. Sweden
15. Estonia
Ranking of countries by proportion of tertiary-educated people aged 25 to 34 who completed a 4-year or higher degree (bachelor's degree):
1. Russia
2. Lithuania
3. Switzerland
4. South Korea
5. Netherlands
6. Luxembourg
7. Belgium
8. Poland
9. UK
10. Finland
11. Japan
12. Ireland
13. Denmark
14. Greece
15. Australia
Top-15 countries by number of weighted wins (total points) at International Student Olympiads:
1. Russia - 61.35
2. China - 27.88
3. USA - 27.84
4. Poland - 22.82
5. Netherlands - 18.85
6. Great Britain - 17.00
7. Spain - 13.86
8. Canada - 10.51
9. Belgium - 9.98
10. Croatia - 8.90
11. Ukraine - 8.80
12. Germany - 8.27
13. Czech Republic - 8.20
14. Australia - 7.17
15. Israel - 6.68
When assessing the success of students' performance at the Olympiads using a weighted score, not only the number of victories of students and student teams is taken into account, but also the level of competition at each of the Olympiads. The advantage is given to those who took part in the Olympiads with the widest country coverage.
Ranking of countries in the world based on the Global Skills Index for 2019-2022 provided by Coursera:
1. Switzerland
2. Austria
3. Belgium
4. Germany
5. Finland
6. Sweden
7. Netherlands
8 . Bulgaria
9. Denmark
10. Luxembourg
11. Russia
12 . Norway
13 . France
14. Cameroon
15. Singapore
Ranking of countries in the world by the number of gold medals received at WorldSkills competitions:
1. South Korea
2. Switzerland
3. Japan
4. Brazil
5. China
6. Austria
7. France
8. Singapore
9. Russia
10. Italy
11. UK
12. Ireland
13. Germany
14. Finland
15. Australia
Most of the winners of the Olympiads go to work in science and make a significant contribution to its development. For example, IMO record holders are significantly more likely than others to win the Fields Medal, the Abel Prize, the Wolf Prize, the Clay Prize for Research, awards that recognize groundbreaking research in mathematics; European Mathematical Society Prize for Young Researchers; one of the awards of the American Mathematical Society (Blumenthal Prize in Pure Mathematics, Bocher Prize in Analysis, Cole Prize in Algebra, Cole Prize in Number Theory, Fulkerson Prize in Discrete Mathematics, Steele Prize in Mathematics or Veblen Prize in Geometry and Topology ), recognizing research in specific mathematical fields, as well as the Knuth Prize, the Gödel Prize (the last two awards are awarded for research in the field of theoretical computer science), and the Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics.
Also, the winners of the Olympiads make a huge contribution to the development of economic sectors. For example, Russian Olympiad winners (and Russia is the world leader in math and programming Olympiads) were the founders and pioneers of some of the most visited sites and popular applications in the world.
The education system in Finland is not the most in the world, it is in 6th place. She did not take 1st place in any of the ratings.
It’s NOT the system , the kids have AMBITION to achieve something for themselves , and AMBITIOUS TEACHERS !! The level of intelligence? That’s another question mark !
I want to go and work in Finland. For myself and for my family.
I'm in love T^T
Why is the narration by someone with a west African accent?
now i wanna go to a finish college
We have some in English too. But you have to pay if you dont live in EU or nordics.
😍😍wow
Well, Finns do a lot of self study... trust me I live here :))))))))
In self-study we learn things we could not otherwise discover during classes. Personally, it helps me learn more significant stuff. Well, it also depends on the learning style of each student but self-study is really great. ☺️
He lost me at free food at school
Sometimes kids go buy some candies from the shop at food break which is 45min to 1hr
only high schoolers do that