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It's 8 a.m. on a cold morning in the suburbs of Helsinki and these primary school children are getting ready for class.
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This morning's lesson—ancient history.
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Well, they are reading with pairs, some texts about Egypt and ancient life.
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They are reading and then I'm going to ask something, what did they find out from the book.
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I think we all are ready now.
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This is a school system that for years has been among the world's best.
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And then what about this gold one?
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And yet these kids will spend half as much time in a classroom as Australian children.
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When you go to the first grade, when you are seven years old, the amount of hours is 20 hours a week.
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It's the minimum and then it gets more hours the older you get.
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But it's still less than in many countries in Europe or in the world.
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In Finland, it's individual teachers who decide how the curriculum is taught, including how much technology should feature in their classrooms.
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We're working on a pyramid project, for example.
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We're now writing our names on paper with hieroglyphics and then we'll be doing some tasks from classroom.
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Eleven-year-old, Mintu Latimarki, asks to leave class to work at the school's own student-run cafe.
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You can go.
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Yeah, that's okay.
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Hello.
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One cake for the cameraman, one cake for me, and two coffees.
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How much is it?
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Two euros and 60 cents.
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How much change?
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Two euros and 40 cents.
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Is there a tip jar?
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Do you have tips?
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No.
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No tips? Okay.
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In Finland, school lunches, like books and excursions, are free.
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The kids select what they want, sit down with their friends and teachers to eat, before they clean up after themselves.
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The children rug up again to play outside.
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Some play a raucous version of soccer, some play basketball while others wait for the hockey rink to open.
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There are plenty of options for bad weather days too.
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The facilities in this school are just amazing.
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Outside we saw an ice skating rink and in here where the kids can play at lunchtime, there's a ping-pong table, a pool table.
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And in here, for the cold winter days, they've got a room full of bean bags and couches and there's even a PlayStation in the corner.
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It seems like it's such a rich school, you must get more money than other schools?
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No, we don't.
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It's the same money for everyone actually.
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In Finland, schools are not allowed to raise private funds or to charge fees from parents.
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All schools are equitably funded from taxation.
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And in our system everything is free for the students actually.
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We don't collect any money from the parents.
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We want our schools to be equal and have equal opportunities to arrange the education.
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So, therefore, also the finance system needs to be equal and treat equally all the schools.
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Mintu Latimarki's older brother, Levi, is in year seven and this afternoon he's got maths.
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We have, like the last term, chapter before we have the next exam.
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There are regular exams in Finland but the results of these tests are not published and shared.
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We have a national test but the big difference is we don't compare schools that this is not a good school, this is a bad school.
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We just use the information that we evaluate ourselves.
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But perhaps the single biggest difference in Finnish education is the standard of teaching.
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Levi's maths teacher, Oona Arnez, speaks five languages and has postgraduate qualifications.
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So every one of us, we have to have a master's degree to be teachers.
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So like, for example, me, I'm maths and chemistry and physics teacher.
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In Finland, a career as a teacher is highly sought after.
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To enter the studies in university actually it's really hard.
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They take something like 10 percent to study teaching.
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If you really want to be a teacher, it can't be your second or third or I don't know what kind of option.
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It has to be your first.
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I believe that they know what is the best for our children.
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I'm not a teacher, I don't have that education.
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So we don't interfere with their work.
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In Finland, there's little anxiety about finding the right school for your child.
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We trust that they have very good school so we don't need to do any research work.
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- I think that is not a question in Finland. - No, no.
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Finland is a vastly different country with a tiny homogenous society.
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But its education success must surely offer some lessons for Australia.
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I would like to say that try to build the system that you trust the people.
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And its investment in teachers seems an obvious place to begin.
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The society respects the teachers and it means also the parents respect the teachers and they don't question the teachers.
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And that's, in Finland that's a really huge thing.
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Hi, I'm Leigh Sales.
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Thanks for watching this story.
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