Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • If you look at the 15-year-olds, or 16-year-old Fins

  • who are leaving the basic school, most of them have been

  • in special education throughout their schooling.

  • Which means that special education is actually nothing special.

  • So it's you are a special child or student if you haven't been,

  • if you haven't ever used special services.

  • We are putting a lot of emphasis on the early detection

  • of any difficulties and problems that the students in our schools may have.

  • And this is a very different policy to many other countries

  • where these measures are designed in a way that they are implemented only

  • when the problems have emerged and are too visible.

  • But we don't think like this in Finland.

  • I think we believe in this early intervention to make sure that those

  • who are likely to be in trouble will be recognized early,

  • and provided help and support as quickly as possible.

  • We as subject teachers cooperate with the special teacher

  • in cases where we see

  • that an individual student has problems with their studies.

  • It might be problems with concentrating on a theme.

  • It might be reading and listening difficulties,

  • especially in languages and math.

  • What we do is that we contact the special teacher

  • at the very early moment.

  • We call it the first intervention.

  • We talk with the special teacher, and try to arrange a time that she

  • or he could be able to come and join me as a subject teacher

  • to my classroom, and then focus on the problem.

  • The special teacher is available for a couple of hours.

  • And then she picks the student to a separate classroom

  • and helps him or her there.

  • And we also make an individual learning plan

  • for that individual student.

  • And by taking these measures, we try to guarantee

  • that no one is lagging behind.

  • The student welfare team gathers on a weekly basis,

  • and subject teachers inform the group with different cases.

  • They might be bullying, they might be skipping classes,

  • they might be learning difficulties,

  • it might behavioral problems, all kinds of things.

  • And then these individual problems are dealt with case-by-case

  • in this weekly meeting that every school in Finland has.

  • Well, a student welfare group deals with any kinds

  • of problems that we see in a school having to do with problems at home

  • or at learning disabilities, multi-cultural problems.

  • The main value of our student welfare group is to interrupt as soon

  • as possible, problems involved.

  • With this policy, we are trying to really make it easy

  • for everybody to say, "Yes, I have some areas where I need help now.

  • Is there anybody who can help?"

  • rather than trying to hide these things.

  • And in many cases, when you do this in the later years they will come

  • and accumulate even more difficult problems.

  • So I think with this, we have been able to positively affect both

  • the equity of the system, and also the quality of the system.

If you look at the 15-year-olds, or 16-year-old Fins

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it