China and Finland can adapt best practices despite differences, educator says, as further collaboration is planned
Collaboration in education has become one of the highlights of Sino-Finnish relations in recent years, with exchanges unfolding in a wide range of fields and at all levels.
In 2015, the Sino-Finnish Learning Garden - a framework for education exchanges and cooperation between China and Finland, was founded. The Sino-Finnish Joint Learning Innovation Institute (JoLii) was launched in 2016 with the participation of major universities from both countries and coordinated by Beijing Normal University and the University of Helsinki.
"With the committed and coordinated actions of JoLii, Sino-Finnish education cooperation will step up to a new level," says Cai Yuzhuo, founder of the Chinese Education, Research and Exchange Centre at Finland's University of Tampere.
A Finnish student from the Confucius Institute at the University of Helsinki performs Peking Opera in an activity marking the institute's fifth anniversary in May. Zhao Changchun / Xinhua |
To deepen collaboration between Chinese and Finnish universities, the first Sino-Finnish joint forum - Learning and Mind - was unveiled in Zhuhai, Guangdong province, in October.
Hannele Niemi, professor of education at the University of Helsinki and chair of JoLii, says the forum offered opportunities to network and expand earlier research cooperation.
Both countries can learn from best practices, she says. The nations have different cultural and historical contexts, she notes, but says that "no methods or practices can be transferred directly. They must be fitted and applied in the local contexts".
Niemi says she hopes the visit of President Xi Jinping will strengthen research cooperation in education. She says joint research projects will produce solutions to many global challenges.
Finland often does well in rankings of global education systems and is known for not labeling children. Students with a mix of abilities are taught in the same classes.
Liu Baocun, dean of the Institute of International and Comparative Education at Beijing Normal University, says the merits of the Finnish education system are not only seen in its basic education, but in higher and vocational education.
"For instance, Finnish schools and teachers have great autonomy in designing their teaching materials and deciding content," Liu says. "Teachers in Finland are highly trusted, without direct interference. ... Also, being a teacher is one of the most desired professions."
In Finland, schools do not usually conduct standardized tests, and students learn skills, rather than facts. Vocational education has equal status to academic learning, and all sectors of higher education are smoothly connected with no "dead ends" for students.
Cai, a director of the Sino-Finland Education Research and Innovation Centre, says: "Among many other things, China should pay special attention to, and learn from Finland, how educators have learned from others and adapted those borrowed experiences into the local context."
Cai says Finland started reforming its education system in the 1970s and sought the experience of other countries and the advice of international organizations.
"Finns eventually developed 'Finnish lessons' by integrating foreign experiences and adapting them to a unique Finnish environment," Cai says.
wangmingjie@chinadaily.com.cn