• HOME
  • BOOKS
  • BLOG
  • PRESENTATIONS
  • MEDIA
  • BIO
  • CONTACT

PasiSahlberg.com

  • HOME
  • BOOKS
  • BLOG
  • PRESENTATIONS
  • MEDIA
  • BIO
  • CONTACT
Home / Year: 2019
Pasi Sahlberg Portrait
BLOG by pasi sahlberg

Blog

Some things you should know about me..

We can fix Australian schools. But to rush the reform is to ruin it

Every three years around this time politicians, education leaders and pundits step up to call for fixing their education systems. This has happened for two decades now. Education reforms follow one after another. Still, according to the OECD’s Program for International Student Assessment (Pisa), school systems are not getting any better around the world. Indeed, in many countries, students’ test scores in reading, mathematics…

read more

Sleepless, distracted and glued to devices: no wonder students’ results are in decline

American journalist and social critic H L Mencken wrote that “for every complex human problem, there is a solution that is neat, simple and wrong”. "Back to basics" or phonics tests are such answers that have been offered to improve Australian schools. Alarm bells were ringing around Australia when the latest PISA results became public on Tuesday. Australia scored its lowest ever results in the global reading, mathematics…

read more

A three-point plan for healthier kids: play, play and more play

The biggest issues confronting parents these days all seem to have one common element: smart devices. We know for sure that children today suffer more mental health issues than generations before. We also know that kids now sleep much less than they should, and a lack of sleep affects their wellbeing and learning. Reading and writing skills have been declining in Australia over recent years and students’ learning in other areas…

read more

What is really going on in Finland’s school reform?

By Pasi Sahlberg and Peter Johnson Originally published in Washington Post on 30 August 2019 Finland has been in the spotlight of the education world since it appeared, against all odds, on the top of the rankings of an international test known as PISA, the Program for International Student Assessment, in the early 2000s. Tens of thousands visitors have traveled to the country to see how to improve their own schools. Hundreds…

read more

Australia must fix school inequity to create a top education system

About a year ago my life turned upside down, literally. My wife and I, with our two school-aged children, moved to Sydney from Helsinki. We soon realised that Australians do not walk upside down. But there were some things that we were not prepared for. Ever since we arrived in our new hometown, people were curious to know how we chose a school for our sons. For us it was no-brainer — the neighbourhood public school. But most…

read more

To Really Learn, Our Children Need the Power of Play

The U.S. can learn a big lesson from Finland’s education system: Instead of stress and standardized testing, schools should focus on well-being and joy By Pasi Sahlberg and William Doyle Five years ago, we switched countries. Pasi Sahlberg came to the U.S. as a visiting professor at Harvard University, and William Doyle moved to Finland to study its world-renowned school system as a Fulbright scholar. We brought our families…

read more

Let the children strike as a lesson to all who live on this planet

Hundreds and thousands of students in more than 100 countries are walking out of their schools on Friday with a shared purpose: Save our planet. Some teachers, parents and politicians have raised objections to insist that these children should stay in school instead. I think we grown-ups need to think twice before we stand up against our children on this burning issue. First, it is difficult to understand how young people feel…

read more

Going to school is not for grades

Renowned Finnish education expert shares his views on Finland’s education system Photo: Damir Klaic-Kljuc DUBAI: Considered a benchmark of educational innovation, Finland’s approach to schooling and sparking young minds has a history that can be traced back to the 1860s when Uno Cygnaeus, who is sometimes referred as the father of basic education in Finland, said that in an ideal classroom, pupils speak more than the teacher.…

read more

LANGUAGES

  • English
  • Spanish
  • Suomi
  • Uncategorized

RECENT POSTS

  • Why the new plan for fairer schools will fail
  • Suomen kouluissa tarvitaan uusi suhtautuminen teknologiaan
  • ‘Distracting and addictive’: School rules for mobile phones*
  • The good news is bad news when it comes to Australian pupils’ PISA scores
  • Respect our teachers

RECENT POSTS

  • Why the new plan for fairer schools will fail
  • Suomen kouluissa tarvitaan uusi suhtautuminen teknologiaan
  • ‘Distracting and addictive’: School rules for mobile phones*
  • The good news is bad news when it comes to Australian pupils’ PISA scores
  • Respect our teachers

BLOGS I READ

  • Diane Ravitch's Blog
  • FreshEd with Will Brehm
  • The Answer Sheet by Valerie Strauss
  • Yong Zhao Blog
  • Martti Hellström Blogi

SUGGESTED READING

  • Education and the Commercial Mindset by Sam Abrams
  • Slaying Goliath by Diane Ravitch
  • What Works May Hurt by Yong Zhao
  • The Element by Sir Ken Robinson
  • My recent articles via ORCID
  • HOME
  • BOOKS
  • BLOG
  • PRESENTATIONS
  • MEDIA
  • BIO
  • CONTACT

© PASI SAHLBERG, 2017. All Rights Reserved.