I have been critical of the focus on international tests because real life teaches us that the test scores of 15-year-old students do not predict future economic success for nations. I find it bizarre that people say that America is a great country but its schools are no good. That doesn’t make sense.
Adam Grant, a contributing opinion writer for the New York Times, injects a dose of common sense into that newspaper’s education coverage:
He writes:
Which country has the best education system? Since 2000, every three years, 15-year-olds in dozens of countries have taken the Program for International Student Assessment — a standardized test of math, reading and science skills. On the inaugural test, which focused on reading, the top country came as a big surprise: tiny Finland. Finnish students claimed victory again in 2003 (when the focus was on math) and 2006 (when it was on science), all while spending about the same time on homework per week as the typical teenager in Shanghai does in a single day.
Just over a decade later, Europe had a new champion. Here, too, it wasn’t one of the usual suspects — not a big, wealthy country like Germany or Britain but the small underdog nation of Estonia. Since that time, experts have been searching for the secrets behind these countries’ educational excellence. They recently found one right here in the United States.
In North Carolina, economists examined data on several million elementary school students. They discovered a common pattern across about 7,000 classrooms that achieved significant gains in math and reading performance.
Those students didn’t have better teachers. They just happened to have the same teacher at least twice in different grades. A separate team of economists replicated the study with nearly a million elementary and middle schoolers in Indiana — and found the same results.
Every child has hidden potential. It’s easy to spot the ones who are already sparkling, but many students are uncut gems. When teachers stay with their students longer, they can see beyond the surface and recognize the brilliance beneath.
Instead of teaching a new cohort of students each year, teachers who practice “looping” move up a grade or more with their students. It can be a powerful tool. And unlike many other educational reforms, looping doesn’t cost a dime.
With more time to get to know each student personally, teachers gain a deeper grasp of the kids’ strengths and challenges. The teachers have more opportunities to tailor their instructional and emotional support to help all the students in the class reach their potential. They’re able to identify growth not only in peaks reached, but also in obstacles overcome. The nuanced knowledge they acquire about each student isn’t lost in the handoff to the next year’s teacher.
Finland and Estonia go even further. In both countries, it’s common for elementary schoolers to have the same teacher not just two years in a row but sometimes for up to six straight years. Instead of specializing just in their subjects, teachers also get to specialize in their students. Their role evolves from instructor to coach and mentor.
It didn’t occur to me until I read the research, but I was lucky to benefit from looping. My middle school piloted a program to keep students with the same two core teachers for all three years. When I struggled with spatial visualization in math, Mrs. Bohland didn’t question my aptitude. Having seen me ace a year of algebra, she knew I was an abstract thinker and taught me to use equations to identify the dimensions of shapes before drawing them in 3D. And after a few years of observing what fired me up in social studies and the humanities, Mrs. Minninger knew my interests well. She saw a common theme in my passions for analyzing character development in Greek mythology and anticipating counterarguments in mock trial — and suggested doing my year-end project on psychology. Thank you, Mama Minnie.
Most parents see the benefit of keeping their kids with the same coaches in sports and music for more than a year. Yet the American education system fails to do this with teachers, the most important coaches of all. Critics have long worried that following their students through a range of grades will prevent teachers from developing specialized skills appropriate to specific grade levels. Parents fret about rolling the dice on the same teacher more than once. What if my kid gets stuck with Mr. Snape or Miss Viola Swamp? But in the data, looping actually had the greatest upsides for less effective teachers — and lower-achieving students. Building an extended relationship gave them the opportunity to grow together.
The Finnish and Estonian education systems are far from perfect, and Finland’s PISA scores have dipped a bit in recent years. But both countries have done more than just achieve high rates of high performers — they’ve achieved some of the world’s lowest rates of low performers, with remarkably small performance gapsbetween schools and between richer and poorer students. Being disadvantaged is less of a disadvantage in Finland and Estonia than almost anywhere else.
Looping isn’t the only practice that makes a difference. Both Finland and Estonia have professionalized education systems — they often require master’s degrees for teachers, training them in evidence-based education practices and methods for interpreting ongoing research in the field. And teachers are entrusted with a great deal of autonomy. Whereas American kindergarten has become more like first grade, with more emphasis on spelling, writing and math, Finland and Estonia make learning fun with a play-based curriculum. Elementary schoolers typically get 15 minutes of recess for every 45 minutes of instruction. Teachers don’t have to waste time teaching to the test. And over the years, if students start to struggle, instead of labeling them as remedial or forcing them to repeat grades, schools in both countries offer earlyinterventions focused on individual tutoring and extra support. That helps students get up to speed without being pulled off track.
Over the years, American students have consistently lagged behind two to three dozen countries on the PISA. A major factor in our lackluster results is the huge gapbetween our highest- and lowest-performing students. The U.S. education system is built around a culture of winner take all. Students who win the wealth lottery get to attend the best schools with the best teachers. Those who win the intelligence lottery may get to enroll in gifted-and-talented programs.
Great education systems create cultures of opportunity for all. They don’t settle for no child left behind; they strive to help every child get ahead. As the education expert Pasi Sahlberg writes, success is when “all students perform beyond expectations.” Finnish and Estonian schools don’t invest just in students who show early signs of high ability — they invest in every student regardless of apparent ability. And there are few better ways to do that than to keep students with teachers who have the time to get to know their abilities.

USA has asked OECD why they are #17. OECD says poor kids always do badly and USA has 18% poverty Finland 5% Canada 8%. States like Massachusetts, NJ, MN would top world rankings as countries but the South and other poverty stricken areas drag American scores way down. America has polarized education results. Other nations have uniformly good achievement. In Canada, Indigenous Canadians do very badly but they are only 4% of the population
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Thanks, Doug. I have made that point repeatedly in my books and articles. Test scores are highly correlated with family income. Affluent families are likely to be educated families. Their children have greater access to medical care, nutrition, good housing, economic security. Read Richard Rothstein’s book on Class and Education.
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I’ve read it and the work of David Berliner.
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First off, it’s a ridiculous question. Never mind that we never ranked #17 in combined score [we ranked #17 in Reading in 2012; we do better than that now]– but say, we asked why we’re ranked #25 (combined). The answer is obvious. The top 20 are squeezed into 500-550pt scores. The 23-country “B team” is squeezed into 450-500pt scores. US at 495 is only 5 pts off the “A team”– but “ranks #25 because countries #21-25 are separated by only 1 point [0.18%] each. Meanwhile 495 on a 550pt scale = 90%.
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Nevertheless #25 is ridiculous for a rich country. It is a result of American inequality
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Of course I agree totally on our inequality. The PISA breakdown showing inequality doesn’t really correspond to rank, though. E.g., we score much higher than Chile, even though our inequality is about the same [IKR?!!] RE: what we spend on ed– using % of GDP spent on primary/ secondary ed, we are the same as the average of the wealthier 38 OECD countries at 3.3% of GDP.
I think NAEP does a better job of displaying our poor distribution of income. You can look up % of nation scoring Below Basic, & then get breakdown by race/ ethnic, and by rough approximation of poverty [eligible/ ineligible for free lunch]. That really tells the story.
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Ginny,
Excellent points.
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YES! Richard Rothstein has been pointing this out for years. However, almost no American journalists pay enough attention to know this. Valerie Strauss of the Washington Post is one of the few exceptions.
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And, ofc, the other person who has been pointing this out for years is Diane Ravitch.
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We are far behind the rest of the world in healthcare, especially prenatal care for pregnant women. Many babies are born with disabilities because their mother saw a doctor during pregnancy.
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I have taught all grades K through grade 12 in 5 different states. The BEST situation was when I taught in Jamestown, CO, a small mountain community. This mountain one-room school had 2 teachers where we were all together in one classroom. We all knew one another, including the parents as well. The students flourished. We didn’t level the students into high, medium, and low groups. In fact, we encouraged students to work with one another and HELP each other. Watching the students work together and help one another was pure joy.
Because we (Jeannie and I) knew the students so well, we did not feel the need to TEST and LABEL our students.
That is, the students in this small mountain community were not sorted and labelled, and neither were the parents/legal guardians.
It was a SAFE environment for both the students and their parents/legal guardians, and I can honestly say, “NO student was left behind.”
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Beautiful, Yvonne!
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Thank you, Diane.
I LOVED working at Jamestown Elementary. We were able to save student work and have the students peruse what they did year after year. The students LOVED this process and used information gleaned from examining their past work to determine their own goals. There was meaning and purpose to what the students did inside and outside the classroom.
I truly miss teaching at Jamestown.
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Lovely, Yvonne!!!
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Thank you, Bob.
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As an ESL teacher in a smaller school district, I was the only ESL teacher in the K-5 building. As a result I had the same students for two or three years in a row, which I believe, made instruction more efficient. I didn’t have to take time to get to know students’ interests, strengths or weaknesses. My beginning classes were always multi-age classes consisting of grades one through five which worked amazingly well despite the difference in ages.
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TERRIFIC. Wonderful situation for both students and teachers. I love multi-age groups.
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Wonderful vision! I’m all for it. But what of the students who move from school to school because their housing is unstable for any number of reasons. Our visions for education too often assumes middle class stability. We talk about benefits for poor children, but we forget to consider they may lack the stability required to benefit.
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The Defense Department school system recognizes this. American history occurs the same class year at all their schools, so if a child moves from Fort Benning to Germany for two years, then back to Fort Benning, they’re in sync.
The counselors also understand how to adjust for students coming from other districts. Oh, your school required 18 credits to graduate and had two years of algebra before geometry, instead of requiring 26 credits and sequencing algebra I, geometry, algebra II? Got it. We’ll make it work.
I was so impressed with the flexibility in that system. You need to PCS two weeks before the end of the semester? We’ll work it out.
The advantages of that system are: every child has at least one employed parent, has a place to live, has food to eat, and so forth. Many families are relatively poor — married too young, started having children too young, and so forth — but they are not desperately so.
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Yes! A recent NYTimes article about Defense Dept schools and why DoD test scores did not fall during the pandemic (only U.S. educational entity anywhere to achieve this) neglected to mention that the Defense Dept recognizes “a mobile student-base” as part of its “strategic landscape.” Imagine if school districts in Chicago or New York City or any number of other cities started talking about what it requires to educate mobile students to meet middle class expectations. Rural areas as well. Anywhere poverty leads to instability. We’d be on a track to something better for sure. Thanks for making that connection!! More educational administrators need to know about DoD schools.
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Looping can be great, but not always. And it’s the wrong point to emphasize when looking at Finland. They started their reform with decades of increasing mandatory teacher education for all existing teachers. They raised the standards for entrance and exit into teacher education programs. They increased the requirements for teachers to a master’s degree. They spread the funding for schools to equalize access to resources for all students. In that kind of environment, looping will be fantastic. But without that there can be so many problems.
I firmly believe that funding public education is what we should be doing. But here’s a view from a parent’s perspective today. It’s complicated and there is no one fix.
I have twins. Kindergarten was great. I brought them 2 kids with very different developmental profiles but both were on track. They nurtured each kid at their own level.
We moved. Between houses we had a temporary new school. In 2 months they squashed my girls love of writing phonetic sentences. She came home and said “I’m not writing sentences anymore.” I had to tell the teacher that she was not allowed to punish a kindergartener for messy penmanship.
Summer. I managed to re-ignite my girl’s love of writing me notes. New house, new highly “rated” school. Two months into first grade and my son is so depressed by school that he says, “I don’t want to live.” My daughter is top of class, and cries every night from anxiety. They are 6 years old!
I volunteer at school to see what’s going on and what I can do. My son’s teacher has been told she must test a possible new curriculum, and she must teach it a certain way. My son is completely lost. My daughter’s teacher has bought into some high pressure ideal and is laying it on thick. I realize I can’t fix these problems.
I move them to a private Montessori program that takes the time to know each kid. In one month they love school again, in two my son has finally taken an interest in reading, by the end of the year they are well above grade level. The have their love of learning again. We stayed with same teacher through 3rd grade. We had not yet recognized my son’s learning disabilities, but his Montessori teacher did see that he struggled with writing and brought in a coach for him. (This was early dysgraphia.) Looping with a good teacher!
Fourth grade and we’re ready to try public school again. We find a “public Montessori charter.” For my kids, there are 2 classrooms, 4 teachers and only one was good. They had rules like: if you have a question you have to write it out and put it in a jar and IF the teacher has time she’ll answer it! The final straw was when I learned that the kids were not allowed to ask the teachers questions about school after the bell rang at the end of the day. My daughter had been sick and didn’t know how or when to ask about making up some work. They were in silent work mode and not allowed to ask during the day either! She was in tears. My kids were trying hard to like the new school, but love of learning was again gone.
FYI this is not a poor city school district with limited resources. This is a middle income suburban area. This school also did my son’s first educational assessment. I specifically asked them to assess for dysgraphia which is harder to see and diagnose as kids get older. (becomes more executive dysgraphia than graphomotor)
On the one test that slightly looked at dysgraphia, they did not use proper protocols on how they conducted the test. They did not seem to understand that excessively coaching him though the test made it invalid. When comparing other tests they used the wrong scale which pushed my son’s scores more towards normal range. He has a high IQ. With the proper scale, the discrepancy between his IQ and performance was diagnostic of a specific learning disability. The admitted they were using the wrong scale.
I only knew of their errors because I had an outside educational psychologist go over the evaluation. There was clear evidence in the tests that were done to suggest more testing for dysgraphia. I insisted on more testing. They agreed. My son did further testing. Covid hit. They claimed to have lost all the raw test results and the ed. psych did not do a report. Are you noticing the extreme lack of professionalism here? They were protecting the school and district not trying to make a good faith effort to support a student.
I home schooled for the end of 4th and through 5th grade. My son’s dysgraphia was apparent, and I worked to help him in this area.
Sixth grade. New public school and district. Small with very progressive principal. They had a middle school team of 3 teachers. From 6-8th grade they would have the same 3 teachers. These teachers had built something fantastic. The understood the developmental stage. They had exercise bikes in the classroom for hyperactive kids. The math teacher taught all concepts in 3 different ways. My kids still say he’s the best math teacher they ever had. The science teacher did everything with hands on experimentation. The English teacher understood that my son was bright but challenged with writing. She scaffold everything. Teaching him tools. They all paid attention when he was showing signs of burn out (common with adhd and 2e kids). They met with him together. Supported him. My kids thrived. And they were going to loop this team for 3 years of great teachers! Fantastic!
But, this was year one after covid. The parents in my area were into mask protests, and so called parental rights. At the end of the year, all 3 teachers left for different less stressful positions. The 3 new teachers were awful. We tried to work with them through 7th grade. My daughter who loved to tell me about her day in 6th grade was silent and frustrated through 7th. My son got lost again by the end of the year. Looping with these teachers would not have been a good thing. In fact my kids’ bright friends who are still there are frustrated and depressed by school still. These are the honor roll kids.
This same school district also assessed my son, and again failed to see the evidence of dysgraphia and ADHD that was there within his test results. We asked them to reassess and to do tests that specifically looked at dysgraphia. They refused with a letter of denial. We asked for an outside assessment. They refused to pay for one. They said they’d “changed their mind” and would do an assessment. This would mean months of assessment by them. Then us saying we disagreed. Then again requesting an outside assessment which if we got would mean our son would have to go through another assessment. It would be minimum one year before we had our diagnosis. We told them to fund our request for an independent outside assessment (our right) or file against us. They filed against us. We had top notch educational lawyers look at our case. Because the district had sent us a letter of denial but then “changed its mind” the lawyers felt that the “district friendly judge from southern CA” would likely side with the school. So here’s our choice. We can take on the case knowing that the judge may side with the district and say we have to have our son assessed by them again. If that occurs then we are out legal fees and still looking at too long for our son to get accurately diagnosed. So we rolled over. We withdrew our request. The we coughed up $4,500 to get an outside assessment. That’s on our credit card. We are not rich and early private school drained us.
The outside educational psych. PhD (a different person from the one who helped me evaluated the previous assessments) was livid. The testing clearly showed that my son was a twice exceptional kid with high IQ, specific learning disability criteria, dysgraphia, and ADHD-I. Furthermore, she insisted that the evidence was in the previous assessments from the 2 different school districts. They should have diagnosed him.
Eight grade. We are now at an 8th-12th grade, project based, semi-independent learning, public school in another district. They are happy and thriving again. Even with the outside assessment and diagnosis of dysgraphia and adhd-i our son is still not getting any intervention from this new school district. The standard mantra in these meetings is “We don’t see it. He’s doing just fine.” We do not want to rock the boat at this very good school where we are out of district. So, we are paying $700 per month to get our son intervention for his dysgraphia by a group that is experienced with dysgraphia, ADHD, and kids with neuro-atypical learning styles. This money will come out of the equity in our home.
This is the state of public education today. It can be great, or it can crush your child. As hard as all of this has been financially, we are a middle income white family and privileged. Public education should be for all. That commitment to equity is part of what Finland got right. But the first step they did was not looping. It was raising teacher education expectations. Raising teacher standards. Raising up the profession. Spreading money equally. Getting rid of private schools so the rich are invested in public education quality too. As teacher development progressed, then power to the teachers and looping.
Get government and parents and industry out of education. Raise the bar for teachers. Then let them go. Looping is great with good teachers but should not be our focus now. The first step must be raising the standards of the teaching profession.
Sorry this got crazy long. But fixing the American school system isn’t about sound bytes. It’s really understanding the failures, success, and complexity of the changes needed.
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I made the effort and expense to get a masters and was stifled by my school district and administration to use those skills. It is more than teacher training.
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What we can learn from International Assessments:
That American journalists and politicians and salespeople for magic online elixirs for education will mistake the reasons for the disparities, either out of ignorance or out of willful duplicity.
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Insanity is as insanity does. . . or some other trite saying. In this case the insanity is relying on any standardized test for anything. It’s all a bunch of mental masturbation over invalid crap.
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The author’s gloomy gloss on test scores mars an otherwise thought-provoking article. Either he knows as little about the details as the NYT ed-reporter team, or he purposely used the pop-media sky-is-falling routine to prop up his argument.
US PISA performance is just fine. Our “rank” of #25 does not mean “C” just because there are 77 nations competing. The top 25 scorers are squeezed into the top 55 pts on a scale where #1 = 550.* We score 495, which = 90% of the top scorer. And consider: that’s an average of 3 scores, pulled down by our typically very mediocre Math score. [We “do” math like Spain and a few E Euro countries.] In Science we’re #18, with Germany and Netherlands. In Reading we’re #13, better than UK, Japan, and many others.
(*I didn’t include China, the only nation to score above 550, as they don’t test a true cross-section of pop)
There is no question we have a wide and growing rich-poor gap, reflected in link to OECD report showing we are #11 among the 42 nations with larger gap than OECD average (where gap = distance between 5th & 95th percentile scores). This is IMHO our biggest problem, the result of US policies since about 1980. Our NAEP scores have changed little over those years, FWIW. That might reflect that we are fighting uphill and still maintaining? But we don’t have the % “Basic & above” vs “Below Basic” breakout to compare (until early ’90s– and most of the shrinkage in middle class occurred before then).
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Thank you, Ginny! SUPERB post!
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