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National subject-specific evaluation criteria were prepared in 1999 for the compulsory subjects taught in
comprehensive schools, indicating the level of skills and knowledge students should master at the end of 9
th
grade. However, these subject-specific standards are to guide and support schools and teachers in their work,
not to act as criteria for monitoring and controlling. The standards are used in the sample-based learning
outcome assessments by FINEEC, but the results are published only at the system level, not per individual
schools. The schools that have participated in the assessment do receive their own results so that they can
develop their instruction (Välijärvi, 2013).
Teachers are one of the main success factors of the Finnish comprehensive school. They are highly trusted
professionals in pedagogy, who are all required to hold Master’s degrees. The teaching profession attracts highly
motivated and talented students. The culture of trust and autonomy that surrounds the teachers in Finland is
termed by some experts as intelligent accountability (Sahlberg, 2010; Välijärvi, 2015).
Teachers also participate in the shaping of national education policy and practices as stakeholders and experts
of pedagogy. For example, the recently finished reform of the national core curriculum was developed in a
participatory process, where teachers were involved in designing the new core curriculum (MoEC, 2015).
According to Välijärvi (2015), the majority of parents in Finland do not pressure schools for higher academic
standards. Since quality assurance is based on trust on the teachers and schools, Välijärvi argues that there is no
room for competition in Finnish comprehensive education. In addition, differences between schools are so small
and competition is very low, so Finnish parents can trust that the quality of teaching will be high in any school
and they are not interested in selecting a school for their children (Välijärvi, 2013). Research shows that among
their Nordic peers, Finnish parents are most satisfied with the teaching provided by schools and they do not
support ‘market-oriented schooling or the ideology of competition’ (Simola, 2005, p. 459).
The teachers’ trade union (Trade Union of Education in Finland, Opetusalan Ammattijärjestö) is considered a
very strong actor in the field of education, with a 95% unionization rate and 120,400 members from all levels of
the education system, from early childhood to higher education. The Trade Union’s ethical principles for teachers
function as a part of the internal quality assurance of the profession. The ethical principles reflect the overarching
theme of intelligent accountability in the Finnish education system, relying strongly on teachers’ professionality
and sense of responsibility (Trade Union of Education in Finland, 2010). The ethical principles state that ‘the
ethics of the profession are not based on compulsion or external supervision but on an internalized concept of
the moral obligations attached to the work’ (Trade Union of Education in Finland, 2010, p. 2). To promote the
implementation of the ethical principles, the board of the Trade Union nominates the Ethical Committee for the
Teaching Profession. The Ethical Committee formulates opinions and issues statements ’on ethical matters
connected with the teaching profession as requested by the governing board of the Trade Union of Education in
Finland or its members, the authorities or other employers in the field of education, parents or students’ (Trade
Union of Education in Finland, 2016). It may also make public statements on ethical matters concerned with
teaching and issue warnings in cases of unethical conduct (Trade Union of Education in Finland, 2016). While the
statements of the Ethical Committee are public, the discussions are confidential.
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