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Laura Creighton's avatar

The Guardian article doesn't do a good job of covering the Swedish education proposals, I think because it is spending too much time talking to Sveriges Lärare, the largest teacher's union. They want to shut down the Free School system, but they _always_ want that. I don't see Lotta Edholm agreeing with this, and as a politician on the right (Liberals are on the Right, in Sweden) it would be very unlikely. We will see what her report, due out later next month says, but from things she has already said in Svenska Dagbladet and Dagens Nyheter (big Swedish newspapers) we can expect a few things.

1. The State has been setting educational goals for the free schools to meet. Most of them do really well. Some do poorly. A good number of the poorly performing ones are all run by the same few for-profit groups, and there is pretty strong evidence that significant money that the State thought was going to be spent on underperforming students ended up in the bank accounts of the shareholders instead. This is part of the systemic failure that is being talked about -- the state never set the rules up properly to prevent this sort of abuse. Sweden still has a really hard time predicting wickedness, and when it happens, it is always a major surprise to all involved.

2. The Pisa reports aren't showing general decline, but instead volatility. In 2012 Sweden's ranking dropped like a stone, when it experienced the sharpest drop in results of any country in the survey over a ten-year span. OW!

https://www.thelocal.se/20131203/sweden-slides-in-global-education-rank-pisa-students-schools

Much arguing about what should be done went on. Then in 2018 the trend reversed. https://www.thelocal.se/20191203/what-do-the-pisa-rankings-tell-us-about-swedish-schools

Everybody cheered and thought the problem was fixed. Now we have another decline https://www.thelocal.se/20231205/swedish-students-maths-and-reading-scores-plunge-in-pisa-world-rankings Guess the celebration was a bit premature. The new minister has some ideas about how to fix things, and they are starting with extra Swedish lessons for pre-school children who do not

speak Swedish, (already started) and going back to centrally marking test results instead of having all grades be given out by the student's teachers. It seems the teachers are getting pressured to give out better grades than the students deserve, and worse, teachers themselves no longer know what sort of grade a student deserves. https://www.thelocal.se/20230622/sweden-to-look-at-centralised-marking-to-fight-grade-inflation

3. There is great talk about whether cell phones are making our students dumber. It is hard to learn to think up your own solutions in a world where you can always look up the answer. But it is precisely this ability we need to train, so.

4. The Minister wants Sweden to go back to making more engineers. How to do this remains a challenge.

5. There is a significant fraction of the Muslim population who don't want their children to do well in school at all. They think that secular values are immoral, including the value of education. The previous government, which was in favour of multiculturalism, thought that the thing to do was to let them run their own free schools which would teach the reading, mathematics, and core curriculum, but without the secularism. There have been spectacular and well publicised failures -- we got some religious schools that weren't keen on teaching anything but Islam. Others were recruitment centres for the Islamic State (Daesh). They were shut down, but the fact that they lasted as long as they did pointed to some terrible problem in how they were overseen by the state. That's another systemic failure that the Minister wants to address. And the time is right -- multiculturalism is now a dead issue in Sweden. The largest party on the left, which is the largest party in Sweden, the Social Democrats -- i.e. the ex-government, the former champions of multiculturalism -- are now campaigning on 'Multiculturalism was a mistake! We're going to make the immigrants integrate, and we can do a better job than the goverment who is also attempting to do this because we are better at governing!' (This might even be true). It's nice that they finally noticed that multiculturalism isn't primarily about having more exciting restaurants to eat in, but what took them so long?

At any rate, this has gone on long enough. I just thought you might want a bit of broadening.

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5hout's avatar

It honestly seems like education, as a field, is populated by people who think grades/statistics are spells. You cast the spell of "transcript shows a B average" and the student gets the B average life, even if they didn't go to class, turn in work or learn anything. This applies to grades, test scores, cancelling programs in the name of equity and probably 2/3rds of this post.

I guess the good thing is most of this insanity is stuff you can opt out of for your own kids. It doesn't fix the world, but it might save some of it.

Half joking proposal to "At a minimum, before we give kids gigantic loans to go get a degree, perhaps we should check for reasonable market expectations on what that degree might enable them to do? And also, if we do not think they should be forced to pay it back but do want them to have the money, give them a grant instead?"

Require schools to take entering student's HS grades, SAT/ACT scores (college must administer for free if student entered without taking one of them) and HS attended/zip code and provide a cost-benefit matrix for 4 years on loans vs expected grades/graduation GPA based on the data + loan repayment using this info.

Right now you have to sign a bunch of docs to get the loans, but they are extremely general and utterly non-specific to the point of lying about the key facts. We have the info!

Make it a choice: School can underwrite the loans and not provide the above analysis, or they can have the government underwrite the loans and provide the above analysis.

Now I'll go back to my libertarian cave and have more daydreams of things that will never happen.

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