Welfare society
Finnish society in transition - Historical perspective
Creating Finnish welfare
Create a timeline based on the video. A dropbox below
[20 min]
[20 min]
Links
The History of Equality
[10 min]
KELA
"The Secret to Finland's Success With Schools, Moms, Kids—and Everything"
The Atlantic (11 July 2013)
Finland among the best of the world
Welfare states - different examples
Three challenges facing the Nordic welfare model
Describe the challenges and the solutions on them by using your own words.
Children and wellfare - Timeline
1890 – The first Kindergarten in Finland is established in Helsinki
1919 – Married women are entitled to wage-work without permission of their spouses
1937 – The Maternity Grants Act was accepted
1948 – Child allowances are introduced. Finland also becomes the first country in the world to introduce free school meals
1973 – Local authorities are given a statutory obligation to provide day care for children under school age
1978 – Sharing parental leave becomes possible; fathers are given the right to take paternity leave (however subject to the mother’s approval)
1985 – Maternity allowance is renamed maternity, paternity and parental allowance
1989 – Child care leave is introduced for parents of children under the age of 3
1990 – All children from 3-7 years of age have a subjective right to municipal day care
1996 – All children under school age (7) have the right to day-care
2001 – Local authorities are given a statutory obligation to provide free (voluntary) pre-school education for children at the age of 6
2004 – Provisions on before-school and after-school activities for first-year and second-year pupils are added to the Basic Education Act (628/1998)
2013 – The number of days of leave reserved exclusively for the father is raised to 54 working days
2015 – The subjective right to day care is limited to 20 hours/week if either a is at home due to unemployment, maternity or paternity leave for younger children, for instance.
1919 – Married women are entitled to wage-work without permission of their spouses
1937 – The Maternity Grants Act was accepted
1948 – Child allowances are introduced. Finland also becomes the first country in the world to introduce free school meals
1973 – Local authorities are given a statutory obligation to provide day care for children under school age
1978 – Sharing parental leave becomes possible; fathers are given the right to take paternity leave (however subject to the mother’s approval)
1985 – Maternity allowance is renamed maternity, paternity and parental allowance
1989 – Child care leave is introduced for parents of children under the age of 3
1990 – All children from 3-7 years of age have a subjective right to municipal day care
1996 – All children under school age (7) have the right to day-care
2001 – Local authorities are given a statutory obligation to provide free (voluntary) pre-school education for children at the age of 6
2004 – Provisions on before-school and after-school activities for first-year and second-year pupils are added to the Basic Education Act (628/1998)
2013 – The number of days of leave reserved exclusively for the father is raised to 54 working days
2015 – The subjective right to day care is limited to 20 hours/week if either a is at home due to unemployment, maternity or paternity leave for younger children, for instance.
A dropbox: The Atlantic
Read the article from the Atlantic (below) and discuss about it within your team.
Choose five main points and write them here
Choose five main points and write them here
Sinulla ei ole tarvittavia oikeuksia lähettää mitään.