GENERAL EDUCATION IN THE USSR (SIR-2658)

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CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5
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RIPPUB
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U
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177
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December 23, 2016
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September 3, 2013
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2
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Publication Date: 
May 29, 1958
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REPORT
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 50X1 -HUM Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 uk.,A0.. 'hs..? 50X1 -HUM 10: 7 f Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 qatitirm? , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 OEN AL IIDUCATIO ZN USIA *port by Dr. Votodrair o}un.C1nadyn.Vo A r Deormat on Dittsion Th. Library of CoNgroosio Washington, DoC. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release ? 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 PLAN ,010 RE T ON SIUMRALI alICATION LW USSR ) Orsanisational and Administrational prinelples it the MISR eduilational system, and basis alms of Soviet *due/atonal volley, 2) System of Waal Education In USSR. A) Pre0schoo3 edusation 0 ineludins all statistical in. formation 6 eurrieulum. A4 nementary eehool 0 ineludi all statistical intermit tion So curriculum; pedcAgogical sushilithshas 0 inelud Ing all statistical intOrmatien & currieulum. year Wools 40 Including all statistical infatuation eurrieulum. ) Teachers Institutes 0 ineloding all statistics] information. ) 100year *shoo s tns1ui, aU statistical thttion & ourrisulus. ) Pcdagolleal Institutes 0 inelud an ctatis information. ) Universities 0 tne1u4in all statiitcsl into tLon 6 curriculum. Paratton of associate pro ems, teasers for Universities instructors of Candidate of Sciences and Doetor it Sciences, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 3) Reterenses 4) Appendix 4 Universities in UMW noes, addresses# etc* 5) Appendix no Aviation Institutes In USU. 6) Appoodis1. Statistics on ifroviet General leuoation. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 ? CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ?,? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 4 1) VIIIR has * state Wool systems all soviet Wool. are opened, maintain/As and eemplately sontrelle4 by the governments Preosshcol institutions (kAmiftrprtens, gaisreunds, "MO and extrawsibelastis edusational and cu1. tura% organisations (clubs, libraries, 000) Ar* 010 tor the most part opened and maintained by the state, and its local organs Of authority. WI* sems are maintained by trade unions (prorsoyusi), but all operate under full control at the Ministry if Sducation or Ministry of exam*, and other Minis tries and their :Weal *mins, 2) All Wools a other Mimetic 1 and cultural 111141404111 ere e plostelky tomato free any eitursh 0 relistous ormnistation. The t loins at retgti subjects is not 410 lowed in any school or other onal and/or cultural organisation with the emeeption tee seminaries open.* tor the appose of Supplying; priests for the test etwittoss the eomo Iste allow to operate Sohools and other Usual and cultural Institutions ere undo obligation to 41 at** nts a msterielistic Inter and of human society 3) There is only union. ( Odusation in tattoo of ail phenomena of nature in the 19550, PP. ? ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 14) to Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy A proved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 4) Immo t eshool age is under compulsory at. tedium of a ?goal Besot (samiletka) tree of charge. Tuttle% s*$ tree in ail ileheols from 1919 to 19220 and from to Wm, Prom 1J to around 1928 tuition was paid in an primary and woman sohools in cities and tom, as also in higher adusationsi institutions, War invalids and NU plena Amens the workers? were given exemptions of up to complete exemption trim tuition, This is documented by the resalution of the 10th All.Ruseian Congress of the Soviets, Dee. 270 102 *points 6 (see 'tirektivy VKI(b) I postanovleniya SOVetekego proviteVetVa 0 narodnom obratovanli ta 1917 . 1947 god e (Direetirte$ or the VKP(b) and resolutions of the Soviet Somnolent on IstiOnal Zducation for years 1917.1947) NosoWir, 1947, Lib. or Co call No, LAW KR 2280 Al 1947, p. Inking Into account the extremely f v$,;- material (financial) situation of the Republio, W. 10th All.Russian Congress of the Soviets, in order to support normal school existence (itte), anon AI a t,r measure, calculated only tor iod, the establishment of monetary tuition In primary end Secondary schools in QUI= and towns, as also in hi r educational institutions,.. The same $b6 dittieult transition book 41$0 31 aVluet* the Postanovieniye WsI! i$111( RSFOR ot go? (R*solution of the AllaRussien Central atty. C, tee and Soviet of People's Commissars of ROO (the form, name of all of USS)) from August 31, 1925), "point" 3, Comments ?Op to the time of establishment of a network of Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R0074nn99nnn9_c Declassified in Part - Sanitized Cop Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 universal elementary school educations the Oblast, Bxecutive Committees reserve the right to charge (studente) tor tuition in primary and secondary schools ot attics and towns, in also cadent). with the decree of the MIX and SNK on March. 22, 1923.4,**** (turther le ;4.1 references given)***" The extensiveness of this doe PrePagan a?. ntation is done in view of the fact that lfter publioationa state most emphaticaliL, that all edu Elation was tree before 1940, as also state wal* publication outside of the Unh? including USA* It is very strange indeed to note, for instance, that a supposedly serious and beautio ful aro soreferenoed book like "Soviet Prormi?sional Manpower" by Nicholas DeWitt of the Russian Roweerch Center, University, University, puelished by the National Science foundation, Washington, DX*, 19550 states on page 14s in 1940 tuition fees **** were Introduced *0** krior tot his 'zime? higher education al well ,s other forms of etucation, was tuition 0 which the above documentatlo' of the existence of tuition beo f ON 1940 we taken, appears as a referenoe source in Mr* DeWitt os book* Mt DeWitt also quotes emphatical r an pp. XXVI and XXVII from a paper by A. rgson that* "However, d spite ny harassing deficiencies it seems that the Soviet Government does not falsify those statistics which it elects to publish n other words, 'Contrary to co,on supposition, the Russiy . seem generally not to resort to fallitleation in the sense of free invention and double bookk ,? ping*," This Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220007-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 naive optimism will be shown below to be quite undeserved, espeoially taking into account or the latest Soviet statistio cal publication, "National Sconomy of USSR Statistioal Collection (Narodnoye Ithosyaystvo Statistioheskiy Sbornik) published in 1956 by Central Statistical A+oiniatra tion of SR1 in which a multamde oi wild figures given be fore are completely neglected or changed often by a factor or Lw much an 5* as will be elaborated lateri It is unfortunate that the ell. does not have the space here to correot many more inaccuracies and frequent naive lief in the truth of Soviet propaganda exhibited in Nr* DeWitt's book, which will undoubtedly lead to innuelort false ii a.tQne on the oart of the readers and stuoonts who will uc- Ar* DeWittla book as a source ?rem 19401 ("Higher Educat on (Vysshaya Shkola), Moscow, 1948, p* 547; lig a Co call No* LAW 260 *Al2 1948), to 1956/57 ("izvestiyan Moscow. Feb* 26, 1956, No* 49, p* 6, col. 1) tuition paid by the student for attendance In all 5?Lal won ry sohools (technloal schools (technikumy), pedagogical achoo)s, medical schools, eta,) and in the 8th, 9th and lOth grades of the bnAl eeconry :whole co 200 rubles a year in scow, Leningrad, and citles of the Union, in other cities, towns end villa 150 rubles a year. In all institutions of higher learning 4 rubles in Moscato Leningrad* and capital cities of the Union, 300 ruble else where, 500 rubles a r in musical artistic and theatrical al 6 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01n4fIlRnn94nn'),-)nrino a , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81.-01043R002400220002-5 ?? A ? tr, , institutions of Mailer learning, Tuition in correspondence and evening schools is halt of that In other., Prom 19507 tuition in all educational institution is free, Al]. books and sehool materials in Au educational institutions must, hoover, be purchased by the student, Highly outstanding students of higher educational institutions and secondary technical schools receive substantial monetary stipends, Due to the low salary of workers, and especially peasants, high cost of livings and the resulting high cost of sending youths to towns and cities where such secondary and hi r educational instido tutions exist, the aecumulated a to of room, board, books, etc,* even without the tuition are largely prohibiti/e to workers and especially peasants, and can be afforded only by children of speclaXiaed workers, government officials, communist party members, etc*, Even workers living in the towns and cities where higher educational institutions exist find h' education education prohibitiVe* 5) All '1? , for thea out all Union are formally identical, The pro avoceeding eehool is a cnttnuatio.. of type schools through tit ",f in h at the pre* vious one (0440 the prog ;4 or the 5th of the 7**Iyear school (semiletka) is a continuation of the program in the 4#1 grade of 014; ntary school, the priv of the 8th gra* oft 106* r school (ftsystlietka) la a continuation of the t in the 7th grade of the Tomo sehool) XX, (Sources e, MO me kiy, *Proovt hchenlye v pp. 7017)0 * (A*ucation in R 1955, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Schools are conducted in the various republics in their respective is, but the Russian language is a coma pulsory subject in all schools of the Uhion (Sources ibid), Study ot the Russian language in Union Republics (Latvian, Betonian? Ukrainian, Georgian* etc.) is begun in the second grade. The Russian language program in non4ussian schools consists or less material than does the same program in Russian schools, se %ms noted in "Narodnoye obrsiovanlyen No, 2, 1955, pp. 1447,trance examinations in the Russian language to higher educational irlstitutions are conducted on the basis ot the pro s of the Russian schools? That moans that students iiattng from nonoaussian schools* have lese chance of ssing the entrance examinat one, oomPant4 io t students who dusted dram a Russian school, In higher grades of the jolty of schools in the sowealled *Autonomous" republics of Nt (actually a part of 80* all subtle'le f Et1 r, are taught in the Russian lingua * and the native unge is taught only as a separate subject, Due to this, their weekly curriculum le 1 ,9 ater than in Russian schools and, as is noted :44n "Narodnoxe Obrasoveniye," fio, 2, 195$, p 17, "the overload of the curriculum in nonAusstan schools* has an adverse effect on the progress of the students to shallow studies of school subjects, and affects adverse:II the health of the studentsos In the sv? magazine it is noted that in the sA schools "there are also many teachers of the Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Russian language who don't know the native language of the students* These teachers find great difficulties in their work*" Russification of non-Russian nationalities by the Russians is officially motivated by the followings "In non- Russian schools, the Russian language is the source of com- munist upbringing of the children, the means of their joining the progressive Socialist culture*" (Source: "Aarodnoye Obrazovaniye No* 2$ 1955, p* 14)* A similar picture of Russification, though on a lesser level, is seen also in all Union republics of the USSR and its satellites* Thus, the deelarations of the communist party of USSR, an to the right to study in one's own language of 44 different nationalities in R0S*LosSoR*0 and also in the other Union republics of the USSR are not based on fact. The thn of Edcati in. USSR According to the program of the communist party in USSR, the aims a academic as well as ideological education and training are till to prepare the succeeding generations to a final and conclusive seizure of power of the whole world, and the establishment therein of a universal communist state (see Nedynski *Education in USSR" 1955, pi, 7). e e sill in oviet 44tion 1) All directives concerning education are given by the Central Committee of the communist party, or rather the Politburo* Laws and resolutions that stem from these Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 U. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 directives are put into proper form by the Council of Minister:: and officially released in the name of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. These resolutions determine the type of schools to be maintained, establish the rules of conduct to be folw lowed by students and teachers, determine the distribution of graduates to jobs, etc.. 2) Preoschool institutions, and schools of general education (elementary, 7**year school ("semiletki"), 10.0year schoqp. (ndesyatiletki"), schools of worker and peasant youths: schools of adult education, are directed by the Ministries of Education of tile Republics they are situated in. 3) Lower professional educational institutions (trade schools and railroad schools, schools of factory team nology) that graduate skilled workers, are under direct control of the Allw.Union Ministry of Labor Reserves. The other lower professional educational institutions are maintained and conft trolled by the Ministries of Specialities. 4) Programs and methodology of secondary professional educational institutions (industrial and agricultural ntechnicum medical schools, pedagogical schools, etc.) are under the con trol of the Ministry of Higher Education of the USSR. The financing and material maintenance of these institutions is done by the Ministries of Specialities. Medical schools, for instance, are financed, etc., by the Ministry of Public Health, pedagogical schools are financed by the Ministry of Educations etc.. (Source: Medynskiy, "Education in USSR," 1955, p* 7417). Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Relea lQ- 50 -Yr 2 03. CIA-RD - nalPnnoAnn Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ? 5) Universities, higher technical, agricultural, economic, and Judicial institutions (33 universities, 181 technical institutes, 109 Agricultural 6 Forestry, 30 (monad cal and Judicial, i0 total 34, are un r full and direct cone, trol, of the Ministry of Higher Zducation of the USSR in all phases 04 administrative, scholastic, financial, etc* The other Institutions of Higher Education (pedagogical 04 2220 medical 0, 77, art 0 47, physical culture 40 15 11 17, literary, and historioal*archive institutes ?? 5$ teacher's institutes 04 54 total by Jan. 10 1956 40 371)are under ths rt noial? and other material control ot the appropriate S* Wised Ministries of the Republics in which they are situated. 1ln total n o ; r of lusher educational ir.stitutions is 7240 (compiled from vochn k diya postupayuahchilth v vriehyys uchebnve zavedeniya 1950 Moscow) In questions of pro,methodology, etc the control is in the 1 nds of the Ministry of H r Education of the USSR, In 1945 Committises on the Affairs of educational culturei, Institutiono (lib tries musfums0 readlna halls, lecture oproav were later ) were ton " in 11 republics, They netted Ministries of Cultures Thus in 1 , flc two AlltoUnion Ministries re in char of education The Ministry of Hisher Education and the Ministry or Labor Re serves, and two ministries each in every individual Republics the Ministry of Education and Ministry of Cultures Besides thio, some Iteparate phases of t uostior are under a aeries of Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release._ @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDPRi-ninAqpnry)ArIrv,,,,?? ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy A. proved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ? committees(Committee of Physical Culture and Sports Committee on Affairs of Arts Ministry of Cinematoeraphys Committee of Radio Information of the Soviet of Ministers of the USSR)a Ministries of Zducation of the Individual Republ:cs of USSR, kray and oblast' organs of public educations nave titair school inspectors, part of whose duties is wethodolo6ical help to teachers and control of their work, Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50 -Yr 2013 /03. _ -n naqpnn,,A nn Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Ap roved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 III.WeIgLajleneral Education in USSR The system of general public education in USSR is composed of: 1) institutions Of pre-school discipline, 2) schools of genaral education of all grades and types, and pedagogical "uchilishcha", 3) Higher Educational Institutions: Universities, Teachers' Institutes, Pedagogical Institutes Degrees, Besides the system of general education there is a network of secondary and higher trade and professional schools, the discussion of which is beyond the time scope of this report, and can be given in a separate report, if such is required, and which is, in the opinion of the author of this report of high importance in the study of USSRAidres* A, Pre-school Institutions kindemtna Pre-school institutions take care of children from 3 to 7 years of age* The acting regulations governing these agencies were approved by the Ministry of Education in 1944* Among the points covered by the statute are the taming: 10 A kindergarten is a State institution for Soviet upbringing of children 3.7 years* 2* A kindergarten, irrespective of the organization or institution that maintains it, is conducted on the basis of the "Regulations of the Kindergarten" ("Ustava detskogo sada') and the program,pmethodical direction of the Ministry of Education of ROSOF4080,R00 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RnPRi_ni (IA Declassified in Part - Sanitized Cop Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 3. For the realization of abovementioned point le, the kindergarten: bYthust cultivate in the children love of Soviet Homeland, its leaders, the Red Army, thus aiding the successful upbringing of the children in later schooling; children must be told, in understandable to them terms, of the life and work of Lenin and Stalin, arousing and strengthening in the children love for Lenin and Stalinu(Stalin is now probably replaced by Khrushchev and others). (Source: Ye. Ne Medynckly, "Prosveshcheniye v SSSR" ("Education in Twig, moscow, 1955, pp. 47-54)e Kindergarten teachers must graduate from pre-school secondary pedagogical institutions (doshkollnlye pedagogicheskiye uchilishcha), of which by Jan. 1, 1956, there was 47e (Source, "Spravochnik dlya postupayushchikh v srednvye spetsiallnyye uchebnyye zavedeniya 1956)0 Besides these there are also pre-school Oepartloents of 57 pedagogical "uchilishcha" for pub14.o school teachers 14 pre-school pedagogical "uchilishcha" have also correspondence departments, and 2 have evening sections. Table I how z tA.P'4, distribution of pedagogical institutes among the various republics 14 a. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043Rnn94nn99nnno_ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Republic, TABLE 1 Doshkollnyye pedagogicheskiye uchilishcha (pre* school pedagogical institutions Correspondence Debts at pre* school pedago? &Leal institu* tions Evening Debts of premischool pedagogical institutions R.S.F.S.R. Az. S.S.R. Latvian 3 3.11. Uzbekh. SoSeR. bolorusskay S.S.R. Kare1o4inskaya 4S6R. (now part 00 Ro)0F.34Re lOviovOOloWhowirMrovvvvion 40 1 1 14 2 000O 000* WOO NO ON NI NO (Table I was compiled L ilaWISOIRIIIMIFYIVIVAItag#11.? the author from the "3pravochnik dlya post* upayushchikh v Jredni4Hre 4ctala1lnyye uchebnyye zavedeniya" 1956). One must note from Table 1 a signifieani, 'et: namely, that pre.. school ped ogical "uchiliahchel 41 out of a total of 47, are located on the territory 0: R.3.Fe6.R., whereas spy republics Estonia, Latvia, Kazakh Reoblic, Ukraine (Ukrainets population i$ second in number only to Russia's), Azerbaidzhan, Armenia, etc., do not have a single preschool "uchilishche among them. This is an indication of a basic inequality in status among the republics, based on solely Political factors -0 Rusaiata desire to dominate and absorb everything. The various republics mentioned, not being able to prepare enough personnel to staff their kindergartens, are forced to draw on the output of Russia's "uchilishcha", drafting teachers who cannot even speak the native language of the republic concerned, leading to Russification of kindergartens, or to neglect 15 se Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDIDsi-ninaqpnnoAnnonn,-,,,,, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Cop Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 kindergarten education altogether. This phenomenon is manisfested also in other forms, to be mentioned later, which lead to the cone elusion that Russia is definitely exploiting her supposedly equal Union republics, which arc reduced to colonies of R.S.F.S.R. For the preparation of preeschool workers of higher qualifioae tions, some Peaagogioal Institutes have special preschool depart' ments. In R.S.F.S.R. such departments exist in Moscow (Pedagogical Institute im. V. I. Lenin), in Leningrad (Pedagogical Institute im. A. I. Gertsen), in Gorlkiy, molotov, Ryazan', Rostovenameonu, and some others, Children booke have e very important part in pre school child It the end of their stay in kirAteearten, children must be able to count to 20.'30: compare numbers, 'tee able to write numerals, add and subtract aulabere from one to ten, know weights and measures, know the day of the week, be able to tell time being accurate to the hour. The child muet be able to cogently and understandably retell a short story to others, tell of an episode in his or her life know by heart several poems. ta4 Numbers of children attending kindergarten in USSR between 1929 1955: ear urn ' o children in thousands ers o children in thousands TABLE 2 5,917 1,130 2,260 TABLE 2 as 16 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-0104f1Rnn9:einnoonnno a Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The numbers of children attending kindergarten, given in table 2, 'between 1929401955, were carefully checked in several sources. This was done in view of the obvious irregularity in the table, deviating from standard Soviet practice of giving statistics in an orderly manner, according to the maxim that every phase of Soviet life must show progress from year to year, and alao because this table can be used to show the real state of affairs in premechool education in USSR, which affects the rest of the educational system as well. As seen from table 2$ the numbers from 1933 to 1940 show a cataetrophic decline from 5,917,000 in 1933 to 1,130,000 in 1940. The documents rPOW which these figuree wore derived are the following: 1) point "b" in Stalin's report during the XVII meeti Communist Party of USSR, on the fulfillment of the first fiveeyea: plain, given in Jan 260 19340 was said: "The rise in the number of children in preeschool education was fr A 838,000 In 19r2, to 5,917,000 in 1933!' II) in the resolution of the XVII meeting of the Coaxuni t Party concerning the second fivewyear plan (1933e1937)t giv n in January 19340 the etatement mentioned above was confirmen: % ',..not counting preeschool education, which even in 1932 reached ?2 million chi1dren0.3" III) the law on the 4th fiveftyear plan, concerning the reconstruction of the national economy of USSR in 1946401950$ states in the section on kindergartens: "...to increase the number of children attending kindergartens in 1950 to 2,260,0000 that iu to double the number (of children attending kindergartens) in 1940". (I, II and III, were obtained from pp. 70.76 of "Direktivy _ r.nnv Anoroved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 VIP(b) i post. sov. pray. o nar. obi?. za 19174947"). Prom this document it follows that in 1940 there were 1,130,000 children attending kindergartens in USSR. 4) The data in table 1 for 1955, 3,000,000 children, was derived from directives of the fifth five?year plan (19514955), where it was stated: "To increase the number of kindergartens by 14 ? The numbers from 1933 to 1940 show a decline from 5,9170000 in 1933 to 1,130,000 in 1940. n re is a ell t chance that the authors of the fonrth five year plan did not look at the statistics given In the first and second five.year plans, but :Lt, is more probable that the obviously too great numberipen by Stalin was decreased consciously. The increase of almost 5 minion, a seven,fold increase, in the space of 4 years can not possibly be true, if only because it ia physically impossible to train the number of teachers necessary, and also to build the number of buildings to accomodate them all, and all that in the most difficult period of Soviet rule, when in ono part of the Union ? Ukraine to in 1932-33 over 5 million Ukrainian peasants died of hunger, among them a very great number of children of preaq.chool age. It seems that Stalin, in order to cover up the reality in USSR during these years, used statistics as a smoke screen, a device now often used, and not without su ess, by trained disciples of Stalin. in July 1956, the Central Stat :Leal Division of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, publ hed a work called: "Narodnoyc khozyaystvo SSSR Statia ichvity Sbornik." (a statistical survey). This collection contained (on p. 248) the table 2a, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Data etven in table 2a differa atarply from that in table 2 (with Olit otoeption or I entry for 1940), thua reruting the voAntioueily published data on the 414.1tbjects The number of childrim 2wfol00 entimivo iiome other datiA, 9ab113hqd in ttg;t $amo eolleetIon arta:404,4i uh3t dit.tui rviw Lj pub 31,,,cki atglounattnaoht alminiahed, amost 64016 in 1950 and 19554* almoat The aontroverfa . la 1 \ 4.46 :)?,;00 4 1. ", 3 0111 1 4 latg14t IDtab latioL .140 of#1,,v. p% 1,404w,? 1/44. w Vr vf ,??? I, Ar.,44#4, 10 4 Uttar* pr tfohinipo 3i4ON,0 aU4 (k,44eLlia bts) oitri uxonot , atttiPtil' n t *s14 tv .???' ? 40 t 4 4e ? "???. to evrgallatv from ??"tw ??it. t, ? Y"lAit tUr.a not tAati4tit41 Th.ol?thor r tot ka:$ ?4?4+????4? 4?1/44 144' 1enty?!.t,i k ,4 C4, Itt lfS 44,4_ .1; OrtelLatii : IM ? si Ne4,114?.t? /Calk: fr..4,3? Oh; 2, at, ,c..4 6.s'elt& " 4 f .?10 5 n?Aliirtt, 4r, ?WP 444;;. r41 1'0 wizen one tv 01;?. f f kOhol V uM4 A(7LLtrli. 44,(0, at." , ,10 ilk 4, 14$ Tlk * ?41,1- 0, ,.?? ? i? 144 4: 4 4 vi*t ;Itettliticta) Cooleiu3ton (ii it 1 , reti,00/40,44i att., 9 tic tollowl ci3111drn111.1111 T kdd 134, f-,.? ? L. 44,14.f t. et, 4 4 $mall Litoton :- m MMAaJLt ttffeld c..OLA t ,tg , '4UW , (4' ? nOw and in the ro 'T future, only a =all nurloo.r of 4,, ,44t, e J.!%`"A .0.4tt,,w 1{0A .1440N1 $fry wiUh ? , nVIlf04 OP? ..m,?4.414, s 0: (ar AtOuntaa who tted ...ergarton A 0473.,,,J1 tint owality 01 ei\VN. 44% 44 9.D .4.1 4 et,, Vra t in h 1?,? 1 40, t ? ? ot?t?,, ?,,T"kt , t itti.P1+0 4atwcov 4 'we " 4 Sli4i; ?t *17,11,170y1410. 30 ? ,?)44X"4. '?? ..1.? ? ? . toy% Ible* 0 'ay ft7.3 We of the E 50, 4 ty of izb? t o etri 4 ? pr wax ci? 4.0-1.444,A4 $ o 4:1 it .two3a4ca.vi, w the r, t. mi !?0, d ti; )ri ,cl NIA--4 0 In 4.1 frIV .1. a, ? .4, 4,,xii;;?,',1?:,!, ? ,?kt? .44 qtyl, ?r?ti, 41111411 tvarten in V13.4 ater role in eduoatlon than it doeep 1441 the WA a? 0 trtta 4rgieo Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 aa the equivalent of the first grade of public school. Table 3 Shows the distribution of kindergartens in various years among the urban and rural population. Numbers of children in kindergartens in USSR (expressed in thousands). Source: .(HTNa-ri)4nue.: Khozypystvo SSaE - :A at i che skiy ,ibornik?, 1956, MO3COW, p. PLO: Table 3 ear 1928 1940 1950 1954 1955 an ura 119 11 906 958 1305 1410 266 211 272 303 From table 3 it follows that only approx, 20 percent of the kindergartens were situated in rural areas in all periods shown, while one must note that the rural populaton of the USSR comprises now 56% of the total. This points out a general tendency of the 'ik,iet government to improve the conditions in cities, in spite of the fact that the standard of living in the collective farms is far lower from that of the cities 1) Elementary school le a 4-,grade ashoolk. for etiden of 70/10 yeam of age. From 1930 on, attendance is compulsory and tuition in it is now free. The course of study is identical with that of the first four grades of the semiletka and the first four grades of the desyatiletka. The numbers of children attending the firat 4 grades of schooling (in either elementary school semiletka, and deLya-ile ka) are shown in table 4, gib 20 40 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002 , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 B) Schools of Prima and Seconda General Education in USSR The primary and secondary school system in USSR consists of elementary school (4 grades) for children 7.10 years of age, semiletka (7myear school) for children 70413 years of age (7 grades) and Desyatiletka (lOmyear school) m 74016 years of age (10 grades). Table 5 shows the number of children attending public school in U611, during 1927401956. These numbers are taken from three dill* ferent original Soviet sources. (I) 01 From Stalin's report to the 17th Congress of tiw Communist party concerning the work of Ts ?? KVKP(b) on January 26, 1934; (Directives and resolutions..4. 70, Joi:z of Cong. Coll No. LAW KR 2280 0A1 1947). (ii) .0 "Cultural opment in USIA" Statistical Collection Gosplanizdat, p. 518, (II1)0- "National Soonomy of USSR" w- Statistical Collection, Central 6tatl3tic:a1 Adminiotration of the Soviet of Ainisters of USSR, Mescow 1956, Lib. of Cong. Call No. H. A. 1433 .A5 1956, pp. 17, 224. The contradiction between Stalin's statistical publications concerning the numbers of children attending elementary school in 1928-11.7 million, 1933019.6 million, and the data (1956) given by the Statistical Admidatration of USSR for the same years (19280-10035 million; 1933-47067 million), points out once again the necessity of being very careful with statistics published officially by the USSR, but this table leads to another very important conclusion api; to the present condi ionsin USSR namely that the number of students in public school during 19501 and 1954/55 fell 4harp1y from 19.67 millions to 12.7 millions that a, 22. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 is a 7 million decrease (36%)* The official explanation for this decrease is that the enrollment during these years consisted of children born during the war, and the birthrate during the war years was considerably reduced* (Source; footnote on p* 221 of "National Economy of USSR" 0 Statistical Collection 1956). Aims of element school education in U ? $ ? $ ? R. The public school must, in way understandable by the children, of 7010 years of age, instill in them the background for a world outlook of dialetic materialism, systhematically develop the ins', teresta and curiosity of the children, and develop their memory, attentiveness, thinking, speaking* The children are taught to observe the objects and manifestations of the world around them, get an understanding of the materialistic quality of the world, are to look at phenomena in terms of their logical relationship and development* (Source: Ye* N. Medynskiy "Public Education in USSR" (Narodnoye obrazovaniye v SSSR) Moscow, 1952, pp. 58-A59). The ro ram and curricula of elementa education The programs and curricula of elementary schools (as also of the semiletka and desyatiletka) are formed by the governments of the individual Republics of the USSR, but the programs must be essentially identical (in reality the Ministry of Education of RSPSR forms the pro-Tams, and the other republics copy them). in 1955/56 a new curriculum plan for all branches of schools of general education, including the elementa4 school (grades 104)0 was instituted in USSR. (Source: "Narodnoye Obrazovanlye, January 1, 1955) pp* 12). This new plan was worked out by the Academy or Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Co .y Approved for Release @50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Pedagogical Sciences of R.S.F.S.R., jointly with the Ministry of Education of R.S.F.S.R., on the basis of directives of the 19th Congress of the Communist Party of USSR on the establishment of polytechnioalmtype instruction in schools of general education, which were based on the premise that the secondary school of general education must not only prepare the students "to enter institutions of higher education, but also form a basis for the preparation of students for entrance into secondary technical educational institutions, and even, in a greater degree to prepare skilled workers for different branches of the national economy: Industry, agriculture, transportation, communications." (Source: ibid.) The new curriculurnapproved by the Ministry of Education of USSR, contained aome changes with respect to the old one. The new and the old curricula are shown in table 5. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043Rrm4nn99nnno_ Isionmaammilimm Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Table 5 Subject Number of hours ? er week ; * 08 Total number of hours old new old new old new old nevi old new Russian 1 uage Arithmetic Nature atudy History Geography Physical education (7,0 C Art (draw* IMO Singing ahopwork and manual training 15 13 0 1 04 2 14 13 7 6 S. i? 15 40 2 TOTAL twanaoseys*wwas 2 2Lil 24 24 2 9 3.716 1734 6 856 796 2 83 66 2 99 66 2 82 66 2 2 198 264 1 1 132 132 132 132 1 40 1 25 2k 27 26 12 300 3234 The new curriculum for elementary school (grades i.4) now includes,a ahcpclass once a week and has 2 hours a week of gym instead of 1 for grades 1 and 2; and 9 hours of Russian instead /1 for the 4th gr e, Decreased were the Russian language in the first and third grade by two hours a week and in the second grade by one hour, arithmetic in the second and fourth grades by 1 hour history by 1 hour (4 gr.,), nature wady and geography were decreased by t hour each (in the 4th grade). Thus, the "Polytechnization" of the elementary school curriculum was expressed in the inclusion of a shop class once a week in all four grades (132 hours), an incase in the physical education Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R00240o77nnn9_ Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Ap roved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 (from 198 to 264 hours), a 66ehour decrease in arithmetic, a 132-hour decrease in Russian, a 17ehour decrease each for nature study and seography, and a 33.hour decrease in history, and also in the 66 hour decrease of the total number cf houre (from 3300 to 3234), Comparing the two plane, one must note that according to the new curriculum, the standards of education will be somewhat :Lower than oefore without even any improvement In the "technical" quality of the students, as 1 hour of manual training a week ehich anyway very little equipment is available in USSR for most schools especially in rural communities) will not help much, especiany considering the ages of the students Involved, A positive quality of the curriculum is that in spite of the decrease, a lot of time is devoted to arithmetic e 25g of the curriculum. The arithmetic pregram of elementary school includes counting 4 arithmetical operations on any whole numbers, abstract numbers as well as concrete number (measurements of things), the notion of fraction, nd elementary concepts of geometry, The solving of probleme io an important part of arithmetic study. The etudy of history is given by the Soviet government an "Important" task, Teachers of history must explain to the children the role of Lenin and Stalin (now Stalin is doemphasized), and the role of, led by them, Communist Party in the struggle for communism and to evoke in the children "wholehearted love of their Socialistic Homeland, and fervent hate of all (its) enemies and oppressors of workers".(8911ree:, Meidynekty),IEducation in .026 to Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R00240022non7_ Lict-ddSSITlea in Part - Sanitized Cop for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 USSR", Moscow, 1952, p. 63). The first parts of the study of his- tory are given in classes of Russian or of their native in the second and third gr e* In the fourth grade, 2 hours a week are devoted to study of elementary history of the USSR. Physical education has as its aim to improve the health of the children, and to cultivate "conscious discipline and collectivism", Fourth grade studeAts have to take an examination in the Russian language, written and oral. NoneRuseian schools also have examinations (written and oral) in the native languages. Almost i of all the elementary schools in the Union have only one teacher (are one-room schools) who fulfills all academic and administrative functions. Other schools have or more teachers, at most 40 students per teachers In two-room schools, one teacher leads the first and third grades, while the other leads the second and fourth gradese Every year they switch roles, the second taking the first and fourth grades, etc., so all children have the same teacher for four years. Such an approach allows the teacher to know closely all his students, and thus be able to approach them individually. In one-room sehools one teacher takes care of all four grades, either at the same time or in two sessions. The marking system is based on 5; five being excellent) 4 good, 3 satisfactory, 2 bad, I very bad (2, and I are failing marks). Table 6 shows the number of separate elementary schools in USSR (not parts of 7-year schools or 10 year schools) and the numbers of students attending, and also the average number of student e per school for the years 19404/41 to 1955/56. This 27 a. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013/0qmq rsi A ?-? ueclassified in Part_- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 table was constructed on the basis of statistical data published in the "National Economy of USA" 0 Statistical Collection" 1956, p. 223. Table 6 Y ars um er o se mentary schools (gr. 1.4) in thousands 4o 43, 01 Number of students in elementary school in millions The aver ;:e number of students per school 125.9 9?8 *8 126.4 745 111.1 108.8 3.6 3.6 60 32.4 33 ovirosawitisOraliltiolowlimOissw From the preceeding table it follows that in separate elementary schools in the period of 1954056 there were on the average 3233 students p r school, that is during these years the overwhelming majority of these schools were one-room schools. This table first shows that in 1950/51 the average number of students in these schools was 60 students per school, that is in that year the majority Of schools were two-room schools, and only a smaller number were one- room schools, which is contradictory to fact. Obrazovaniye of the ministry of education of SFSR published in 1950 No. 1, pp. 17018 states "In 3talingrad ob1ast10 in 1431 out of 3171 points of habitation (vil1age3) of the oblast, there are no schools due to a very small number a achoo1emae children liv ng there. 1184 azine "Narodnoye Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release g____51)-Yr 2013/09gn ? rin_Dr,mn. ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 points of habitation have elementary schools, the numbers of students being from 8 to O. Such distribution of the rural population is characteristic also of other oblast' ?rays, Autonomous Republics." Thus the number of twoioroom school in 1950/51, was nearly that of 1955/56, that i3 1184 were onedsroam schools, and 556 schools were schools with numbers of students exceeding 40 per school. This data confirms the above quotation, and the previous conclusion that the statistical administration of USSR gave an exaggerated figure for 1951 attendance of separate elementary schools (Table 4) and that the ovrwhelming majority were lwroom schools. ito 29 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 CIA RDP81 010431R0074nn99nnn9_c Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy f;pproved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 B3.) Elementary school teachers are trained in pedagogical schools 4- "uchilishckilsocondary professional pedagogical schools). The total number of these "uchilishche by January 1, 1956 was 360, including 3 correspondence schools (sources "Spravochnik dlya postupayushohikh v sredniye spetsiallnyys uchebnyye zavedeniya" (Handbook for enrollment in secondary special schools) 1956, Moscow). Ninetro*two pedagogical uchilishcha have correspond** once school departments, the students of which are mostly people who are already teachers but have not graduated from a pedagogical "uchilishche or its equivalent, and are obligated to graduate from these correspondence schools with* in a certain time, 57 of the pedagogical suchilishche ? have preschool departments to prepare kindergarten teachers* Table 7 shows the distribution of the pedagogical uch 1 'helm among the various republics of US Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDPRi_ninaq nnnew-Inne, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-liDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Republic 14 INS ellis$ TAM 7 rrowrirotwo+~.040?0 ordinary kopulatiom pedagogics:1 (millions) %towel** oetiods Corresp? 11111.6.0601111?04mIlleloWNIO0?0011114041111MVAIMIllwANNOtrawaskowsisegfirvondwontrtiolger***041,40.4iMsliaiso Likrainisn B4 13.R. Uzbek 3?Seft ? Kazakh 3 .3 Georgie ? Aserbirshen t"1 loi.?? Lithuardan seS.R. :old a 4 OS A. tetviaz %R1 gir s.s.n. el EV No?4,00A0 4100# 10j1441:61,Sil t,oitto+4 4*V 2.7 2.7 1.9 4 1.1 3 5 8 0?1011111016"10116111110PoisrmouftitimmiqiiialAweintonsaluvreftwo040.4.,00.1044.4 3 00110610M. AgtkAgeikk ,e,falittAtt.A 404(4400 41144,10i* emishmor 4)0.2 357 3 w0a34,1011POOvrVMAWOOMMO010001144/POWfsw#WW(firiYiviMMANollikeOtalsW.RIVOMPAinewaivr.0001K01,tiRotr,f? WA tea, oftt? Gorresp. cloperiasete prom/school of uchilishoha departments 79 *wow dmippoors. Wisakeits wooPirt 92 23 13. 3 1 1 2 1 3 Ovarovoo. eewiromisoswooddobstobome$144400MS'Av Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 One must note the disproportionality in distribue* tion of pedagogleal uchilishoha compered to the population, 11.80P.5,R, has five times more uchilishch than Ukrainian 84,34,11., while 11.8?P?S,R, has only 2.7 tit, the population Of Ukraine, Of 92 correspondence departments 79 are in ReS,?S?Roland Ukr.11,810R,, Oeorgia, Axerbaydshan, Uzbek 3.3?R?, K4sakh S.S.R., and Kirgiz $4,R? Go not have among them a single correspondence department. All three correspond once schools of the Union are located in 114,F.S.R?. The logic of such uneven distribution is in the Russifieation motivations ot Russia, Xt gives the Russian people a privi lege of training the greater t,rt or schoolteachers, who will be sent for employment in the other republics. The students who wish to become teachers but cannot afford to live in a place where one of their national schools is located, are toreed to study in a Russian correspondence school or depart ment, thus not learning their own language, but concentrate* ing on Ruasian, must go to Moscow to take examinations, etc,* while they are not trained to teach in the sehools of their native rb11o, thu$, lowering their worth as teachers and leading to further Russification, fore 1947 the pedagog cal Wilishche was a year secont.ry school; after 1947, a 4*year school, Prom 1940 to 1956 the tuition was 200 rublos a year in Moscow, Capital cities, and 150 rubles in smeller towns, Theg duate of such a sahool is given the title of teacher of public school and those finishing the pre school ? Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RnPR1_n1rlA,20 in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 department, a teacher in preschool oducation? Those who finish the pedagogical uchilishohe with excellent marks, but not more than 5% of the total number of graduates earn the right to enroll in an institution of higher learning, and all others may also, after three years of work in their profession (teachers in public school and kindergartens) enroll in an institutior of high.lr learning, after having passed the customary entrance examination (Sources sSpravochnik dlys postupayushchikh v voishiye uchebnyle savedenlya 1956" Moscows 19?u, 3)0 Table 8 shows the cUrritulum or the pedaogiul uchilishche, ?L,1 ! ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part-Sanitized Co .y Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 No. Subjeat taught 1) TABLE 8 Number of hours Number spent on oath part of eubjeet Russian language and methodology of teaching the Russian languip, 447 s) Russian language b) Aethodolo of teaching Russian Literature a) Literature b) Children's literature 3) Mathomatica and mothodology of teaching mathematics a) Arit tic b) A:Lgebra o) Geometry d) Mothodolo of Leaching arittic 4) Physies 5) C*,tp, try and minerolo 6)Mtu1e study and methodology of teaching nature study a) Anatomy and physiolo b) Botany d ic evolutionary theory 01 BasZoology (Larvinlom) e) Methaoloa of teaching mature study G ography and Uodology of teaciling 4e4rephy a) Qoneral study of the '4trth b) Geography of foreign countries o Geography of t U.S Ey d Methodology of tahing geo aso? - 34 189 647 254 110 274 v OA I I a NO SIM 35? 90 :$25 64 248 144 182 73 254 110 6$ 57 42 35 110 72 72 35 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01RetflPnn,,Annoon.W, c Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Mrisittowor000t No. Subject taught worapakaieremmfarfoiiMmormownit.WM...? /410...,41111.100111111WoomlumiottiliNNIMMANDIRIONSIWWWWWoroomokorpolOPoryw.rpowee *WNW 8) History and methodology of teaching history a) Hie tory of USSR b) New History c) Methodology of teacaing history 9) Hiatory of AP (b) Comm, Party or USSR) 10) Constitution of U4464,A0 11) "s'oychology 12) ?edagogical 13) History of pedagogy 14) Logic 15) School hygiene 16) Gellipapily and the methodology of tcaching caligrapil 17) Drawing and methodology of teaching drawing 3inging and tilt methodoloey of tcaching singing '44wsica1 culture and methotiology of physical culture Practical work in shops aitid on collective farms Obsrvatiori of lessons and trial lessons 4. 35 It laiiIMNONIONWS101?01001011,10,1401.10?111P0 Nurber of hours Total. 399 92 51 57 190 64 54 36 245 09 205 212 NuMber spent on each part of subject 1,44141, 11104 254 110 '35 92 51 57 190 64 54 36 108 245 209 230 205 212 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220on7_s Declassified in Part - Sanitized...9.2a.LL proved for Release 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Pedagogical uohiliehcha, as all other special secondary schools, admit students or both sexes, ages from 14 to 30 (evening and correspondence schoole have no age limItation), and admit all who have graduated from a Teyear school and passed the entrance examination, During the last few years, admitted also are students who have completed sece ondary education (10eyear school), and they have a twoeyear program, while those who entered from a Teyear school have a kwyear program, The twoeyear program concentrates on methodolrogy, pepholoey? 'Niel pedagogical practice, etc. The entrance examinations are based on a program compiled by the Ministre f Education, PedagozIcal uchillehcha of the sa type existee in Russia before the communist revolution of 1917, and they were called teachers! seminaries, The total eumber of these schools by Jan, 1917 was 170, including 26 women's schoo114 the total number of students attending these schools was 20 thousand, Each year they graduated 5e6 thousand, (Source: Medynskiy? "Prosveshcheniye v SUR" (Educ in USSR) 1955 p. 177) high quality teachers for elementary seeoole? The number of Soviet pedagogical uchilishch at the present time (Jan, 1956) is 357, that is only twice the number fore the revolution, and they graduate (including about 2,500 corre- spondence school students) about 30 thousand teachers a year (this can be deduced from t total number of students graduating from technical schools e 312 thousands* and the Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release ? 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043Rnn94nn99nnno_ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy A proved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 number of pedagogical schools 40 about of the total, so if these statistics are true, the number of graduates from pedagogical schools each year is about 30 thousand ("Economy of USSR" Statistical Colleation? 1956; p, 27, el. 229)). if one compares the old teachers' seminaries with the Soviet pedagogical uehllishcha, one finds that only at the present time do the Soviet schools approach the old ones in the quality of teachers produced, One of the factors in thia is that the pre-revolutionary teaching even under tsarist despotism, was not doetrinary andoneesided as it is today with all biological, literary, political, social, etc. studies being perveated to the core with communist ideology to the absolute exclusion of all othert, The old-time teachers eould? therefore prefvnt his students with a less oneesid,..* and stilted world outlook, and were not forced to give them a standard party line that many of them do not themselves believe in the least. One may note at this point that western observers scei to forget that the high standard of some Soviet schools is not duo to Soviet accomplishmentes In fact the contra:4\ is true, Until 1935 the soviet schools, due to their so- called trial of "ultrnemodern" and "ultraeprogressive" educa tion? were steadily falling in quality until they reached an incredibly lee state and only a thorough revision (with, of course, no nlways under the Soviet system, a thorough purge) of the whole system with a return to old-time teaching methodology and curriculum, started the schools on a rise in quality until today Oft of the results are high though - 37 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-n1n4ylPnnoAnnoorvw Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 still not as high as in the oldetime schools' and with the dictatorial political and social oneesidednees being forced on educations they cannot reach the old time levels except in a purely academic way in the phyeical & mathematical science:4 Only with democratization and establishment of academic freedom can these schools scorn e truly educational .nstitutions and progress from where the old schoolo left off* And this Is not in the leapt bit a vindication of tsarist despotiom, but a condemnation of the Soviet system that with all its technical pro6roen cannot attain the quality of education in tsarist schools* "Econoey of USSR" e Statistical Collection for 1956 has no direct rererence as to the number of teachers working in elementary school and also in the firat four grades of the eemiletka and the desyatiletkas but on the buds of other materiel in the same publication one can calculate that by June 1956 the number of teachers in the said grades was around 680 750 thousand* Thus, on p. 223 of the said publicstial one finds that the total number of students in elementary, heart and 10eyear school in 1956 wae 28*2 minion, and - there were 1655 thousand teachers; that te on the average Aore were 1604 etudents per teacher* Since the ave4age num ber of students 041t teacher in grades 14, is generally Wier than for gradem 5e10, the average num#1, of students per teacher in these gradee would prc'babiy be around 18e20* Page 224 of the said Statistieal Collection indicates that the Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013/09/03 ? ria_pnDszi Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 numlAr of students in grades im4 in 1955 was 13,6 nallionil From this it follows that the number of teachers in grades 1?04 was around 680 to 750 thousand 4 The veracity ef these figures for teachere in grades 1m4 is further confirmed on p. 195 of the Statistical Collection (1956) in the number of actually employed teachers, library and cultural m educe, tional workers, having had secondary education was 818.6 thousands on June 1, 1955. Obviously this figure includes all teachers of the first four grades of public school, whose highest 4ucational requirement is graduation from a secondary school, and also some teachers in grades 5 A,7 of To?year schools and 10myear sehools who have complet' d only secondary s(hool. Excluding from the total number the library workers, nd educationalmcultural workers (working In youth clubs, eta.) and the teachers in grades 51.7, the number of teachers workm trig in grades 14 would be about 700 thousand. Not all teachers in grades Imit have completed even sec? ry education. These teachers are by law, enrolled in the 92 correspondence sections of secondary pedagogical schools in USSR. The total num r of secondan technical elorrespondence school student in UR is 297 thousand. ("Sconomy of USSR statistical Collection 1956 p. 227)1 of this about 2045% are enrolled in pedagogioal correspondence schools (about 60m65 thousand stu nts). These pedagogical schools as a rule take only students who are actually engaged in teaching at the time, The percentage of teachers who now 39 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 ? CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 w.:14m14r4.:." ' ?'. - , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Co.y Ap?roved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 have still not completed secondary education is now at least 1045%, because of the increase in the population and the number of schools, and also because of a great influx of the better prepared elementary school teachers into the 54,7 grade of rural Teyear and lOslear schools, due to the eatablish ment of compulsory Twyear education in rural areas. The graduates of secondary pedagogical uchilishcha are first of all taken by urban areas, so the rural areas are filled by comparatively lower quality teachers and are generally ot considerably lower tyz., and the urban schools prepare stu dents much better. Another factor contributing to the low qualitr of rural schools and reflects negatively on the training of the students is the great economic poverty of rural residents, of *WA the author has had firsthand experience. One illustra tion of the very difficult material condition of *sante that the author has seen himslf is the following. In 1940 two very good friends of the author's were teachers in a two room school at Putivka village in Poltava County, Ukraine and the author's little son was staying with them for the summer. The author came there himself at intervals, bringing bread, belt pork and other provisions from Kiev. Due to the rpetual state of .emimbunger among the Ititolkhoe children 0 who lived in the villa& and attended school, the author brought considerable quantit3r ot food which the two teachers secretly distributed among tae hungry children, To do so openly would - , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 013/09/03 CIA-RDP81-01043R00240o27onn7 - 1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 be to challeee the maxim that "life became better e life became happier" and would be a dangerous admission of the fact that the parents of the children could not feed them. And this in Ukraine, where the soil is, as is universally known, the best in the world for grain cultivation. These two friends confided in the author that at tendance during the cold winter months was low* but not be cause of a lack of interest in the students or a lack of care in their eirents, but in a much more fundamental lack e a lack of shoes. The children especially of large families, tried very hard to get to school by sharing the Baum shoes. For instance if there were two pairs of shoes available, two children would come to the schoolhouse, but one of them would return home carrying the other ix' of shoes in his hands to give to another child, who would then come to school, and if there were more children, the process continued. Some families, however, cd not have even enough shoes even for that and if the parents had to go to work* the children sines ply couldn't come The author contributed two pairs of shoes to be thus c rculated. During Spring, Summer and Autumn all rural children went barefoot. The teachers were very happy with these shows not only from obvious human feelings, but doubly so, because teachers In whose schools the attendance was low were punished, and these shoes enabled them to have Later com ratively excellent attendance. They weregommendediti the authorities. Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013/09/03 r.IA_RniDsm rArz - Sanitized CO .y Approved for Release ? 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 This was by no means exceptional, such conditions existing throughout the Soviet Union. In spite of all handicaps, the teachers finishing secondary pedagogical uuchilishche are well prepared for their duties and in the ?Wes where the better teachers are placed, and where the residents are materially much better off than the.aunts, the schools give an undeniably positive is result and the quality of training is high, This/specially true in capital cities like Moscow, Leningrad Kiev, etc. The rural schools however, because of the severe handicaps menw tioned, graduate much poorer quality students. Lapecially excellent schools with the st teachers and excellent equip,* merit are established in Moscow, Leningras? etc., for the amazement and admiration of them by tore ign visitors, whose opinion of Soviet education would be somewhat difterent it they chanced to visit a real rural school. If thoy did, the ravings about Soviet scholastic excellence would not exist in the American newspapers. The Soviets aro excelient prop*' gAn44 artiste, and to obtain the best equipment in the world for a few schools is not too hard, so their purpose is easily accomplisheo It is astounding however, to see the intense tual stature of viators whom they manatod to fool, and who do not refills that Moscow and Leningrad are not by far the whole of usu. One must note howeverlthat many soviet elementary schools in the cities prepare students with high quality " 42 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Co Ap__pj__slpyqfAr. Release ? 2013/09/03 : CIA-FinPPl_rmnAor) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Ap roved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 academic knowledge who go on to secondary and higher education. The gap between the schools in large cities and large incluse trial areas and all the others is, however, very great, and very few rural students have any chance at all of Eetting higher education, and as a result a privileged class of urban residents is being more and more firmly established. Insti- tutions of higher education, which are comparatively few, will, therefore alweys have enough good students drafted from good schools in the cities selected by competitive examinaUons, to assure high quality in the higher educational system. The children of peasants, however, become themselves peasants, The same situation exists also among poorer industrial workers, who, even if the tuition is free cannot afford to give them higher education because they cannot afford to give them material support while they study. These children are forced to enter into the industry at a comparatively early age to help support the family. The results of urban elementary school education In USSR (4 grades) are near to the results of elementary educa tion in the USA (6 grades). This is in part explained by the fact that children in USSR enter school a year later than in the USA, the Soviet kindergarten playing a more import nt role in USSR than in USA: and also that the USSR has 6mday a week attendance in school, as opposed to 5eday in the USA. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R0024nn77nnn9_ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The ear school semiletka By decree of TsIK and SNK SSSR (Central Executive Committee and Soviet of People's Commissars of USSR) on August 140 1930 compulsory elementary school education was put into effect in the whole Union, and 7-year education in urban centers. ("Narodnoye Obrazovainye", 1948) p.25, L. ol C. call not LAW KR 2280 *A2 1948)* The second 5-year plan (1933?,1937) extended compulsory 7-year educ ? tion in the urban centers had already been accomplished. Point "e" of the plan ttates: "to accomplish durirk; the *ecnd five-year plan not only the liquidation of illiteracy among the poopie of the Union, liquidation oP semi-illiteracy among the workiw dult popu- lation and establishment of universal elementary education, but the realization of universal compulsory polytechnical education in the sphere or 7-year education especially in the rural areas, as in cities this problem has been basically already solved durinG the first five-year plan." Actually, however, universal 7-year education in rural areas diAl not even begin to be in effect until 1949, and even in the cities it was not fully accomplished by 1949. This is indicated by the fourth 5-year plan. The fourth five-year plan (1946-1950) states 'to raise the number of elementary 7-year and 10 year schools by 1950 to 193 thousand, and the number of students in these 44 0. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043Rnn94nn99nnn9_c Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 schools to 31.8 million, providing universal compulsory education of children from the age of 7 on, in the cities as well as rural arca." Narodnoye Obrazovaniye No,10 January 1950 (an official publication) states on p. 16: "(The fourth fiveeyear plan) of 1949 had considered the promotion of all children in the rural areas to the fifth grade who had completed elementary school that summer. In order to fulfill this tremendously important government directive in all rural areas a gr e w deal was done to extend the network of 7eyear schoola to staff these schools with teachers, to widen and better equip the existin6 doemitory facilities and establish new ones. A great tioal was done also to explain to the studentu their parents, and the entire rural community the political and cultural meaning of transition to universal 7eyear education... As a result of reat organizational and propa8andaeexplanatory work among the population, on September 1 1949, 97.2% of all students who graduated that summer from the fourth grade of urban and rural echools had enrolled into the fifth grade." The quotations clearly indicates the fact that the transition from 4year to 7eyear compulsory education was not even begun until 1949 and the statements made in the second five year plan (19334937) as to the establishment of universal 7-year education in rural areas by 19370 had no connection with reality. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 This indicates the propagandistic nature of the five year plans, and shows of what little value they are, except in an indirect m nner, in studying Soviet reality, The transition of rural areas to 7-year compulsory education (in 1949) was conducted without a preliminary prepar- ation as to bui4dings, teachers and equipment, and as a result, the 7-year schools were established in the existing elementary schools with the same elementary school teachers, making it necessary to run the school in two or three shifts a day. Confirmation of this comes from the same article in Narodnoye Obrazovanlye, No,10 1950, p016 (Some questions on 7-year education): 'However, the administrations of public education could not supply all the newly accepted students with class- room space. Therefore the number of schools working in two shine was increased, and some schools were forced to conduct studies in three shifts." Additional teachers were drafted from among the more prepared elementary school teachers elsewhere as was already mentioned previously. Furter confirmation of this comes from the si114 article on p016 of Narodnoye Obrazovanlye: "Great difficulties arose also with the selection of teachers in the newly organized 7-year rural schools, In most sections (cray, oblast', and autonomous republic) for teaching in the new fifth grades elementary school teachers e ea Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 were drafted. Aleo in some newly opened schools (for instance in ?moment* oblast') for teaching in the fifth crade were drafted teaohers of the elementary schools in the area where the 7-year schools were established orcin; them to teach in boqi7." The same article indicates that some students are forced to go to school a distance of 6 to 10 kilometers and some even more than 10 kilometers (more than 6.2 miles), Since transportation for these children ia not available, they are forced to walk, and sine proper clothe, shoes, etc., are not available, many children are fecjuntly absent from schools especially during the winter months du, to cold, spring - due to impossible road conditions etc. Due to these conditions, and also the inferiority of teachers forced to teach in higher articles than they are qualified for and forced to teach subjects that they are not acquainted with,the quality of students is poor. The following quotation from Narodnoye Obrazovaniye, No.1, 1950, p.170 serves to exemplify the fact that part of the teachers in ilrades 5-7 have only completed secondary school: "in 3talingrad oblast,, in the extension of the nat- work of rfeyeax schoolsin connection with the transfer to compulsory 7qear education in rural areas)290 teachers were needed - 112 teacners of the Russian language and 78 teachers of mathematics. These teachers were drafted from a number of the better prepared elementary school teachers," 47 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The requirement for elementary school teachers being the completion of a secondary school, the teachers drafted in this case to teach in grades 5.7 were also ones who only completed secondary school, especially in view of the fact that teachers do not choose their schools but are appointed, so ever if a teacher who has had hi:;her education wanted to teach in elementary school in spite of the lower salary, he could not do so, ?Ordinar:e (full time) teachers of the 5th to 7 6ra4es in USSR must graduate from a "teachers, institute' (at the present time (1955-56) some -"hap;os were made which will be dealt with later)* Therefore all elementary school teachers forced to teach in the 5th to 7t11 Grade of the Y-year school had to enroll in a correspondenc Uivision of a toacherss vt institute. Teacher xistitutes zraduated teachers of the following four specialities: Russian lan6ua6e and literature; physics and matlematico; nature study and c egiraphy; history* To receive full pay, each teacher must teach at leat 16 hours a week* Aecor(i 116 to thcr curriculum of grades of 7-year chools, this is possible in small schools for teachers o? only two specialities; RuuLan lanata6e and literature and mathematics and physics* In history, for iniitance? there are only 8 hours a weel, available, in geography and nature study - 15 :loars* Thus, history teachers have to take on the responsibility to teach other subjects, for Instance forei-n lanEouaze, physical culture, drawing, drafting, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R0024nn97nnn9_ ' Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 singing, ioe. responsibilities for which they are not prepared. Such difficulties are, of course, not raced by 1arger urban schools, which as a rule Ilave several sets of classes for each 6rade. Rural T?year schools, however, with one set of classes, mostly have for these classes only two teachers, who during class hours conduct two classes each at a time, and equally divide between them the available hours. It is obvious that such a system leaus to lower quality or preparation in the students. The students zraduati from Imtah a school have considerably lees chance or passin the entrance examinations into professional sou,ondary schools, mpare h,ive graduated from urban 7-year to stuiicntt* who The ?quality of learnine, in the 5-7 grades of the 100?year schools, is without a doubt hi6her than in the 5-7 grades of 7-,year schools ?specie:4y in 10.*year schools in the cities, whore hija quality teachers shop equipment, etc. are available. Rural 10*Pyoar schools are also somewhat higher in quality, but not much hi6her? due to lack of buildins? laboratories and shops, and poorer quality of teachers as well af4 poorer preparation of the students by rural elementary schools. The old and the new curricula of the 57 6rade8 of th 7year school (1951 ", and 1955/56) are shown in table 9. The Eilource for tke old curriculum was Ye. N. Meaynskly "Narodnoye Obrazovani v 6S3R0" (idtwation in US R) Moscow, 1952? p.74* the source for the new one wau "Narodnoye Obrazovaniyen No.9,19551 p.49 A* 49 4* Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ? %Am Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 , ?tactic occupation (work in the field and shopwork) , Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The new curriculum for 7 year schools, (19550056) given here in table 9 for only the 5th, 6th and 7th grade, In comparison with the old one (1953152), because the curricu lum for the first four grades was 3iven earlier, and the curricula of the first four zrads of elementary school and 7-year school are identical* The new curriculum was formed at the directive of the 19th Concress of the Communist Party on the establishment of "polytechnical education' in schools of general education. As been from table 9 the new curriculum for the 5.07 grades of the 7-ye school differa from the old only in the inclusion of "practical oc tion" classes - two hours a week in the 5th and 6th grade, and inging lessons - 1 hour a week in the 5th and 6th 6rades. This was done at the expense of dimlnishing the number of hours of mathematics in the 5th and 6th .rades by 1 hour a week, diminishik, the Russian language by 1 hour a week, chemL ry in the 7th iorade by i hour a week, and biology in the 6th ;IFoade by 1 hour a week* From this follows that polytechnization" of the 5-7 grades was effected only by the inclusion of 4praetica1 occupation" - shopwork and work in the fields, unless one is to consider the ad Won of in Ieasons as effectine "polytechnizat on," which is somewhat doubtful, to say the least* Sine % there are no shops in moat of the Nhools and no shop teachers as wello the positive eTect;s of ''polytechni It any will he very alight in the nem future as well as the present* The resultine dimunition of the number of hours Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy A proved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 devoted to mathematics, chemistry, physics, and bio1ogy by 3240310 will, however, have a olearly negative effect on the proficiency of the students in these subjects$ 52 40 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 're:'chers1 In titutes The traininz of teaailere for the 5.07 grades was, before 1917, accomplished by 17 woo-called teachers' traininc institutea with a threeft.year curriculum. The students of these teachers' traininG institutes were usually zraduates of teachers' seminaries (now callQd pa joicai uchillshcha), after they had been taachin6 for several yearz, in elementary schools. Teacher' institutos save very ivod traininkL. Aside from ordinary subjects, her were t it: psychol,o4y,pedazotia? and methodoloa. PedatA61 al practiv, was wIry well omanized and gave excellent resulta. Wome:10 however were not accepted into the teacher0 institutes. Even thotkiA teachers' inatitute;$ v4ere not cronsidtwod ashihir educational institutions In pro.oravolutionury they were neverthUeso truly important educational centers oT hi6h0vIality pedaLpOocal With tile eAabUshment Bollshevik powers these inetatutes were transformed into 4year inAltutes the 4o-called higAer educational Institut& (Intituty JarodnooD ?bra ovaniya) with raculitets for tranInz of teaOherz eor 7 oracles. in 1935, when a sharp turn Was taken to revert to pro.orevolutionary tQaohing modcw? teachers' institutert were reestablished with a twoowyear curztoulum, for the preparation or teachers for the 5.p1th grades. Teacher's Institute dmitted atudents betwven 1935 and 1948 who had 6raduated from the 9th 6rades The trail/lint; of teachers in such two year teachers' 53 ? ! Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01n4riRnn94nn9 onnflog Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 institutes was notably of lower quality than that a000mplished by the old-time institutes, besides which academic freedom was also very much taken away, and the 3tudent8 were compelled to study the history of the Con:moist Party and historical dielee?? tic materialism) conforming with iliarx -Gels - Lenin theories, and other subject:3 with view of eonununiotic indoctrination future teachers. In 1944 the statuteo or the teachera I institutes were clua4.,;,(A? and aocordin to the new plan, td4 wom ?yi n thc it s of ftdl fiedLcd, Qducational institutions, even thou they were not co in actuality. The ;qd 4 - o students aooepted to b .Graz.ku44t,; o'Jr , 10year chool 0 Curricula wr udied,i) and for tho i'd?rvi;i' time a coup , te uni xorst? curriculum as for tew-141 in.stitutes with uniform textbooks put to we. By statute$ eaoh teachers, in stitute to pro ppaotiQ.e for EltudcT t t by i an, eachers exprimcntal 7ea seIool. But e41.1 after th reform the quality 1evd of teschcr 41:r1ni; could oot rca.. J. pre, revolution ? ? 00,64N 4\t?? t ttorrl 0,?? ? #4,A ? . h others were c.epartitiakr, of A. tf7J.d to lmvidc teach ? indlcutes that were of better qual r ior r, de artment5 4 than the indL ,1 cal Inst , V., .r* A. tutes aLcra iciU 1 umes y one since the former .1004 use ?ti.ae room and laboratory Vacilities oC the 6peoici inatitlAtet$ and also was Eava1i with better' quality tft.' pe;.1 poun.. t y poviUtd a lai7,1 or. quality of training* 54 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R0074nn99nnn,,_c Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 In 1945 there were 196 teachers' institutes, 106 of which were independent, but starting with 1953, there began a transformation ot teachers' institutes into 4-year pedagogical institutes, which up to that time prepared teachers for only the 0-010 zrades of 10 year 3-cnoo1s (Aedynsieciy, "Narodnoye az- ovanlye," 1955, pp. 182-184). Handbook for enrollment into inotitutiens of HO= Learning in the USSR in 1956 ( ravocanIA kioscow, 196, where are named all insti iutions. of hiaer learai% in the 6Ov1et Union by Jan 1, 19.56 .cept military) indicates that in 1956 in. USSR there only 5 teacher ; imtitutea; I) Karzhi Tersi institute, Karshi Uzbek 3SR, ul Kucbaba 17 Speciai:i Uzbek lar_,uao i and 1,terature; 'luzsian 1an6uae a..d 1:J;c;rature; hiztory; glysice and matheatIcs. There ie a correspoth section .0., in the aame 2) Leninahad ,c)'.)raenls Teachers; Inatitute, Leninabad Tadzhikskaya SSR, ulo Ord2honikidze 12. Specialities: Tadzhik lappage and literatui Uzbek langw;!6e and literature; hiwtory; physics and mathematlez; nature study and geography 3) Novaya Villnya Teachers' institv Novaya Villnya Lithuanian Salo ui. KrC.cuvo 50 Specialities: polish language and literature; Russian languago ctnd literature; history; physics. and mathematics; natvirc study and geograp There is a correspondence section ill tho aamk apecialitiest Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01n4f1Pnn9Annoonnt-v-) c Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 4r;atemparitantt reathlk Toticht,,',2,4*7 aa4 Uzbek SR.4t u10 and litivmatouI4e; vow 1;1 .1C, /AA, 44 Ift r'? ""1 A inotitute im0 3. Ards , 111,4 . 0 Tadzhik ?fcc'i (,s' 1113041a WA, LI 14 4 41,:t 4- ? \ 4., .?.) ?.' 04:44;ta ''Itr?lattv*0* +4,4 er, Ittle he', , 4, ?,?. ,..0;44., 4,;,4 lgo? C4 4 t ?.'r7r), ? 't tt. 4., 44'411 ? /rit, ratli 1 to ' ,P ^ 4,t '?(;/oLiratilaizi0 A 1 444 , r ? , 0,1 ?,1?1:??, '4.711441,- .14,44r?g*N 1. I,Arr4t, ,rir4rA , to 4 11i 41i,4 ,tLtAt oru r,'??? 1 4 o t.1.$ ^ 4.464411, 4 ,1151,11rir, 4.)1, *44A ????:6-? 44 4' . . ? 11,,- tettaer 0 ) 44',11,4 ? r, ; 11C, 4.? ; , ?r /, , ? tA'"' '4' ? I . " ?? 41' !ri ' 4.4.!"` A ,1 .410, % 44 ;44 I , 11:01 ? . . : 4,t1(ti ? C444.1414,4., ?!?-? ' ? ?:? / 1 ?44 ?,,? )., 4444`?1, , 01' 71' 4 k ?)?,??,,A .1, 11..14414,4,. ,/,,3 ,ti.4111 ,r f"444A, k ?;/ 41'i 044 t ..1 1 4-, ? 1,40' ,;? , f",".!'.4, -? .,4 , A , * ? '4' Ix','?) ? ? :? , , ? , ? : ? , ; I qt% ? ?? u'Art '?.44 ???;' '`? .r ? . r ' r " *1' I. 1,4 ? ie C * OA, I` k 4,14' 4,4 4.- toe . , A 41 ?;,4, .34 11(., 11. allUA j i??? t ir 1, s??? A 1t, e ???: ??; 41, ? ' ,r k, tair s, A?, r .40) A 4 ? " h h ,1?, '? /r?-? r, ? r: .4?? 4; A ?;'; , ?.'te A ,44..,1 1 t '4444:44.t?44%.r. ' .rhr , ?,44 ? ? :1 er,r , ,,ltir4.110.14?L,40,',,'?'t4 riN .11/4 44i 4, os.;? 1) rr??4? ? r??? ? , ?..;1 t way ?? 44, I, r).4 4 ?IIA ci r; 4,1'r r,414 4.+14.4 w * "3/4w jar; ni; ,r4 1 MV11 riled . , 4.? at;*,ikt k4.4.? 40..? ? : .?.13..1 4,4 IN .?;,:?41, ty.4, Art ' AkO?it ;?`?'?? 1.$4.rc,,-, ? ,t? , W4P: ?f44* t" kqf do,4.4 1". k w " ti kAr r 14 400, i;?) ? .,i?A ? ?,?4?? "7". 3114 ,t4t'',k1-.' !%,0 1.1? ? to ? 4i:44** '4!.* "'" ? ''' ' ? ? ??,. i,"0,1e41$,,A1.7 ..? ..404440.40, ,A V 11,;(tA:1.;1, ?, ' I ? ,4? 4????4 .14 4, .4. 4' ? t 9: t7* ? 4 * 4114.: divo -4 oArt. ; .6 4% .!4A, q44,114.44???, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 b..i Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 even though Amarioan students have to spend 9 years for the same training in USSR in 70'year school plus 1 year of kinder- art n. This is explained by the fact that in USSR the students attend school 6 days a week, which about in 9. years makes and 4/5 or a year more than if it was 5 days a week, and beoouse the curriculum devotes more attention to these subjects than In the USA* 57 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2613/09/03 ? CIA-RDP81-01043R0074nn99nnn9_c .11 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 E The eurricula of the first 7 grades of the 10 year school are identioal to those of the 7-year sohool. As the T*Year school curriculum was discussed earlier, the following discussion shall concern only the last 3 gradesm The old currioulum (19500/51) given in Medynskiy, "Narodnoye Obrasovaniye v SSW 1952, pi bb; and the new curriculum (1955/56) given in Narodnoye Obrasovaniye No. 9, 1955 p. 49; are compared in table 10* The polytechnised curriculum for 1955/56 Utters from the old curriculum for the IMMO grades.ar 1950/51 by the fact that the new curriculum has 83 hours more physics thaG the old plan, and besides this a new subject - "practice in homing, machinery, and electricity" (149 hours) - was intro- dueed. This, together with the physics comprises 232 additional hours of study. This increase was made at the expense of a decrease in the number of hours devoted to literature 100 hours less, nature study 50 hours less, psychology - 33 hours less. The new plan so completely eliminates the study of logic - 66 hours, which altogether adds up to 249 hours 1 ss and o the new plan cells for 17 hours less than the old ones The polyteohnization o.L the new curriculum for grades 640 wi thus expressed by an 0 hour increase in physics, and the inclusion of 149 hours of "farm practice, etc" 58 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 ? CIA-RDP81-01043R00240077nnn9 ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Subjects No of hours previous grades TABLE 10 No of hours per week per grade rt new old new Russian language and literatuies reading 76 71 Literature Arithmetio 35 33 " 00 40 VID I. le 1156 1090 Alpaca, geometry, trigonometv 11 9 6 6 6 6 6 6 957 891 Nature study (old) biology (Laii) 9.5 8 2 2 2 1/2 a. .. 445 395 Constitution of SR 2 2 0 a fie 04 401 . 66 66 History 9.5 8 4 4 4 4 4 4 709 660 Geography 10.5 10 3 3 3(2) 3(2) . . 528 512 PhybAcs 5 5 3 3 2 4 4(5) 5 478 561 00 Total No of hours gr 9gr lOir 10 old row old now old new MI op a? .? 2508 2343 5(6) 6(5) 6 4 5 4 544 444 Astro Ministry Psychology Logic Foreign Lang 2.5 11 Physical education 12 Drawing (freehand) Drafting 1 2 . . . . 1 1 33 33 2 2 2 2 4.(3) 3(4) 3,0 314 2 1 w 00 m 66 33 . . . 2 -0 66 iork and practical occupation 10 Pars4,1,31; practice & mar no creeds. TOTAL 195 193 32 33 33 33 33 32(33)9669 9652 40 3 3(4) 2 2 op 4110 3 4 3 726 693 2 2 2 594 660 011 198 1 1 1 132 132 a 132 198 11W., 40 40 110 040 ? 330 1(2) ??? 2 2 ea ei 149 59 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release ? 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 indicated above, Farm practloe is intended for schools at collective farms, and machinery and electricity for city schools. It is doubtful that such polytechnisation of 840 grades of rural schools will give significant results, if one is to note the low state of agriculture on contemporary oollective farms in USSR* Practically it will be reflected in that students in grades 840 instead of resting during the summer, shall work in the fields and on the farms, and on Sundays in the fall semester shall work gathering the harvest (potatoes, beets, etc.) on collective gardens, and also work plowing, which was actually What lhey were doing before the establishment of p ee cAn c4v, the eotimootivicatien plan. Thus, for instance, in the official publication of the Ministry of Education (Narodnoy- obrasovaniye No. 80 1954 p* 54) it is noted: 'Many etudents of our school (Zcolyanskaya srednyaya shkola voronishskoy oblasti) take part during the summer in collective farm work and work 30,5Q)and more full work 0 This, by the way, ref443 to children 14-16 years of age, whose "vacation" during which thy do this lasts only two months. Practice in machinery and electricity in urban schools (149 hours) will have significant results only in schools that have sufficient equipment, and teachers qualified to teach it. In general the polyt chnization is only in the initial stage of execution, and how far it will go only the future will show. t Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Secondary schools of general education had, in the old plan, one aim, and that was to propar4 students for higher edueations Now, however they have to perform the additional function of supplying workers for industry and agriculture. This was due to the increase in numbers of 10-year schools especially in the cities, the number of graduates of which ax- cud the higher education facilities available. Therefore it U necessary to prepare students for practical technology and also probably the military. The num 'r of 10-year schools Shall continua to grow. According to the fifth five-year plan, in 1951-55 there should have been acoomplished complete oonversion to universal 10-year education in the larger cities, and according to the sixth five- year plan for 1956-60, there should be completeds "universal secondary eduction in (all) oities and rural areas, through teaching children and youth in secondary schools of general education (10-ye schools) and secondary special (professional) schools* To develop polytechnical eduoation in academic schools, by at: .nting the tudents with the most important branches of cant porary industry and iculture': Me newspaper ?Ievest ye for F b* 260 1956, p 6, col. 1) The establishment of universal 10-year secondary education in I er cities of the Union, intended by the fifth five-year plan (1951-55) was not accomplished due to the nettles sity to pal' tuition in the 10 grades of academic schools and 63. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 rt Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 all srades of special (professional) scv=ls, whioh made such education prohibitive to children of poorly paid workers. Only In 19560/57 tuition shall be free in all grafts of the afore mentioned secondary schools, and also in hi er educational Institutions (awe source as above). The universal secondary education was not accomplished also due to the tact that the existins number or secondary general and special schools is insuffident to accommodate all graduates of 70year sohools. Therefore during the sixth ilveilpyear plan the number a schools in larger cities should increase. As was noted above, in other cities and in rural communities universal secondary education should be completed in 195649603 but one can safely say now that this probl especially in rural communities, cannot be solved in the given time because of the following* 1) It is urgently necessary to erect many new school buildings for 8.10 grades of lOwyear schools, and equip them. By the way according to the 20th congress of the Communist Party; "Xolkhozi (collective farms) must take a wider pert in construomo ting and equipp ng of schools and dormitories. (S e source as above). In the cont gporary economic position ot the col ec- t4ve fame it will be aposst.ble for thm to build sehool?build inss for the number of schools necessary (In cities and to construction of 0011001$ is financed by the gover f?ent). 62 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @50-Yr 2013/09/03: Mezalserweniany Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Ap roved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 2) iThe absence of the number of Washers necessary to supply the great numbers of asw 10-year schools. 3) Parsers, due to poverty, shall not be able to send their Waldron to distant 10-7ear schools, where they would have to pay for their subsistence in dormitorims, for their clothes, and for their books and school supplies. As was already noted above, 7-year universal compulsory education was supposed to have been attained in the second five-year plan, while in actuality in rural areas it was only begun 17 years later - from 1942 and is still not completed. Establishment of universal 10-year compulsory education in rural areas, Is therefore a question of the distant future - at least 30-40 years, if it can ever be attained under slave labor conditions of Soviet collective farms. In grades 840 of Soviet 10 year schools a groat ? phasis Is given to mathematics, physics and chemistrimproxi- r,?1 matey 37% of the total number of hours in the curriculum, The teaching of mathematics emphasises the relationship between theory and practice. The students nust apply their math t cal knowlefeio the solution of probl da from physics, maths- mattes, astronomy etow Pbysics in sroes 6-10 is taught be ginning from mechanics kinematics, statics, dynamics, A great deal of thus is devoted 'be hydro- and svio-mechenics. After mechanics follow stud of hest, molecular physics, change of Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R0024nn77nnn9_ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 state, gas state physlos, electricity, optic* scoustles, atomic strueture. The studies of physics in grades 54 is acoompanied by demonstrations, and a small number of laboratory exercises to the students. In grades 8140, great dela more time is devoted to laboratory work. The physics course, according to the new plan, must be closely related to practice in electricity and maehineri? The chemistry given in grades 040 le mostly in organic, and some concepts of organic chemistry are also intro.' ducted. One must note that not all 1001rear :schools, in fact, only comparatively 1 number at them, especialty in rural areas, have properly equipped physics and other laboratories. Therefore pod results in $ 0 of physics end chemistry are accomplished mostly in large cities end in model 100year sehools which exist mostly to Impress foreign visitors. A great deal of attention is devoted in cities where are universities or l e pedagogical institutes, to maths matical "634apic games." Thus in the magazine Vspekhi MatiVsmaticheskikh Nauk," Vol f 8, No. 5/58, 1953, pp, 163 1 8 are given probl s which were presented at the math 4 stual olympie games in Stalingrad for students in the 9th grade at the second round ot the contest4 One of th is the following: Prove the identity: 004111.40114110110410111010110.04ew el 01,0101101101.11100010SPIPPOWO 1RM ViNfal.00100*.001111010101011.1 fik ??? ? 41Mb logx2 1og24 Logf,g4 log z: loge log46 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R00240o77nnn9_ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The 10th grs4e studenti were given the followings ? two for x in terms of a and b and determine the relationship between a, b and x (what happens When 4 in* oreases,,eto.) 142)5 (x ib2)5 (x ib2)5 *(z 142)5 At the M014Ow mathematical olympics in 1952 for students of the 10th ade at the seoond round the following problems was givens ?rove that the sums Cos312x + awicos a3ocoss30x 404 alcoam can take on negative as well as positive values. From this, of course, it does not follow that such problems could be solved by students of the said grades in all lOwyear schools of the WM These probi s were solved by the best students of some lawyear schools of loge cities. These olympics are significant, however, because a large number of students attended thee. Thus for Instance in the first elimination round of the atorementioned Olympics of the city of Stalingrad, 1019 students of grades 740 entered, and students qualified to the second elimination. In the first round of the Moscow olympics 1.500 students took part, (Uspekhi mat nod vol. 8, NO, Ik/54 pp. 194*197) of which 770 were ad mitted to the second round. Of these 282 qualified for the second round by solving these and other problems. Such olympics? ki? 65 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 as was mentioned before, are held in all Urge cities having universities or large pedsgosioal institutes, treparstion to these dimples is usually Oireete4 by the maltematies depart unto ot the universities or pe ogles; institutes. Judging by the quality ot the partiotpants in these olympies, and their results, the meohinlealomathematioel departments and physioslocathematisal departments ot universities and pools gogloal institutes in cities Aire the above olympies are bald ere amply supplied with qualified students, with od mathemil matteal backgrounds supplied by tho extra training given Or some 101**yeer echo is whieh prepare students to the olimpiess These ol os conducted In 02T4 (doubtless play a signittout role not only in the preparation of students tor suoseseful work in universities in physios-mathematios department's but also in seleetion within the univeralties of the more talented *song them for pr variation, otter graduation to the first oolontitic degree candidate ot rhysioal Mothemstimal 14141401* 4,* 66 Alt Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Part - Sanitized Copy Ap School Years 1914/15 1933/34 1934/39 19 1950/51 1954/55 19554/56 Number o 10,yr schools 1,953 2,436 12,469 180800 15,000 25.200 26,900 roved for Release 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Total number of students in all grades 635,591 011 798 ,028,156 2,200,000 p.0,200,000 200,00C 5,40,00o TABLE 11 No. of students in grades 8 10 In cities Among them and rural in rural areas areas 1380677 1,408046 2,370,000 1,5000000 5,140,000 5,250,000 15,084 548,757 1,000 000 640p000 20280,000 2,370,000 Average nuMber of students per school 325 822 724 650 680 603 550 ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release ? 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R0074nn99nnn9_c No of studento in the 10th grade 450,000 290,000 1,100,000 1,300,000 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDp81-01043R002400220002-5 Table 11 was conctructed on the basis of data published for years 1914 to 1939 in "Prosveshcheniye v SUR", by Y. N. Medynskty (Education in USSR), 1955, p. 81, and for years 1940 to 1956 in "Statisticheskiy sbornik" (Statistical Collection), Moscow, 1956 P. 223. From this data the following conclusions may be drawn, The difference between the numbere of schools in year 1914 to 1933 is about 500 schools) and the difference between the numbers of students attending these schools is about 16 million, which is contradictory if one takes into account that for 1953 schools 635, 591 students and for 500 additional schools 0 1,500,000 students, that is thern increase in the number of studeas per school is too great to be possible, Also the average number of students per school was in 1914 0 325 and in 1934 0 822. Since the room facilities were about the same as before, it follows that the only way such a thins could be accomplished would be by con0 duoting school in 3 sessions. The data for the relative numbers of urban and rural 100year schools is also of a highly dubious nature) indicating that between 1935 and 1955 many more rural 100year schools were built than in the cities, almost equalling the numbers of schools in the cities, This is completely untrue since) as was shown before, the estaluishment of 10-year education in rural ems is only beginning at the present time. It is very important to note that the quality of education given by general secondary schools existing in the Russian Empire before the revolution was not only not of a lower caliber compared to that of the contemporary Soviet schools of secondary 'education, but was actually of a higher caliber. This refers specifically to the physioal0mathematical field and the foreign A, 68 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 niA_pncmi 411, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 :Languages* Por instanee mantic geometry, and differential and integral calculus were taught in the last grades (7th year ? 10th year) of the pre0Soviet "real uchilisheha" (called elsewhere "real symnadum"). These subjeets are not now taught in any 100year sehools ln the Soviet Union* Besides this elementary mathematics 0 algebra, geometry, trigonometry, were taught more thoroughly before the revolution being approached with more depth than they are now. Students were better trained in the solution of problems in elementary mathematics, using specially written problem manuals. These "real lichilishoha" supplied the atudents for Higher technical schools, to enter which the students had to pass a difficult competitive examination, much more difficult than the entrance examinations to contemporary Soviet schools of higher education. Two languages 0 nch and rman were compulsory in "real uchilishcha" and the teaching was conducted on a high level 0 approximately on the level of contemporary Norwegi I?;', ? ' gmnasiums. Foreign I . e teachers were trained in foreign countries, and were highly qualified. In contemporary Soviet 100year schools only one foreign langu e Le mandatory, and the teachers teaching it are deprived of the possibility of studying foreign countries, ? and are of a cow4quently low ellalberi many Soviet secondary school teachers did not even reoeive any svcial Z,uage training in a foreisn language tvachers, institutes as it is e un noted in official publications of the Ministries of Education. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 80-Yr 2013/09/03 ? CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 As a result foreign language teaching is continued in higher education, which did not have to be done before. The programs of all "real uchilishcha" were identical throughout the Russian empire, all teachers had to be graduates of higher educational institutions, and all material facilities were alike throughout, so the quality of education in small towns did not differ from that in large cities, and the graduates had the same chance of entering into institutions of higher learning no matter where they cams from, while now the difference between rural and urban education is very great, as was shown Were, an the graduates of city schools have much more chance of continuing their educations than the rural students, Religion Was taught in the "real uchilishcha", but was compulsory only to the students who were of .14. religion, Jewish and catholic students, for Instance, were exempt from religious studies of the Russian Orthodox church, Very little time was devoted to religion, and teachers of other subjects 40 biology, physics, eta,, were not forced to accept church doctrines, and so enjoyed a measure of academic teed= which does not exist in the Soviet Union today, when party doctrine is forcibly imprinted on all studies, notably of nature, biology, etc., and every t acher must conform or be sent to Siberia. Religion in higher educational institutions was not compulsory for anyone. So the supposed domination ofirei? Soviet education by the Orthodox Church, stressed so ?insistently by the Soviet prop anda published in the 1950 edition of Encyclopedia Americana (see Vol, 27, p. 239g) as the truth, is pure fiction. 700 nariaccifipri in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R0024002 L.iciassitied in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The second type of secondary school ot general education in pre4olshelk Russian Empire was the gymnadum *there humanities were stressed, as opposed to the etress on the sciences in the "real uchilishoha", In gymnasiums three foreign languages were compulsory. Latin, French, and German. In some of them, called classical gymnasiums four languages were compulsory. Greek, Latin, French, German, The level of mathematical and physical teaching in the granazium is about equal to that of the better contemporary Soviet 10-year' sehoolsin large cities. The teaching of languages in the gymnasiums, being held on a high level, allowed the students of higher grades to read classical literature in original form. The study of literature was very bre, not centered on Russian literature, and presented in total academic freedom. In Soviet schools, however, the students cannot read original classics and read selections published in Russlao which the authorities deem as harmonious with MarxismooLeninism. Thus 10-year school students cannot study humanities in any real sense but are isolated from all forms of thinft except the official communist propaganda. The gymnasiums, like the "real uchilisheha", were all of an equal level regardless of where in the Russian 4oitTire they were, and all students had an equal chance to enter Universities, The gymnasium students were also eligible to take the entrance examinations into technical higher educational institutions, even though their preparation in the sciences was lower than that or Declassified in Part - Sanitized Co y Ap 50-Yr 013/09/in ? I'm c'rlr? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 "real uchilishcha". In order to graduate, all students of gymnassiums had to take a special "maturity examination", which were written by special committees of teachers headed by the supervisor of schools of a region (popechitell uchebnogo okruga), thus an equal level of knowledge was required to graduate, Beginning in 19440 the same type of test was in. stituted in the Soviet Union, distributed likewise from central sources 0 Ministries of Education of Union republics, One of the greatest faults with the tsarist educational system was the tuitions which made it prohibitive to workers and peasants. The Communists, a?us received from the tsarist regime the heritage of a high-quality educational system and promptly pro* ceeded to destroy it, through the following reforms. The Decree of AllAtussian Central Executive Co ttee of the Soviets from October 16, 1918 states in Paragraph 1: "All schools of the R.S.P.S.R. (the former name of all USSR) shall be renamed "One Labor Schools" (Note 2), The separation of schools on elementary, higher elementary schools* gymnazium, real uchilishche, trade schools, technical schools, commertial school) and all other forms of elementary and secondary schools, shall be abolished"... paragraph 2) "One Labor School" is divided into two parts * the first for children from 8 to 13 years of e (a five0year course) and the second for children from 13 to 17 years of age ( a 40year course)" (from 1923 the "One Labor School" was dividdd into two parts the other way around 0 the first half being a four year course and the Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 and the second m rivet. "(paragraphs 304) The schooling in the first and second halves of the ("One Labor'I school is free of tuition, compulsory and universal secondary education, by the way, is something that is not realized even today (as was pointed out earlier), and indeed cannot be realized in the near future. "(paragraph 5) In the schools of parts I and 11 coeducatbnal system is established" (in 1944 segregation according to sex was reestablished, on the motives that coeducation did not give the desired educational effects, but in 1954 coeducation was reestablished on the very opposite motivation m that segregation by sex leads to undesirable effects, and coeducation is indeed a desirable feature)." (paragraph 17) "The assigning of homework and compulsory home projects is forbidden..." (paragraph 19)" All examinations, m entrance, promotion, and final m are abolished." The Resolution of TsKVKP(b) (Central Committee of the Communist Party) of February 12, 1933, paragraph 2 I), repeals a circular letter from the "One Labor School" division of Narkompros (National Coissary of Education) of R.S.F.S.R. from August 19180 to the effect that: "textbooks must be totally banished from schools." It is interesting to note that letter was only repealed after 15 years of its being in effect. Part V of the same Decree of October 16, 1918 of the Central Executive Committee of the Soviets states: secondary educational institutions, and also schools resembling them in kind, governmental, public and private, are divided according to the following plan of division of men's gymnaziums: -73 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDPRi_ni nit-4 flf10 A nnevInnnn Declassified in Part- i Sanitized copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 the first three normal classes with (first three) preparatory (classes) are (hereby) converted into independent schools of level Is and are reconstructed on universal basis for the said level... Grades 4, 5, and 6, shall form schools of level III the 8th grade is abolished." So the number of years in secondary school was dimlnished by one. Among other notable reforms of that time was the fithg and frequent exile or execution of all teachers of "bourgeoisie origin" (sons of priests, sons of landowners, sons of tsarist government workers who had titles, etc.) purely because of their birth, even though they cooperated fully and may have been excellent teachers. They were replaced by incompetent and unqualified persona, because none others were available. The methodology of teaching was changed to "ultraprogressive", the curriculum was greatly diminished, only one foreign language remaining taught. Religion was abolished and communist props, agenda was instituted instead; the teaching of separate subjects was abolished, and the project methods the Dalton Plan and the "complex" method established. Discipline became voluntary 0. to be enforced by the students themselves, The results of these curious reforms was felt very quickly. The graduates of secondary schools did not have enough prepare tion to continue in higher educational institutions, and Unim versities and higher technical schools had to drastically lower their entrance standards, the graduating engineers, doctors, etc not knowing even elementary mathematics. Doctors for instances did not know how to make out prescriptions in Latin, and were so poorly prepared as not to know arithmetic. 74 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Old druggists often had to turn down prescriptions which called for dooms hisbly poisonous to the patients, The general disimot titillation of education was so drastic as to necessitate equally drastic reforms to revert to the oldwstyle educational system, Beeman' with the Aug* 250 1932 and July 1936 resolutions of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, a Sharp reversion to the prewiloviet educational system was effected, in 1930 the 10th year was added back to secondary education. The 1932 reso* lution returned the following: "the basis form of the orpoisation Of Instruction in prl ry and secondary schools must be the recitation? with a careful classification of all mils and a systematio echfidule of studies." Grading and examinations were also returned. The 1936 resolution returned disotpline to schools; even the tsarist practice of requiring students to wear uniforms was rewired. In 1944445 the prewrevolutionary Wet maturity examinations was returned, and the preforevelutionary practice of distribu sold medals to excellent students, formerly branded as "antimarxist" was reeatataished. Disoipline became quite severe and militaristi (much mare severe than under tsarlst re ), The sciences were I once more and the eurw ?team was Increased and mere diUtot4lt. The " le games" In mathematics in, large cities was established positive innovation, /n *pits of all, however, the Soviet second** education has in general not yet reached the tsarist level, and t Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-ninztflpnn`,Annoonnn-) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 it is doUbtful that it can do so in the near future. However, comparing the level of secondary education in large cities of VSSR with the secondary schools in the USA, it is evident that in physlealomathematical sciences the Soviet schools are quite superior. There is no need, for instance, to teach trigonometry, algebra, solid geometry, etc., in Soviet higher educational institutions, while in the USA most colleges are forced to teach them* able 12 shows the numbers of schools, students and teachers in various periods. Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01n4f1Pnn9A111100rvino r Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Soboola of TOLE 12 amid odusatica Lis USSR for 14271/26 to 1955/56 Years Types of schodra.,,, 1927/ Total number of schools thousends) immludings elementory 70yesr 10.year No of teachers in all thisli schools (in thousands) of students (in aillions) inaatings el 0 ,ntary ?wirer 10??year 118.6 108 8 606 1.8 347 114 8.4 201 009 3940143. 195C1/51 ?. 4 111 1954/s 1955/56 12509 45407 18.8 14 3408 9,8 31,24, 12.2 2014 2974 126154 11101 59.6 6005 15 2502 1433 1950 108.8 58.7 2609 1620 1665 33.3 29,6 28?2 Sources "Ecotomy of 1133R0 oh Statistical Collection 1956 306 306 1007 9040 15 a 15.1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R00240o77nnn9_ I_Julassitied in Part - Sanitized Cop proved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Tesehers of the higher grad'''s of secondary school are graduated by pedagogical institutes and universities. 1) Pedagogical Institutes The pedagogical institutes have a four*year curricuo lum. In 1936 there were in USSR 99 pedagogical institutes with 73.817 students y In 1941 there were 112 pedagogical institutes. By September 10 1946 the network of pedagogical institutes was as is shown In table 49 Republic Total No. of Pedagogic (sal Institutes 11.8.7011.11, 65 Ukrainian 20 loruss tan MI Axerbaydshan SEIR 2 Georgian R Armenian UR Turkmen $$R Uzbek SSR Tadzhik $U 2 Xasakh SM 6 Kirgiz UR 1 1.78 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy App for R I -Yr 2013/09m ? rsIA rpm,? ????? cU 111 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 20 I Cent d. Xarolowlinnish 83* Moldav Salt Latvian UR Lithuanian 3 Estonian R Aside from this there were in Moscows Pedagogical Institute of Foreign Language, Music Pedagogical Institute, Pedagogical Institute sTsontrosoyuss, Thus* there were in USSR in 1946 123 pedagogical institutos, with 79,000 students. (X, wo Medynekiy0 wProsveshcheniye v 3831111 Xduoation in 11-40 pp, 1834,5) By January 10 1956 in USSR there were 222 pedagogical institutes inoludIng 4 correspondence institutes, whose speciali sations are indicated in table R. Pedagogical Xnstitutee o6 at ?mop, Depts. Pedagogical Institutes prep ring teachers for I subject Pedagogical Institutes preparing teachers tor 2 subjects Pedagogical Institutes preparing teachers for 3 subjects Declassified in Part - Sanitized Co 3 35 1 31 28 1 23 -79., Approved for Release r 50-Yr 2013/ncvnq r? I A ueciassitied in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Table Id* Cont d ? Pedagogical Institutes preparing teachers for It subjects Pedagogical Institutes preparing teachers for 5 subjects Pedagogieal Institutes preparing teachers for 6 subjects Peagogicai Institutes preparing teachers for 7 subjects Pedagogical Institutes preparing teachers for 8 subjects Peda ogical Institutes preparing teachers for 9 subjects Pedagogical Institutes preparing teachers for 10 subjects Pedagogical Institutes preparing teachers for 11 subjects Evening Pedagogical Institute preparing teachers for 6 subjects Poreign langtiase pedagogical into stitutes for 2 languages Foreign 1an84540 Inw stitutes for 3 languages Foreign lanopto pedagogical in 'tautest for 4 languages Correspondence pedagogical in stitutes for 6 subjects Correspondence pedagogical In* stitutes for 7 subjects Correspondence pedagogical in. stitutes for 8 subjects Correspondence pedagogical law stitutes for 9 subjects 29 25 20 36 j 13 14 2 2 2 TOTAL 222 Higher educational institutions 1 of physical culture 15 TOTile 237 Declassified in Part - Sanitized COp Approved-Yr 2013/09/m ? (NA CD 1"-N rnn 20 22 19 28 12 4111 2 11 io? IMO UM 189 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy A proved for Release_ @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 This table was compiled by the author trom data in "Spravochnik dlya postupayeshchikh v vysshiye uchebnnz zavedeniya 1956" (Handbook for students entering higher educaft tional institutions in 1956) Ministry of Higher Idusation of USSR. The data is completely accurate, because the handbook gives names and addresses of all the schools in question, and any fictitious names or omissions for propaganda purposes would be too evident to be published here. The higher educational institutions of physical culture were included in the table since they prepare physical education teachers for becondary schools. Among the 222 pedagogical institutes in USSR, by January 10 1956, there were the following 6 women's pedagogical institutes .1 1) Dagestan Women's Pedagogical Inetitute un, Gamzata Tsadasa Makhachkala, ul. im. 26 Bakinskikh komisearov, 43 Specialties s Russian language and literature; mathematics. 2) Kazakh Women's Pedagogical Institute Alma4ta0 ul. Mira, 113 Specialties: Russian lansuage and literature; mathematics; geography. 3) Kirgiz Women's Pedagogical Institute ime V. V. Mayakovskogo Frunze, uls Dzerzhinskogo, 48 Specialties: Kirgiz language and literature; Russian language and literature; history; mathematics; geography; nature study and chemistry; English language; ?German language. 81 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043Rnn9Ann99nnn,)_g Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 4) Xokand Women's Pedagogical Institute Xokand Uzbek 38R, ul, Karla Marko, 61 Specialties, Usbek language and literature; Russian language and literature; history; pedagogy and psychology. Correspondence departments the same specialties 5) Nary Women's Pedagogical Institute im. Y4 V. Stalin& Nary Turkmen 38111 Urallskaya ul., 63 Specialties, Turkmen language and literature; Russian language and literature; history) nature study and chemistry. 6) Sta34nabad Women's Pedagogical Institutes Stalinabad Tadzhik SISR, ul. lienina, 139 Specialties: Tadzhik language and literature; mathematics; nature study and chemistry. (Same reference source was used for this as for the preceding table.) The presence of women's pedagogical inaitutes in the repubilos indicated shows that the Soviet government could not to this day liquidate the historical national traditions of segregation accordirlt; to sex (women in these republics once had to wear veils, etc.) and had to comply with the antagonism of the population on this question in the republion indicated, to the extent of oogretating education, even though the Soviet policies were qulte stringent in that direction, and from the first days of Soviet government all institutions of higher educa- tion with the exception of some in these problematic areas were always coeducational. Russitioation? however, was more successful in the areas indicated, as 3 out of the 6 women's pedagogical institutes -820 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 not having their own language, and 5 out of 6 having Russian language and literature as a specialty servos to confirm ono, again. Al seen from data shown above, the larger pedagogical institutee have several departments, including foreign language departments. Some of these pedagogioal institutes, as for instance the ones in Moscow and Leningrad, have wellesequipped laboratories and other facilities, as well as excellent teach- ing staffs. As a rule these institutes admit the better press pared Wvadents through competitive examinations, while the r smill provinoial institutes with oneythree specialties aro badly equipped and have staffs with far lower qualifications than those the of rpm ones. The students in them are also of a poorer quality. Thus educational results on v,rious levels of quality of the institutes are obviously unequal. The graduates of the bigger institutes normally are placed to work in Large cities, while the others are placed in rural areas. A great deal of attention is devoted in pedagogical institutes to pedagogical practice and discipline. In the thir4s0fourth year, the students have several week' of uninterrupted pedagogical practice, teachiu Ing in the higher grades of nearby secondary educational Instimm tutions, Teachers of pedagogical institutes are present during ? the lectures of the students, and later, in conference, make suggestions as to methodology, etc. The total curriculum is composed of about 4000 hours, ten to twelve percent of which is devoted to pedagogical studies and practice. ?834 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03. CIA-Rnpp1_n1rlA,2173 ueclassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Curricula and educational requirements of every sub' ject are drawn up for pedagogical institutes by the Ministry of Higher Idueation of the USSR, and are consequently identical in each pedagogical institute where the subject is taught. The pedagogical institute of USSR is a graduate as well as undergraduate school, without the distInction made in USA between undergraduate and graduate studies, and the curricu lum includes the graduate as well as undergraduate studies in a single sequence. In mathematics, for instance, the pedagogim cal institute curriculum includes the theory of functions of real variables, theory of functions of complex variables, also probam bility, uumber theory as elective courses, etc. Besides these some courses are included, as for instance a special 402mhour special course on all elementary mathematics, taught in the t. third year, the program of which is on a high level, and for which there are textbooks written by the best mathematical specialists. The importance of this course is very great in pro paring students to teach mathematics in secondary schools. Prom 1945/46 compulsory maursovyye rabotys (extensive scientific reports) were instituted for students of the second and third year. The marks given for these reports are equiva lent in importance to final examinations. The aim of 4e rew ports is to deepen the student's knowledge of the rticular subject, to get the student to learn scientific material on his own, to get him to determine for himself the most important points in the development of his theme to acquaint the student Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013/09m ? rIA_Dimno., 4 ueclassified in Part-Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 with scientific Xiterature and teach him to extensively use Ind habii"?ally read scientific monographs and periodicals. \rostra Vysshey Shkoly No. 10, 1947, pp, 37039 mentions some such reports in physics submitted by the itologda Pe4agogioal Institute. Borne of those are the followings "Neutron v? die *ovary and important properties)" "Theory of vacuum and gasp, filled photoelectric tubes;" "The study of the phenomenon of ionic dissociation in relation to concentration of the so1u04 tion (copper sulfate solution, for instance). In 1955/56 a new curriculum for pedagogical insti4? tutus was drawn up by the Ministry of higher Education of USSR on the basis of directives of the SOVNARKOM in connection with the "overburdening" qualities ot the old plan, the multi tude of subjects, and repetitiousness* According to this now eurricu;um plan, the weekly study requirement is 324?36 hours (6 days a /week) of compulsory required classes of a theoretical and practical nature within the Institute buildings (the old plan often reached 40444 hours a week), Elective courses are taken outside of the 34?36 hours* (see Vestnik Vyashey Shkoly* No, 2, P. 15). After cealion 4.6d the passing of final examinations in all subjects, the students must, before they can be employed, pass a special government examination, instituted in 1937. (see "Ifysshaya Moles 40 Osnovnyye postanovleniya, prikazy instruktsii, Moscow, 1948, p* 15004452). The head and members of the special commissiongAving these examinations are, for .85 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Relea____@:?s)-Yr 2013/09/n:1 Declassified in -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDp81-01043R002400220002-5 each Institute, approved by the Ministry of Higher idueation of the 10411, Members of these commissions are, various depart- ment heads of the Institute, the professors of the most advanced fields in each subject, and one*two outside specialists not on the staff of the given Institute. The work of these commissions is done from June 1 to June 30 and from September 1 to September 30. Which subjects the student must be examined in at these examinations, is determined with respect to which specialty the student wishes to teach, by the Ministry of Higher Education of the USSR. The tests are both written and oral. Students who had A's and B's in all required subjects, and got Age in all subjects of the special postgraduate examination, re- ceive a 'diploma with exoellence.? The chelorls and Master's degrees do not exist in these as well as all other Soviet schools, Due to the greater curriculum, a 6-day work week, and the two months longer school year (September 1 to July 1), the time spent for studies is considerably greater than that opent in attaining the Bachelor's and Master's degrees in the MA. Also, eince in the larger cities - as Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev, Khark Vand other cities with Universities - the quality of teach- ing staffs available to teach in the pedagogical institutes is quite high, the quality of secondary school teachers profuced by them is undoubtedly high. One must note, however, that these comments apply to the better regular pedagogical institutes, not evening or comes pondenee elections of such instituten? the number of students in 86 cm Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for RelYr 2013/09/03 r,IA-RnDPi ueciassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 which equals, and even surpasses that in the regular institutes and which can only give a *secondhand* type of education that cannot be compared to that in the regular pedagogical institutes. In addition to that, as was mentioned before, many teachers in iseoondary schools have no higher education of any kind. Thus, in the official publication of the Ministry of Higher Educations (Narodnoye Obrasovaniyes No. 8, 1954, p. 28) states, 'Among 1676 teachers in grades 8-10s 428 teachers do not have a higher education lin Kurt& obi-mall.' This means that 25% of the teachers of Kursk oblast' do not have a higher education. And Kursk oblast', being centrally located, is ny no means an exception, a similar situation existing all over the Soviet Union. These teachers without higher education teach predominantly in rural areas and small towns. A situation like the, with a great number of teachers teaching higher grades of high schooilbeing themselves only high school graduates, is csrtainly unique, and the Soviet propaganda of their school eye. tem being the best in the worlds with the bestaitrained teachers, is altogether false. Due to the great percentao of such teachers, the SOVIA; Union shall have to use them for a long time, especially if one takes Into account that it plans to establish universal compulsory secondary education throughout the Union, and has a great shortage of teachers. The existence of such teachers is the reason for the great number of students enrolled in 41 evening sections and 189 evening sections of pedagogical institutes, and also the 4 correspondence institutes Declassified in Part - Sanitized Co 87 APprovecg 2043/09/n ? rib, pi-Nine,. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 with many departments. This wholesale preparation of teachers by correspondence schools is also a phenomenon unique with the Soviet Union, That oorrespondenceloschool education is of in- terior quality is obvious. The "Economy of the Me #a Collection of Statistics (1956), does not give any figures on the numbers of students attending regular pedagogical institutes in 1955/56, but they can be approximately calculated from other data. As was noted earlier, the num r of students attending 123 pedagogleal instiw tutes in 19407 no 79,000. According to the fifth- five?year plan (1950055) the admission of students into pedagogical instil- tutes was planned to be increased by 45%. If this was aecom0 plished, then in 1955/56 there should be in the 123 regular pedagogical institutes 115,000 students, and in all 218 Ways gogical institutes in 1955/56 there should be approximately 2200240)000 regular (attending) students. In addition to this there are about 101000 students in the 41 evening sections who are mostly secondary school teachers during the day. According to data given by Ustnik lrysehey Shkoly No. is 1953, po 191 "In pedagogical and teachers, Instititues there is at the present time more than 300,000 eorreepondience students 14 *Economy of USSR ? Statistical Collection" Moscow, 1956, po 194, shoo that the total number of teachers, library and cultural wokkere with higher and secondary education is in MR 1,725,000, In previous discussion of the elementary school we noted that the number of teachers in elementary sehool was about 700,000. 88 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50 -Yr 2013/09/03 ? - . Declassified in Part - /Sanitized Copy A proved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 From this it follows that the naber of teaehers in UM see? ondary schools is about 900,000, not including library and cultu. ral workers. If one assumes that the number of correspondence students in pedagogical institutes is now the same as in 1953 (300,000), then the conclusion is that the number of teachers teaching in the upper grades of the 10.year school who do not have higher education is 37% of the total number of teachers of the upper grades of 10.year schools, because correspondence school students are in overwhelming majority teachers of the upper grades of secondary school who have not yetc completed secondary education but are required by law to do soo The total number of students in pedagogical institutes of USSR . reeular and correspondence, is at the present time about 520.540 thousand (220.240 thousand regular and 300 thou. sand correspondence). The total number of students in higher educational institutions in UM including both regular and correspondence, is according to the "Economy of USSR . :natio tical Collection 1956" p. 227, was in 1955/56 1,867,000 (1,228,000 regular students). From this it follows that the total number of students of regular and correspondence peda. gogical institutes in USSR is about 30% of the totals the number of regular students being about 20% of the total number of regular students of all higher eduoational institutions in MR. As seen from the above mentioned table the number of subjects for which a Pedagogical Institute prepares teachers, varies from one to eleven, The largest are found in Moscow and LeningradO Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 1) Moscow Oblast' Pedagogical Institute, uli Radio, 10a Specialties' Russian language and literature; historyi maths maticss physics; natural sciences and chemistry' geographyl Inglish Isanirmages German language; French language; physical culture Correspondence departments the same specialties 2) Moscow City Pedagogical Institute im. V. P. Potemkin Moscow, Davydovskiy per., 4 Specialtiess Russian language and literature; history; matheu? mettles; physics; geography; natural sciences and chemistry; drafting and drawing; English language; German language; French language. Correspondence department; the same specialties except physics 4) Moscow State Pedagogical Institute ills V. I. Lenin Moscow, M. Pirogovskaya ul., I Specialties; Russian language and literature; history; mathe matics; physics; natural sciences and chemistry; geography; pedagogy and psychology; defeetology; English language; German language; French language. ) Leningrad Pedagogical Institute mi. A. I Gertsen Leningrad, Nabereshnays Moyki? 48 Specialtiess Russian language and literature; history; mathe mattes; physics; natural sciences and chemistry; geography; pedagogy and psychology; defectology; IngAish language; physical culture, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy APproved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-n1n4f1Rnn9Ailrl',Ortrirtn a Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Department of peoples of the Par East. Correspondence department, the same specialties except English language, pedagogy and psychology, and department of peoples of the Par Bast. Evening departments Russian language and literature; mathematics; history; natural sciences and chemistry) geography. 5) Leningrad pedagogical institute Leningrad, Malaya Posadskaya ul., 26 Specialties; Russian language and literature; history; mathe? mattes; phyoics; natural sciences and chemistry; geography; English language; German language; French language, Correspondence department; Russian language and liter* ture; history) mathematics; geography; natural sciences and chemistry. smallest pedagogical i.netttutee are the followings The 1) Osipenko pedagogical Institute im. P. D. Osipenko Osipenko Ukrainian SSR, ul Dyumina, 15 Specialty: mathematics Correspondence department: same specialty 2) lavyanak Pedagogical Institute Slavyansk Stalinskoy obi., ul. Shevehenko, 15 Specialty* mathematics. Correspondence department: same speclalty 3) Chernigov Pedagogical Institute Chernigov Ukrainian 33R ul. Lassalya, 1 -91 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-n1 nAnpnn9Annoormrv-, c mar Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Specialty: mathematics Correspondence department: same speeialty 4) Aserbaydshan Pedagogical Institute of Russian language and Literature im? Mirsy Fatali Akhundova ilakuo ul Polukhinao 205 Specialty: Russian language and literature According to the statistical data published In the official periodical of the Ministry of Higher Education of US (Vestnik Vysshey Shkoly0 No, 1# 1955# pp, 406) there is a total of 10,000 professor:10 instructors, etc? in pedagogical instils tutes at 14$0,30R,, It this is true, then the total number of instructors of all levels in pedagogical institutes of the - Is about 180 20#000, as the number of pedasogical Institutes is approximately half of the total number of them in USSR (see "Spravochnik diya upayushehikh v vreshyle uchebnlye savedeniya v 3SSR v Rand Par nroUtng in Instittu tions of Higher Education in SR in 19560 The above mentioned oftisIal periodical (Veitnik neshey Shkoly No, lo 1955, PP, 1012) states on page 5 that in pro J)gisal institutes of R.SJ4IISORs, there are 3,500 teachers holding the degree of Candidate of Sciences (the term *seism* IA used as translation of the Russian lin:Lukas,* which includes all fields of knowledge, e?g, the humanitiees not only the "sciences* in the American sense), a degree which as shall be 92 lib Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 explained later, Is equivalent to the Ph* D. degree in the United States, and that in 1953 there were 6,918 instruetors of pedagogical institutes who did not hold a degree of any kind, that is university gradates* The sum of the two figures given above is 10,416, not including Professors of the pads. gogical institutes* This seems to be a rather tree use of statistisal figures on the part of the Soviets, as the number of instructors astUalatts full professors who have to hold Doctorate degrees, is Wan ilian the total number of instrus tors of all levels 4 L. professors w obviously nonsense, By Statute of Higher Edueation 10 law governing; all higher educational lhotitutions, every taoulutet must be headed by a Professor who Is a Doctor or Science* The above periodloio cal states that in R*Solt*S.R* the pedagogioe institutes have 11300 departments (chairmanships ?e? kafedra)* Since the number of pedagogical institutes in awsoosA, la about half that of the whole Soviet Union, there must be in the Soviet Union about 3600 faculftets of pedago:leal institutes* Since every depart ment (katedra) must be headed by a professor, it roll* , that by law the minimum number of Professors4octors should be 3600, and taking into account that departments need several Professors to teach advanced subjects, the number of Professors needed 4t is much higher than 3600* Actually, however, their number is considerably smaller than even that. Vestnik Voshey Shkoly No* 9 19470 p* 31 states that in pedagogical institutes of UM %slip now are working 475 Professors,Doators, 93w. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDPRi_niaanpnrioAritInnn,,,,, imisminy Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 2,183 Docents ? Candidates of Winces, and 7,343 inetrustors and assistants.. Sines the number of Candidates ot Selenees in 1955 was shown Om to be 3,500, that is about 1.7 times the number of Candidates in 1947, allowing for an analogous increase in the number of frofessor4ostors should now be about 700. This means that the number of ProtessoroDoetors in pedagogical institutes is now only 20% of the minimum required by law, or about 4 Professors per institute. The problem of meeting this shortage in pedagogical institutes is so ?at that the fulfillment of the required mlnift mum ot tillins of all positions of taculetet chairmen by full professors, is a question of the distant future, even though sem* pe Weal institutes as for instance the ones in Moscow, Lonazgraci, 0400, are doubtless fully staffed with Professors, leaving s ller teal Institutes without any, leading to unequal results In the training of teachere by the instituteso Pedagosioal institutes underwent during the Soviet rule a considerable number of drastic changes. In 19202 in U? there were about 80 pedagogical institutes, including peda 600041 faculitete of universities with 240816 studento. In 1923/2k there was only 47 of them with 200641 students, while in 1927 the number tell to 27, with 15,500 students. This de crease was oftioial4 explained by that the institutes were founded on inourtioient Mterial basis, and could not sure the needed quality of scientific training," *Therefore, it was necessary to liquidate series of pedagogical institutes, and Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Cop Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 to bring the network of pedasogieal institutes into assordanse with the tinanetel eondition of (the USSR), and the eadres of instructors available.* (Vestnik Wsshey Shkoly, No. 11, 1947 pp. 36041). The surricula of pedagogleal institutes were often changed, and before 1930's they were divided into two cats series io industrial and agricultural, with *ultramodern* teach ing techniques, and as the same issue of the Vestnik points outs save was manifested the influence of *projeeelpstbods, trying to transfer the eenter of gravity of the work from stuffy claps. rose to collefeive farms and industry, manila% the so-called 'production practise' in collective terms and industry.* The curriculum of the same period had 3 of it devoted to the academie study and 23$ of the time on the so4wcalled *poly technical cycle.* This lyteohnisation* of pedagogioal inatl tuts', stemmed from the goal of *to a the tutu,* teacher with the knowledge of industrial or agricultural production, depend'. ing on the specialisation of the institute (asrlaultuval pods gosioal institutes, and industrial pedagogical institutes) (Source ibid.) Atter the resolution of TeX VOW on September 5, 1.931 on *1 ,Iltary and secondary schools, which revealed ant Leninist theory of school mortification (deterioration) and the project fi thod,* the pedagogical institutes were more geared to prepare teachers for seeondary schools and In 1934 58% of the total time was devoted to academic preparation of the teacher. .1 95 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-0104f1Rnn74nno onnnog Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The same resolVtion liquidated in pedagostest Institutes the so called *laboratorp?brigade. method, and the main method of study became again the lecture and individual laboratory work ofthe students, Previously classroom lectures were forbidderjebrigades" of the students had to reed textbooks, while the professor fulo tilled only the role of a consultant to whom questions were directed from time to time. Normal testing had been abolished and the test question was dim:4W to the whole "brigades Which answered it as a *up, and was marked on its performance as a 'group, no individual marking being permitted. This situation exIst4 in all sohools, not only the pedagogical institutes. The above -ntioned resolution also abolished the *free ourrioulue whieh allowed each tlacher to formulate Ppro4eets4 aoeor4ing to his wishes. AUendanse was herewith also made compulsory, and with stringent shooks on atteince, Th resew lution also abolished the "4 *ovation practice on collective farms and in industry." (Sources ibid.) The complete roVersion to pre,Soviet methodolosy and eurriculum V*4 , de in 19360 which Insisted on not academic teaching, but also required original research to be done by the instruetors: professore, etc., or pedagosisal Institutes as part of their duties. Prior to this practically no rePearoh *ark of ally kind 'a conducted In the Soviet Union. One 04 not at this point that it took the Soviets i.e years or experimentation loading to complete ruination of the whole school system before they reverted 'back to the old methods, and the results rose in quality, hut hove not yet reached pre revolutionary level, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-n1n4gpnnoAnnonnrwl, 'at Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 artaasxTxss IN USSR Universities in USSR fulfill a double runction of preparing scientific workers for research institutions and preparing teachers for secondary schools. According to the "Handbook for Enrollment in Institutions or Higher Education" (Spravochnik dlya post- upelushchikh v vyeshiye uchebnyye zavedeniya) 1956, Moscow, Mins of Higher Ed., 19560 there are in USSR 33 universitieo as shown in table 15with the numbers of faculttets? number of specialties, and date of establishment ot each. Puller intormation on ow* of the 33 universities, including namse of testi:04st' and specialties ot each are given in Appandit 45' As is seen from the table/41;wn above, the greatest number of departments (faculstets) w 12, are at the Leningrad, Moscow, and Kiev universities; the greatest number of specialties are at the Leningrad University .0 52 and Moscow tint Tatty w 37, Twonty ono out of 33 universities in USSR mom, been established atter 1917. The most recently establo lished are the Was University (est, 1951) and Turkmen University (est. 1950). The oldest universities are Villnyus University (est, 15791 Soviet 0 1940), Moscow University (est, MO, Lavov University (eat. 1758, Soviet 4. 1944), Sas& University (est. 1800, tharskiv University (est. 1805), Leninsrs4 University (est. 1819), and Kiev University (est. 1834). (f7 , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ?,,?? , ? , ", , - ? :74`.%;17= .?;(- ' k," Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The total number of departments (faculeteto) is 233; the total number of lahdras is 1,900. latedra is near in meaning to the deportment in American usage; every Paeulca tot has several Itafedras, 41,11, the Physics Faculltet may have a Theoretical Physics tatedra, a Nuclear ftsics latedra0 Optics Wedra, etc.* each Kendra being: beaded by a Chairman, (3ourees lialmillOreshey 311ko1y No 5* 1954, p 48,). Among the faeulitets in all 33 universities are 7 mechanics thematics faculetets0 and y physics faculstets. In 19905, there were at the Untv mattes 120? fullatimo professors, assoc. professors (doeents), and in *tractors, 3, poi* ducsos students sorting tor the de of "candidate of Sciences*, and about 100,000 students (see Vesta* Vysshey eitkolly0 5,1950 pp 474). lam universities 40, Moscow Ohiversity, Leningrad University, iiev University, Sharticiv ataverstty, Tbilisi University* etc., especial4 the first 4.pee? Woo a leading part in the most advanced and vital scientirle re reh of the Soviet Uhione scientific woke advanced in so for the other h.reduoationel institutions, Some of them ? Moscow, 41114 Monis Santo' etc., have spec Scientific Removal In i'lloutes, Advanced students can cam on researeh there under the smidance of a Wiled scientists, to fulfill their greduatton reguloremont of a 'work Presented tor the 01 loos, hu, not only prepare histedy qualified cam reseure" that is often voo q9 4* 1;4 ? norinccifia,r1 in Part - Sanitized Coov AOproved for Release @50-Yr 2'013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 _ rart - 6anitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 One may note here the Moscow UhlversiAr is afforded the greatest eare and endowment by the Soviet government. In 1953 a tones of new buildings were construeted for It, tar more modern and bettor equipped than those of the other universities. These buildings house the MechanlesomathematLes fault/tot, physics tasullteti biologfoseil science facuiltet, chemistry fteulttet, poles/ faculitet, and geography fteu10 tin. The new, buildings house about 1000 scientific, laboratories with the best and newest equipment. Humanities fesulotets were left in the old buildings* , The moehanissmmathematies rtuittet has a number or vorldotimous scientists, as Xolmogorov, VInogradov, Pont Aleandrovi trovekiyi Oellfond, solinbevi and others, the other fleulotets m4oy likewise a large portion of the best Soviet setentific workers. Moscow University serves not only as a Wen Inc eater. but a sours* ot propaganda se well, being constantly shown to innumerable foreign dig?tsi ssientists and other notables, who are lett breathless with the splendor, that the Soviets, despite many hardships and shortages, chose to amass at this one 4dA t onel center leai1ng the others in rathitr *ki 400001011d4 Inns, a fact whisk therm est to mention to their torei 4 visitors. The visitors, as planned by the Soviet., write upon return to their various homelands of the wonders of Soviet ettusatio 1 klnditione in general, thinking that all their educati I cmteri are emactly Joe Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013ingin,z Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 like Moscow aiversity, The visitors are ted sonorous portions ot lies about the pay, world* sonditions, woOkins hours and condttions of the se/eat:Lets In USSR. Some premolars of Moslem University ere Indeed so priv31140000 but as ever the official Soviet publications intended mainly tor domeette use indicate, the conditions in other Universities end other Meier educational institutions are quite dicrento lbw :term of study in Soviet universities is t years, *wins Ole the student must tultal requirements of the etirivalum eorrespondin6 to his intended olalty, write* *work presented for the diploma* (a thee sthat ; rewind tor vox )ksteres dope. but of a nob aeope), and pazz special vernmentaeondueted 40minetions* The students in the thivotrsittes ot ft are the very beet students trots all the 1,04eyear school* who are select44 on Vs basis si stat coagietitive e inationse The test Ilion to for enrollment in the Univereities ot 14esems and Ziev. /0/ 14q Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDID81-n1n4lpnnoArwww,, ueclassified in Part - Sanitized Co y Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Curri Lila of 3ovi t U Ivor. The curricula or Soviet hlgher edueational inti tutions in effect up ,to September 1, 1955, were designed to graduate specialists of a 'narrow profile, that is highly specialised in a wall portion of a technioal field. Thus even in 1953/54 there were eoparate curricula for 460 inde pendent speoialtieelmcfessions, 135 of which were subdivided further into 510 specialties (pee Vestnik Vysehey Shkoly, No, 5, 19550 pp 19*23)4 Universities prepared student** or 62 dieter ent "professions" (oe- Vestnik Vesher Shkoly? No 5, 1954, p 47), in which for instance the chemistry'Orofession" was divided into 27 specialties; math atics was subdivided into 10 specialties (see Ibid., No 4, 1955, p The student mid to choose his profession before enrollment, his specialty had to be chosen in *boat the third year. Every specialty had it owu eparate curriculum* In 1954 there was a reconsideration of ell curricula of Soviet institutions of hIsher education in connection with the 4overnment resolution on 1mprov ent in the training of specialists (see Vestnik Vysshey Shkoly, No 5, 1955, p 19), This resolution espressed the desire of the Minlstry of Higher Education to diminish the nomenclature of specialties and widen the scope of specialists to be graduated from the Universities* The nOmenclature was diminished from 460 professions to 2600 and 061000.1 the specialty / 0 2 2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2_5?)-Yr 2013/09/n:1 ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 d e1assitioations40% (see Ibid. No 5, 1955, pp 2223), that is the policy changed drastically from that of narrow specialisation to a wider, more senora character of scientists* In connection with this, on Sept 1, 1955, the curricula of the first, second and third year at all faculitets osi? Soviet Unlversities were changed to produce 44de profile" speolalists; in the fourth and fifth year the old curricula xAre retained temporarily until the graduation of students who were in them at the time of the *Wiwi except that in the Physies3"mathemstieal r, ul,tete biology facuittets, chemistry tat:14,We and geogr40447 41 famil'tetso in the 7th master was in. a ()ourse in''mothodology of thing? of 36012 hours, and in the 6th semester was includ-* po * sioal practice of 6 weeks* duration, with a cessation during this period of all other studieet_ In the new curricula specialised subjects were teed and subjects at general ohmmeter were stressed lar specialties were fused into a broader theoretical basis with as little separatton as possible and only in advanced studies, This - that IA the first two-three years of studi s, students of related specialties shall study the same subjects in the same scope. Thus, the6 specialties of geolety were, in the new eurrIculum given 27 *abjects in oommon, for which 66m60% of the total number of hours of study for the professions shall be devoted, while 320634,0 of the time sh011 to special separate subject*, not oountini the tii open t, i, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/02 - rin_Dnno., . _ - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 in field work and the "work presented for a Uplom$6" In physiesenly the following 10 speeislties were lefts theeretLeel physics'; optics; xray metal physies; magnetism; solid state *Wei; eleetrophysies; strueture of matter; radio physies? Chemistry is left with only the following four speeialties out of 2/1 inorganie *Ministry; orgss4o chemistry; analytic ehemistry; plveleal chentstry The profession of "geology and prospeeting of useful mineral deposits was "left with two cielties: geology and pros pectins of atogenous" nommore type useful mineral deposits; geology and prospecting of solid nonwore type useful mIncel depostts0 The profession of zeo sloal methods of sesreh and prospectIng of useful mineral daposite was left with thsicollowing specialties: geophyeical methods or prospecting for altos of ore and non-ore type deposits; geophysieel methods of prospecting for petroleum, gas, and coal deposits.; geophysical methods of study of Winos. left Zn all other new mimic sod subjects, only t for the student to take a, 120 to 3 ? of the t hours each is de le* ives and special seam* 0 These electives and special a'? ?aari klai an role in the curricula of universities, in extending and deepening the students' knowledge in some special field, in acquainting them with experimental techniques, methods sad nature of scientific rem oho help the students in fulfilling ted k Ali ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDPsi_ninaq PnnoArinnnt-Innn Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 the ?work presented for a diploma, and also reveals Which et the etwdeate are Imre WW1 and have an inclination to research In the old (Were 1955) eurrieula of Soviet universities# coneldersair greater mount of time was devoted to electives and special seminers? Thus in the old geology eurrieula 626 to 944 hours were devoted to eleotives and special seminars, while now only 316 to 400 hours wars so devotei; in the old biology eurrioula, 444:0456 hours were devoted to then while now on VI 3706 Part of the t to ly devoted to e *octaves and eiminars in tor instance, biological curricula is now devoted not to fora New sub*: are also ralised biological subj. too but also sicsa chemistry, higher mithamaties, eluded which were formerly not given, U for instanee biophysics* (tor all spesialti.. of the biology tsoulttet) ichtyo with omparative Wog ma soosso ties) plant and siolosists) ( : Vestal 1955k PP 28#33)4 turrteula no two related spool basic (tor ooloOcal olo (for botanists stihri syt for the specialties ot include 4 mantrestation and instead at Slavie aity *soh* sification) ? Ia 105 k w prepare ly No lis student for 0flt Thus the ourrieulum s and litersUre now angusse (another ?ialties ot ?classical literature had now a Declassified in Part - sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2043/09/03 : , , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Cop Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 second specialty each ?0 either Russian or one of West Nuropean languages. A second related speolaby was also ineluded geophysics, geochemistry, some specislties of biology, astro nosy, and some others (sources Vestal( Vs4y Shkoly No 7, 1955, pp 1-5), The establishment of doublewspeoialty (or double-protile) curricula was explained by the Ministry of Higher adueation that since there was not enough need of specialists of those types and so it is necessary to give the student another profession in order to assure his being usefully paced, (sources Ibid.) The whole shift to leas specialisation was explained by the Ministry of Higher Education by "need ot various branches of industry, culture and educatlon" in connection with the feat that menyistudents have to be placed in teaching positions, SW *inning with 156 not less than 80% (previously 60*, of graduates of the philological, historical, geographical and biological faculitets and not less than 60% (previously 20%) Of graduates of physicslAesthematical facuistets shall be placed yearly in teaching positions of secondary school*, where 'wide-profile" socialists are ncded (sourest Vestnik VOshey StamaY Wo 20 1955, P 32)0 It is planned also to abolish and annex to universities the smeller #:* togioal institut t in citi's where universities exist, Where parallel pr on of tesehers occurs? as universAties griduate,tesiohers of much higher quality. These reforms also Include ephasts on pod training. of university students and a closer 26 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2613/09/03 : CIA-RnpRi_nirlAQInnnel Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 relationship between secondary sohoo s and the universities. In eenneotion with this, the diplomas of university graduates acquired an additional meaning. Instead ot beim; narked "physielst," "nalammiatoisian," eta., the new designations vet Physleist. Seeondary school proxies Wisher," "Mathismatioian. Seoondary school matbamatios toothily," eta (source: Vestnik Wssey Shkoly No 110 1955, p. 32). Only the future will Om the results ot such a sharp shift to "widermprotile" stiu0Sotion In higher 54ueational institutions of USA especially the universities. One must note, however, that similar sharp reforms of curricula in universities and other hither educational institutions of us U well as in other o oi *;oviet oilugation, have *cc+ 4efores Tima in 11120 university curricula were reoriented towards narrower drastic reforms poured in curricula time or study Of "ultra specialisation* Also in 1532 theddogy, behavior which resulted in liquideo rn methedcloilea and vaulted a return to' pr viet educational methodsp a basic necesetty in view a he deterioration of the school s of that t described ?alter in the discussion of *moo eduestional institutions. educational Institutions deteriorated just as mer edly d r the end primary educational Asti Um? it not more so than the act* Atter the 3.cond World War, viet h ons were eharacterise tendency towards, nem sp.* ealsation, while 107 55/56 Declassified in Part-Sanitized Copy Approved for 1____a_s_t_2_50-Yr 2013/09/03 CIA-I:2 INDPi nAnn?,-, _ _ ? !.: ' Declassified in Pad-Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 period ;wideness a baste polier morsel Words more generalised education. It is Latoreating to note that this latest Sonsrellaattoz policy marks another return to preoSeviet edusationalv,tewi Whisk emphasised broader Ossetian, as opposed to very narrow speolaillsattem4 even though from time to Use there were diseuesions on posSibie illiereliee in epesiallsatien (soureet Orgisnisatatis Wavlintis Universitet*, v 333A4 (Organisation of Administration of Universities in WAR) by Prot. Volodyeir #44unoChudrnivs Rosoerch Promo on USSR Okra foundation) Mew York, 1 This rearms while undoubtedly leading to the Improve t in the training of secondary aehool Washers, hoe the ? to effect OA the htifillment of the *Ma Mein goal of the unlversitios m the trainins of scientists tor seienseft research institutions, so it seems possible that the sharpness of the reversal may lead to ? new polio changes in the futures pass ell sub ee s write a than paSS a OM Wee in lark. 7 the VO Dip entocondueted series o thf The Diplomas" Mabota (Work Mown atuden al sad no lasting ther 'sample of 3ovlet oduealional views reinstituted ".,.4 ? too VI tansy* ra to is a ?- nt research imbrues a small part at the data shish comprises 168 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Rel /03: CIA-RDPR _n npnr, A , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 the speeisity it the students* ?Sem universities in MI6 as the Oseow, Eason', teninired, arstev, eta., bsve Wense. researih institutes of verie's speeisitiest The work of these Institutes is theeretieal reseereho and solution, of problems *rising in industry, etc' The setentitic remora eenducted in these institutes is done by the professors and selentitie workers of the ft:411W of latedra of the given swishy, as well as a num*or of upperi*ciaes students of the faeul,tet or kaftan, who under the guidance? of their teachers fultUl therein their requirements for the diplemnara rabetao %stalk vys Shkoly No 7, 1954, p 44 indica, that in the Institute of the Sarstov University Upper ?M: :.4 conduct 14 to 20 works presented tor a diploma At the Moscow University part of the students kmwtge f4t111 their dplonnara robe remote at different researeh institutes (thai.. one sposiallaing themeties) of the University, is the peater port of ? students at mural science fakul,tets at N.scow Univers ty assembles and $00414111$4111 sisterisl gathered during several, years of studios, 10:watery work# and field tiers ti the work of the motion cal mathematic taouL't.t at the Moscow University*. con e sun tram Warm ion Oven by P 3# Aleksandrov in Vestn Sway lito 5 1956, 1244 Accordi of the facia tet was a sod of two eleetives, C sory sab4seta inolud and anal is $eorntz7, Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : nAqP !In', A tInnew-tnne, r in Hart - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 hisher Slobs% wathosatteal analysis, ditterenUal equations, et.* Tho ditforontisi equations eourse is taught in the woad rear or tibe well-known egotist of oblih ealiber L. S. tontryasini who redesigned this course kilns it In elosely with problems of technology and natural sciences regulation theory and oscillation theory tor instance, Thus students from the very otginning study material closely eonneeted wt l the newest 4cientitic dowioients and their praetical ifl.ti?$fl4es atudents ot the thkru par attend the course ''Anslysis lased in a large moesure on material of 00A porary mathe,tica.2 atrial oint, glective 00Ur406 *Ad a narsit ahith t re is a aonoidarable number aro also designed 0604:0141y 414 Ube of rerlecti 4 the newest scientific develop,iO4nts. Their *abject matter is con tantly being ahangedo depending on which new problos aria* in applictatione Thus at the 4 r ? &tics wd its practical * of Acadamiclans I. G. Fetrovekib 3 LI Sobolev, and Pro Le Se Pontry 0 on at:er t al equations' ina cit Aced len ke Ne ?Kolmosorov on the qaestions or contemporary sis and also the theory at probability; Prot% 40 Go Xurosh on aloaloras and Prot Lilo Go on tunctional ysia ' t methods of theoret cal physics* 7$ti4ti*U7 anallze the newest developments in these fields of 4athematice. Mem of these seminars not only voter to the newest ovit and foriiips math tical works but thomselvql solve /10 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for R'elease 50-Yr 2013ingtn1 rs1 A t. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ,4op Prefileser4estors, and 2200 ftedbielled et atensesi The iame this sours also at the other meithematleal seminars. given at Woe* Unlversity. ilekdandrov gives the following examples At the present time, the ?rash mathematioal Wool seined important results in the field of topoloSY, It Applied to topology new alsebraio methods, Now at out faoulitet several semtnars &Ire exiitenee, among thew f$otae seminars organised by various karedrai Which are working in this field* The first works or seminar mom4ors bear evidenoe that out' esientists, ineludins the youth, graap the modern methods and successtally apply them,'' Seminars and electives of the meohanicswmathemati * tacul'tet of NOS4OW UniversIty, aceordi tG Aleksandrov, include all the r developments ot cont porarymatheseltioa sciontces, lncludin& calcuattaK mathematics and computer machinery mathematics* At Moscow University a zits:Lou:Latina th tics katedre (doper nt) with Aced oician setit# Sobelev ' at the head has been foruted? This kafedra conducts work on the development of caloulatinti machines, 101 also the solution of series of oretical problems, connected with design of calculating machines, closely related to von tlelds as ' sib atisal 1 co done al; this ease too orten, not iitna taiS, OS One an e she teristio of aU the universities, lout is ,V11 best t U 3R, In 3,955 at %0400W University there were 2600 seientitic workers, in 210 kare4res (4eparolic nts) Including 89 academician*, 400 )?rorifsOr" tors,5, 1200 Condi -tot* ot Seiencea; that is t % M.* Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @50-Yr 2013/09/03 : ueciassified in Part - Sanitized Cop Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDR81-01043R002400220002-5 approstsattly 650 at the seiontitie peilassigissi I it the jvers$7 hold *steatitic( demos, (3eurees Vested* VIeshil 3h)W1 No 5, 19554 p 11)) Th. Wuaational results of the universities sr* mush hisher than those at ped teal institute for obvious reasons GUS year more of study, better tee/shows and equipment, better prepared students enrolled, etc., and therefore nanrosere students of univeraties become aspirants (graduate etudents working for the degree of Candidate of *donee), take part in the work of seieneefttre qeroh institateet end maim mush better secondary sehool teuther?P than graduates of pedagogleel institutes, ak part of university graudatee become instruetors in hlgber eduoational institutions, including ped4 eal institutes Taking into a*oeunt the greater unt of time spent tor studies than In the OA m yearep delta a week, 300,34 hours a week, a lt r year of study Sept.. I to June 30; the better preparation of students in U$S than in the USA (the riot universities# be twin numr, have a *hole* of the best Or a great number of stud nts wanting to t in); a greater ,,,unt of time and attention spent on the 4iplomnaya robots (a thesi or a much wider seope than the Master,* thesis required in the VSA)) the results of study and preparation for fulother solentific study and research are in the better Soviet universities greater tiv4 t for a Masterls degree in the USA0 fte Soviet it 312 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013/09im r1A_DrInt-lA requi s of the Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03': CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 better universities are also better prepared to work at aspirants for three years Os attein the degree of Candidate of Mince 40 * degree that in the Pkystesl?Nathemittioal scienoes$ ohemistrb geology, ete, (not in liumanaless histor), eta.) is equivalent to the American demo of Pb, D. There are no degrees in USSR equivalent to the American Ba4belorts and Master's desrees All the graduate ot =1461484 sets Is a diploma with his specialty indicated OR it, the extent of his accomplishments, though is 091041ent to the American Master's degree. The 4ter students got a "diploma it the timt grade " the average and lowrr get a Aplems at the second irst 10,3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R00240022non7_ Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The salentificopedagogical staff. of Soviet unlversItics* have among them speeialists in all main fields ot knowledge. Weelally in the greater universities there is a considerable number of highly qualified scientists who group around themselves the younser generation ot scientists and together with them solve the most difficult problems posed by modern soignee. Thus* as states Vestnik liyeshey %kW", No. 5* 1956* pp. 5011* physicists or the Tomsk University continue their researoh irksolid state physics* and also actively conduct research In radiophysics. At Chernovets University* tulder th; direction or Prot. lovieh research on semicomluctors is being done. At Oorokly Univers* sits radio sloe research is being done* the field extensive research is in done also at Liaratov Univerolty. At the Middle Asian University lex work is in done in the field or alkold chemist University* Prof. Yu. T. At Aserbaydzhan daiiyev* conducts with his collaborators some frultrul researoh in the field of petroleum chemistry. Groups of oology spesialists at tvov* Kazan* and Irkutsk Universities conduct lotortant research in their field." In th 195504960 five-year plan* s univeralties plan to organize nuclear physics .aboratories equipped with particle accelerators 4,, cyclotrons and 4itatrons of various power, so that the students workiing in that specialty could t to work with particle accelerators* Xn the near , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 CIA_Rnpp-i_ni (IA') Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 future Iaberaterles are to be organized for ?Gamic ray research at the ioningradl Yerevan, Kazakh, and Middle Asian Universities. In these to be soon established laborstories, research in chemistry of artificial isotopes and their application to stud ly of catalytic reaction mechanisms may be broadened Riophysioal laboratories shall likewise be established, where the action of artificial radioactivity on living organisms shall be studied. In the near future the laboratories of Academician V. N. Shapochnikov in foiov, Prof. Bo A. Rubin, Prof. T. N. odnyev; Prot, V. A. Chesnokov; and other scientists working in the field or photosynthesIs shall enlarged and roved. At Leningrad University Academician Tere Jilin with his aoworkers conducts rear tio on art4,4161441 photooatalysis. More than 15 untversities are workin6 lo the field of semi oonduetor research, Inteirsating work in this field is conducted also by Prof. S, 0, Xalashnlkov, (brows of universit$ workers take part in the study or the electrical and optical properties of rmanium Silica; and other OP conductors; methods or synthesis or semiconductor materials, photoconductivity ot 40condactors (includingfrocesses of transformation of various radiation energies into electric energy); semiconductor detectors of intrawored 11, to and in working out the is of quantuw$ ohanics and phenceenologlcaI theory or electronic pro o sae, in solids, H Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDp81-01043R002400220002-5 These themes charaeterise major interests of a number ot leading scientists in a number of Soviet universities The above Information is, of *wise not by any means complete* but some conclusions can be formed from it on the in Jf lye solentific work in the most important fields of modern technology done by Soviet universitlee, As was shown above* the number of raoulftets in all the 33 Soviet universities la 263; the =Wow of kafedras is 1* *0; the total number pedatiogical.solentific workers is 12,0000 Vestak Vpia4ey Jakoly* No. 5, 1956, pp. 5.11 states that in univereltim ',,tcozog,tit! 414t jadi ial hi4her educational Institiu ,onstA 195/6 th re were 16 COO solentifio.pedagosi* Gal workers* tnc1u4ina 1500 Proreasor.Doctors (about 10)# 53% of the sciorAl ic.pedap cal workers in them hold acientiric 4e4rees. This ansthat p ogical workers had sciitic d f the scientific or Candidate of Scianac or Doctor or Science.. Since the number of Professor. stors ;LA IQO Aittexa", ? ? * r of C dates of $alences must can approximate the ;umber of Professor.Dostors and Docents who work in the thi 1tt of Wiato Prom the ratio at 12,000 to 164400 it 4ollows that the approximate lumber of Frotessorm tors In univ rattle* of USSR is n 100 and 103001 the number ot Candidattes of Sciences as) is tween 6,30 and 7# account that the num of karedras pa and by law each must * * rt Taking into s) is 1900* headed by u rofessor*Doctor* there is so Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release_@?0-Yr 2013/09/03 riA_RnDpi Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 anitiz Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 261'3/09/03 : CIA-RnPRi_ninA not even the legal minimum of the frotessormftetors needed to till #ositions or department heads, end sines many depart. mento need than one Professor-Doctor to teach advanced subjects, the thortage is quite pm-umonced, the need being 5000 to 6,000 ProfessorwDoctors. The preparation of the scientists required 041 be a long and arduous tasko since the degree or Doctor of Science In USSR is considerably more advanced than the Minoan Ph. D., us will be shown in the following section (h). The Shortage a ProtessorftDoctors he Soviet Uhion may be explainlird by the following two reasons4 1) Rust of the universitie, Or 33 were establish during Soviet An,* rule without having prepared the Protessc: necessary. Hig4 qualifications are needed for the Doctor ot Salome, requiring about - 12 years or productive scientific work atter the attaint of the Candidate of Sciences greeo and the publication of solentiric works that are important contri butions to science. Contributi - to the shortage is the tact that Profesoor40aters are not distripbu:4,4 eguslIt. Ono third of their total number work at Moscow University, for inetanoso and another one sixth is at Kiev University, whish leaves RAM alIer universities even more badly understaffed. Declassified in Part - S ed . , _ i-art - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 As sus u the vista same Late power, they law, stituted a series it swespins reforms thronghout the *duea., UAW 4,4.4 One of them vas the establishment on August 2# 1 or new rules at enrollment into universities, approved by Lenin* Mese rules announsed that all *Mons oould enroll in universities without showing any diploma from secondary or Wan"' *shoo* and without any entrance maw Siena* The payment of tuition was abolished* Ai a result of that in Moscow ilsiversity alone there was in 1921 27# stup dents, many of never bothered to even sd4endthe university'. Very few students were qualified to ?rstand the lociUmet or work in the laboratories* Prom 1 there was establi a "class yr:Wipe of student selection for universities* This meant that only re at ?proletariat" class and sons of members of the proletariat were eligible* All son* at priests, government workers, and even sons of the kaiaks, the well. to-do armors (who too cows a better se, 30050 acres of lend or ins ), were the number WA out at the mwelv*rsities* students at *scow MiLversiti Inw s shawl from 270 to 13,000. In 1929 in MOSCOW, Let *them, so-called Hrebtaks" rot f stet ) wars established whidh were de to woos to universities thoscAtudents t proletariat did not have aor Declassified in Part - Approvece/ease 2613inginq r" A Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 education and oonseopently could not understand the work being done at the univeraW, On Sept 20 19220 by signature of Lean a new set of rules mans the universities was estab2ishe4 This statute changed icatedras (departments) by "subjeet commissions, sed of equal numbers of teachers and students0cemmuniste something that was, to exy the least, completely without prscedents These , satins regulated all phased a university lite. The slim* WAWA* was applied to faculitets with the tormatlon of "learne4 soviets" 41 ,+-#24 half at teachere and half or students, ate oommunist partly appointed a rector to head 1440ich university, and he beaame a bete dictator or all niviratt$ policies, sink controlled the votes of t students c uniste in the "subject co-q atone and "learned soviets" ir party supervisor. The objective,ot those retorms, as stated by Vestnik Voshey Shicoly No?4 40 19470 17,0 451 "000in one blow to end with the old schools" Th a Soviets were looking for a new structure system for universi ties and tried t m out in the old universities* as well as the t.w ones 0 established at about that time. Newly establishod'acrildby University, for instance, tfr yen a curious assort at of tacolttets ineterineannstructioni physiooppo pedic, etc la now, mining, rotessional, envoi? In 'Ukraine in the w:i* t5 all universities were closed, and in their, place "institutes at Public Etiumatten" were tablithed with tagitaqatil social itraini: professional ettu. ation, // 9 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81_n1nLmq-in9Annoonrw-v-, in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Zn s ioso& thewitiuttiss were retained, and Si even in i92/23 lissom University was extended or establishment et several Institutes 07 It 01 of mathematiesomechanics institute, physics, zoology. soi: 8410A440, stool, At Leninvad University institutes at liatheostechenteso astronomb chemistry were 0440 tablished, At Tomsk University the "Siberian PhialcooTeohn1,441 Institute was opened. Many professors of universities es lolly et law and historioalftphilological faculftetio which wore clo 4, student' dismissed and teachers fire Prom 1932 on asherp reversion to he reestablishment of pro.? viet methods and utruature in the universities was of tooted in connection with the resolution ot TiIK $$ on curricula and in higher edacationsl institutions* As stated in Vostaik Vssbey Ne? 54947 this resolutions 0 000 ? policies of the NAR an end to expert tattoos and erring with res ti\po tiie universities." This re lation devoted a spec 1140414 ditiVitiV 48 educational institutions prep in enema scientific tields and nt" to the universities, then the oxisti universities hi P 05 it ie specialists A.gawm.A.144malift OVOWAxmou universities in those republics whore 1;hey 4o not ea t (Ukraine aAd others) " As the abovementioned article states* "This authoritative resoluOion put 411 en4 to I talk of t re be no used to the universities*" came the ti of roestab ish nt; of previously abolis d tea 'tete Leniinsrs4 the cherai story fecal tet and biology recta et were reopened ill 14 1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-n1n4Rnn9Ann-)orinrIn iiieu in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Re_Lase @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Moscow University the ohemistry faculttet was reestablished* In Ukraine, the Sao Uhiversith Marolkiv UnivOrsity4 Odessa University, and Dnepropetrovsk Uhiversity were reestablLshed ly these universities a aeries 4t\pcientificoresearell institutes was opened, Odessa Qamrsity annexed a physical.chemical research Institute, an seOronomical observatory and a geophysical research station. In 1937 Uie h ties raft:Mots boon to be row established. Thum at Zeninirad University a philology taculitet W40 r0Op0404. resolutions ot t UMW in 934 and 1 no /vestal:1i t 4 scientific d ,f,rees and titles, which the aoltiote WA formerly abolishetif and the lade of which cau:c44 unog qualified persons ?o tioyeil br tho 14m4vereittes1 ahoy:14 lowering Ws teachi petitive syst entrance examlnatio 0 leflo to a 2 'r s =dards Also reinstated was the 0,101** eu%.tng Proteesors and Docents* in 1937 tor students were likewise stsWihed tow the preo4oviet edus VIOWS in the Wily or work 4,0 at the oniversi ties* New curricula thus oriented with the increase to -$ years I bay love ,d the 4$' ?These aurritoula devoted a and special stunts were en at the students t ot t to d nstat d *lea course. 4 ric In the scientiticoresearch W41 geared to the production of 1 institutes* The whole syst "nerrowprotile specialist - /02/ - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/0qm rsi A Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The Soviets, Wins inherited a tradition of excellent universities, with a system of tkishity quAlltried scientists In many fIeZds, instead of teprovins them were at first tryi Item bard to destroy them. Their reckless and stupid experimentation that lasted 3446 years, had 1Weigght the universities to almst coolete Mtn, having destroyed the system and ejectad tram the universities many expert scientists especially in history end other humanities, and in biologicel sciencesq Only the physical mathematical)chemical 104 tecludocal sciences were not c etely destroyed. as realized the extent of the they had made, he Soylets wade sharp atetO POW,36 C-44. oystem an4 try to undo the # only thanks to thecol-4130mm ot *asap tits of the old school and their students were they able to tet the universities back on their test s process or resrstLon is continued to this days but has not yet qualitatively reached re. wig * their preeenOwday 1001year school* had not yet reached the ualit ot the old system and ,ho on down the 40444 In the knowle 4444W or foreign x so the knowle of which had enabled et'. nte to draw on fore an aurae* at scion itic 4evel wit in western oWervers t the Soviet Union with a educational 0/s1ew, torsetting Oat that syst was built centuries ot hard work Oo a state in *doh even 14 years '4oviet snort concentrated On its deStrUOtiOn 00U1d not AeltiCk destro it Only credit to0 the SOVietS is tMt - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy A ? proved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 '44! they had had the sense to return to the old methods wbon they saw their education crumbling into dusts and aUtowerd the rem- nants of the old school of scientists to build It up win, Even now the 1ea4ere ot Soviet science are not tiommurtistoproduagi4 as is testified by the tact that almost none of them are members et the communist party, despite the many personal advantages and privileges that membersktp in the party ?otters its - berss ani despite the pressures put on them to Join, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 60-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220007-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Resolutions of the =AMOK in, 1934 and 19370 returned to the :014 or Soviet *ducat/on t old degrees ot Nagister and Deater ot Alenees0 renaming the former "Oae414ate a 3eloneeb4" These resolutione also eatsbliOed he organlsatione to regalaVe the giving of '40 The highest organleatoion for tf4 giving of degrees is the 1Washaya atestatsionnaoka koslealia" (upreme attestatlan Won) at the SOVNARKON 543110, 44 states Vestnik V$sshey Shkely No. 90 4630 pp. 24030, the right to actv4t the Doctorate dissertation ie given to 1b iihr educational inst440 teams and seienoe.reeearch establiehmentst r t to aeeept th Candidatoe dissertation was gAven to 278 higher eleoational institutions and 211 aelenceareseareh Lnotltatee. Ameht the 31 universities *bleb, exie1 in 197, onli 21 reeeived the right to accept Doctorate ard Candidate diegm unotiittOrto The amarding of (tepees on the beets ot defense et aseertation *an be done by those insfAtetioas0 however, only tor the cic ;to of Can4idate of Saiences, and they aan reaorvite 1 the asplraht for a doetorate enc. sueeeestully teAd Ms dieeertation to the deoldes whether to viewe Candidate dieee ttestation Coareission d the de eol 10116 04.11 take aw de: 0 it it wants to even atter it has been The following 7 universities ad not 4. litt then re idate riot& with resp to the lectorate dograeat Oor kly Kazakh, IfasmeIeeitiratish, Molotov, Uzbek Urai nett ' Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-n1n4npnn9Annoonrmn c # it I ? ';'. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 and Chernovilsy Universities did not set any et the above riabts (sowoes Vysshaya *kola, i. et C. call no.ZR0Al2 pp. 3290330). The * reme Attestation Commission Widths the universities into three categories, indicated that the above* ntioned universities do not have the necessary standards. Ompses are warded in the followins tieldoss 1) physicalemathematioal sclersoes; 2) Ommt441 1141400114 3) biolosIcal SOW0044 4) polosi4al4minerolosical saisnew4 5) technical Sa$114014 6) agricultural 3ototoes; 7) bloom 8) ? macs; philo IQ) geopsphyl 11) ju4iaial, C$1 so s; 13) , disinei 14) pharmace010411 aolenoes, 15) wtsriusoienoesi 16) artt; 17) arohi GM$ Abov %0 f only he t4 ropriste field from the $ without moattGnine awls' a* eoto Doctor or Medlar C Wt. ot Veterinary &demos Deetor ot AvAso ('0?e4 MC, pp. ? ? , ? .. J. Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 20 13/09/03 : , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Persons holding the Candi te at $s.iwes, and con4uoting the eorresponding pedsiottosa and r0000roh work at a higher edueational Institution under the direction at a Professor, are given the title or Decent, Moons holdins the dove. at tor at Lances and 4 conducting pedagosioal and researeh work of lea4ins quaaity in higher efteational i tuttoma or seisms researeh establish, wants are siva the title of Professors The title at Aseistant is given persons who have graduated trom a r cluciaonal institution hitt aufti lent on fmr teaciang or research work an4 eon4uat og sueh work in a r educational institutitio et a Profeseor or a *went (mums lad), Statistical Information given in Narodno spy* vo SUR Statiatiohoshiy atomise Moscow, 1956, p 233k LnCUO$tU taw ems Win that in 19$ at USSR the number at scientific workers was 223 among thee the having Dootorste es the number hulas Candidate degrees a* 76,000 The dissertation presented for 4 Candi4ate ot atce pee must reveal the plural thevretical knowle at the &marmot, his special knowledge In the tleld of the dissertation, and talent tor i ?pendent scientific research which mos expres in the achievement of a w4 or i clientitio result The We ztte dissertation be ail arab work, the result at which is the solution or them :enSralisation of soientitie problems or a seientlfteally presentation at new pro with considerable selentitie - /02 - Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : an11111111111112111111111111W )t Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 interest, The , tar of Scienee is an acoomplished scie*tiet Who had Oven signitiaant contributions to e4ence0 having mode general theoretical conclusions, and Win' a lame number of sotentitis works published *arm nifysehara Sbkolso" Moscow p. 301 Vestmik Vieshey Shkely No. 80 195541 p. 14)0 The Genital As :'bi7 a the Academy of Solaces ot bus the right to sward Doctorate degrees "bowie cause" wttbout defense of a dissertation, to especially noted Soviet and foreign scientists. PUll members ot the Aca4emy of Sciences of ars liven doctorates at the moment ot their election to membership. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 From the day of the resolution of WOMEN In 1934 ton the reestablishment of **Lentil/is degrees and titles: to 194t 5,236 persons resolved Doctorate degrees 1309 without .fending a dissertation, in which during the first six years 886 persons got the Doctorate without having to defend a dist* sir tion, While during the second six years 423 persons re eeived them. The great number of Doctorates given without Is dissertation *wins the first six years is explained by the tact that this degree was In the first place given to those Professors who hied already achieved Doctorates before Soviet rule, and whose Doctorate (as 11 scientific degrees and titles) were at first taken away by the Soviets, Also during the time when there were no degrees many scientists achieved a high status of competence, despite the Soviet expenteentations, end in the tollowins years the number of Doctorates given without defending dissertations, was less and less with every year, and the main my of attaining a doctorate is now the dieser tation? Prom 1937 to 1947 the number or degrees of Candidate of Soienees awarded was 25057. It the new data in the 1956 statistical collection is to be trusted, then at the present time there are 78,000 Candidate degrees, that is within the period of 6 years about 55,000 (s must hove died in thie period) that is every year about 8,00: were graduated, The same statistical collection, however, on /040 23 states that in 1950 4,093 aspirants were graduated not all of whom received k 128 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R00240022nom_s Declassified in Part Sanitized Copy Ap roved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 the degree, and In 1955 7,607 were graduated, tree which also not all resolved the demo, so it is evident Oat the Soviet figure ot the total number of Candidates of Same (78,000) is optimistically issagierated for propaganda purposes, while the actual number Is not more than 6000Q. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R0024on79nnn9_c Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Vesta Visehey Shkoly No 9, 194, pp. 3640 states that the Supreme Attesting Commission confirmed in the degree tot Doctor of Scions, in 194?6 484 pwrsons, end it 194 ? 640 persons, in the fields shown it the following WU. Molds ommthsestioel ?eel biological Osalogyominera Teatiniaal Agricultural Hist** Eat-modes Phil000phy iiilology it,leogrep4 pAti Nodioloo Pbarmagutioal s Fed.1,0 VeterinorY Art iirchitecture Miter/ Idait 0 Total 736 60 113 2,9 411 37 19 6 42 14 23 2 603 50) 909 703 a.) 4*4 3,4 1.3 ?5 "a 1.2 24 2608 38 3, 4 15 3 12 151 13 a 8.0 440 7.4 , 649 ; 151 44 28 3,5 20 2?2 09 2 302 27 11 .6 2?7 302 151 39 77 54 6.1 1149 7,4 443 3,0 1.4 03 4112 1?7 144 #4.1 Avw., 02 8 2,5 1.7 1132 100 30 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Kelease @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDPsi_nin4qPnn0AnnOnrIrIrIn laillIMMENIMIMIllilk Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Prom this table it follow' iwhat the number of persons having received 4?ot:orates in physicaimmathematioalo, dummies:14 bioloOcal, geolosioal*minerolesioal and teehnical rielola in 1946 we* 46,' or the total number of persons who reaeived 400tero4 ates luring; this year, and e$' ot the total In 19470 In one assumes that suoh a relationship between the sroup of s cialLies indicated and the total, then the number of persons in MR holding doetorate kiegrees In t,he MIAs is now &WW1 4,300 to 4,6001 that le about a h' bt the total number of Doctorates in 4$11 (WOO) to the rule approvel by SOVNARSOM SUR gm North 1, 1939 (see I'Vysohaya ***la Moscow I p0 299 232)0 the main meth od of preparation of Prift.scorm V gioal so attic s is ?he process cal1, upirantura," An aspirant (person undergoing; asplrantura) le A graduete student working for the Jos c of Candidate of Seienc,s, or a Candidate of Seienoes workina for the of Oootor of 3alencei In Shich case it is calleJ dokterantura. A4pirantura is by such in effect only a reluoational institutions and s4v enceitomteeare ins* stitut whioh stsfte4 with W I Outlined actAwitic "leaders" and has t correspendIng *dentate research taallities# Arent 8ont4ent also preparation of professor-op can take place are coal koo'luostion at the rso All Candidate 4 owipi intatution0 and e4ras in whioh cal cadres by way of aspir the All Union C*44, ttee of H io of the appropriate "narkometl" t oontienta must piss examinations 4 131 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDPRi_ni nit-4 flf10 A nnn nnnn Declassified in Part - Sanzed Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 in Mardsmotenintism, their specialties an4 one foreign lingua.** The aspirant works for a certain definite katedra under the di rection or an advlsor who bears reeponeibillt for the results of the aspirant's work. The advisor formulates an individual:LW carrie4 for the aspirant, which is a three-year program. The aspirant is to fulfill works re2ate4 to his dissertation th 0431 ImatiosalY studY sources 10 toreisn and Russian literature i his specialty, study and attend cl.taes in related subjects, and perfect his knowlo e of forciln lan 00# in which th, aspirant took nla entrance e is etudiel In the second I , Inge in which he rnw be proficient before 4etwilAitt; his dissertation lik% studied in the 2nd year. Aspirants have full ;see tram the first yeux or pirantura or all facilities of laboratories, special librarioir and the library of the Atstlemy of Joiences on equal bias with resular res,arch kers in the institutes The aspirant r t take an examination * at he end of each year in his specialty and toretan vases, witshin the scop of his individual curriculum. it the end of the t,rs indicated by his individual curriculum the seplrant must detenct his dissertation for tkiA twee a Awidato ot uols is b) he tails ir t must be iismissed from aepirantura its commended, by his advisor on motivos of do n scientific research work; ) he does not eu ions in his 3p4cialty and foreign t on t? his dls\ertation work. 132 nstrate4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy A proved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 I! All accepted aspirants get ?vernment stipends during $isw pirenturas Thy also get an allowance tor the acquisition ot solontaic literative. The amount ot this allowance is equal to the stipend Itscit? The aspirant to also allowed to 8 4024, ment his income by teaching in 4 higher educational Institutions but no more than 30 hours a month. The aspirant gots 11 days vacation in the Winter and 2 months in the Summoro Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01n4niRnn9ann9wInno -4 ? LimAdssiried in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 TO **Winters are aceepted persons not older than 45, or in exeeptional eases 50 mire of ase, holding the degree ot Candidate of Sciences, knowing two toreIgn languaos (* tiara is studied during doktorantura), and having recommended thea. selves as competent solentitie research workers* Acceptance to doktorantura is by e oetition on the basis of judgement or the caliber of scientitic works publish ,0 by the applicant, anti an e, nation in the knowledge of two foreign lan5us4,e. The doktorant enjoys the same privileps in using totalities ot the institution he works in, Doktorantura is conducted by the ademy of Sciences of Wai and also i i 1are universities, where faeilities or advanced research are available nsi** bility for the work of the doktorant is assumed by his s nted advisor or two advisors. The term or etudy is determined for each doktorant individually, depending On the level of hie knowle et and the nature a the dissertation work to present o4,4?4000 of more than four pare of work44 including the defense of the dissertation* without taking the doktorant away from his main 1; 4 work. Beciently a sys was devised for the * ktorant to finish doktorantara in t years, being panted a leave or absent* with full pay from the institution of his main WO*. The theme of the dIseertation is included in regulexi schedule or the researoh plan of the institute where the dissertation is fulfilled, among all the regular non degree research being done by the institute, 134 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy A proved for Relea? -Yr 2013/09m ? ('IA _ "IU Illrart - Sanitized Cop Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 The doktorants finishift their 4oktorantura must be proficient enough in three for*Ign languages to fully utilise all seientitis literature in those languages in their fields Doktorants who have derended the dissertation tor the Doctor of Selene* degree are considered as having finished their doktoran toys. Acoordi 4 to intonation found in %stalk Vysshey SikoLy &A, 19550 ps in Soviet universities, economic mots and judicial institutes, in the period or 1)4704955 inclusive 6757 persons finithed aspirantura, only 1925 (28050) at which defended the diasertation on times A similar situation of late presentation exists also in doktorantaras This is explained in Vestaik Volahey Shkoly No060 1955, pp 1245 by Correspondent W ber or the Iao. t of Sciences or us" Valls Xusnitsov (from Tomsk University), by the fact that the theoretical preparation of aspirants is ususlly cooposed of four subjects, one or them in i toreign lengusge, one in philosophy, and two in their specialty, all or which he must pass during one and a half years, In which the tint two subjects take up half the times Kuinitsov feels that the OM and 4 halt years left, aro insufficient for the preparation of a dissertation for Candidate or Sciences deetre 0 In the same Vestaik, Kunitsov notes that a consider* ale number or Candidate dissertstlons are not of any scientific values This he explains by the tact that the rei4t sitility for the aspirant's rinishing his work on time le put with his advisor. Such 4 4 assumes that eaoh *spirant' attain* become ? . ; Declassified in Part Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013incvnl ? rsi , - ' ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy A. ? roved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 a ocientlfie worker, and it he does not beoome such, his advisor is blamed. Me is blamed for ohoosing the 'mons theme for the assertation of the aspirants And thus advisors are apt to try put themselves out of blames* way by taking Appropriate measures? *wising a theme which is not a search of something new, yet will be satisfactory for a dissertations "This is *Ay there are yet so tow Candidate dissertations that contribute to science In any real ways In most cases they are deveior -nts or subjects already known% Vestnik Vyashey Shkoly. Nosl, 19554 104, gives some los of strange themes in pedagoslcal sciences for which Soviet aspirants received Candidate degrees: uZt sometimes is also this was, A teacher writes on the theme /Bole and Signitio canoe of the Sahooi letin Board (stennays assets) in the Work of Communist Upbringing of 7th Ora. Public $chool Studentest And lo, be was a'..#q4 a degree of Caudidate of Sciences (Ir take the dissertation for Candidate of P, gleal Sciences taping Over the t Hors, by the "Lege pr.ad0 method-. New pedagoa herett?1 irks it of ours. 'etp not follow that there are no OsnAlIdate dissertations that have definite scientific value* DoubtieSa aspirate who undergo aspirators* the universities 004 inatitutes of the Aca$ t at Science of II in the fields of physics, mathematics, biolo others have presented dissertations of e*ident worths This is indicated in part in Mathematical Reviews ( :glean publication), Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy A df r Release@ -Yr 2013/09/03 . CIA-RnPRi_ninA ?? ? ? ? ? , Declassified in Part- Sanitized.caz?2Enyed for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 where are reviewed same positive Soviet works, among Candidate degree dissertations. Many of these works equal in scope Mori - sot Ph o dissertations. One must, however note that these dissertations do not equal in se the dissertations for a stir degree which exiated before Soviets came into power. This is $o because the Register aspirsat was atAring as a, rule in a better universities than the present soviet ones, even though they were few in number (9), and consequently the students and therefore aspirants were better prepared in encoachins their Nag:Lotter aseertationo end it 144$ of a higher level. Prof. Kusaitsov corroborates this in the already mentioned article in iteartaik Voshey Shkoly: ?To der,, 0 the to r ' ter dissertation in pre -revolutionary Russia was harder then th present Candidate tissertationo but easter than contw rary Doctorate." far applioant knew at losst Wee languages to Germano Latino and some tour 1 Aa4e0 adding Oreek to the other three. Therefore he did not have to study a new e during his preparation pert sad also did not have to pass e or any correspondent Wool* e for the ons la star de t smolentint ft. ent or the Tsarist system. He had lastmed to pass I subjeets al rtatni , to his proteselon before he was allowed to defend the dissertation, ono of which was a written e " ion on a t- the examination. So tile !Wawa than the pre At not revealed to ia until degree had a greater Sifli quivalent et Candidate of Wows. Also his knowledge of the Paolo anguasee was very *137 , ' , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 ? CIA RD 1-0 9 nn9,) n Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 much greater than the presentoday knowledge of he Candidate or Sciences* This can be seen from the tact that the Candidate aspirant has to s One linguae and then study another for only one year, and the carom examinati4n in foretiA language required before ooduatiOn of pre4oviet secondary schools* In the present 100year schools, however, only one language is taught, and that on a comparatively low level with respect to the former depth with which th c was treated* The contirmatiolt ot this comes from the following fact given by the Vestnik Vyeshey Shkoly No*5* 1955* p*47* At the Moscow Xnstitute of tisnolerrous Metals and Gold where entrance e foreIgn lansuages are t yen, 60 of ali (Citv ?natio* in oat start the continuation of their aecondary school language cour, -t booming ullth the phabet* At the graduation from the pre Soviet slum, however, the student could treely Sk at least two toreich lInguages, al et with the sit-0 proficiency as the present-47 **condom school radustes or No and Demo** The knoll* e tial tor all siantific foreign languages Is V soon rkers who wish to attain anydepth In their researches and have to follow toren literature* Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81_n1naqpnry,Annoonr,,,,, c gamsr. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Cop Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 As states Vestnik Wsshey Shkoly No. 8# 1955, pp. 12015 (article by V. N. KUsnitsov), a considerable part of Doctors of Sciences got their doctorate by a dissertation at the end of a doktorantura. Notwithstanding the measures taken, however, the ranks of the Doctors of Sciences in educational institutions under the Ministry of Higher Education are filled lately at a very slow rate. "The system of preparation of Doctors (of Saienceo) is, in ou?opinion# contrary to the very notion of Doctors of Sciences. A Doctor of Science is an accomplished scientists in his field, having had -a considerable number of works (published) and coworkers working under his direction. 16 falOWS that at Doctor of Science not oaf need no advisors, but himself ia able to guide a group of scientists. Dootorantura# however, does not differ in principle from aspirantura. In both oases the theme is given by the advisor and the applici t work under the guidance of the advisors, the only difference beIng that the theme of the doctorant is more complex and broader (in scope) than that of the aspirant." 4L, pre0rirolutionary hussian universities, the Magister prepared 41s Doctorate dissertation working at the university as "extraordinary" professor (lower in rank than "ordinary.", which was the highest), chose himself the theme of the dis sertation, had no official advisors, and after finishing it sent it to the offloial reviewers (retsenzent). If they found it satisfactory he was given the right to defend it at the university, After being granted the Doctorate he received the right to be an "ordinary" profess? and to the one and a half Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 0 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDIDsi_ninaqPnrioArinnnnnnn Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Ap roved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDp81-01043R002400220002-5 times the pay of the "extraordinary" professor that went with it At no time was the appliaant forced or hunted in any war* Being unhampered by any time schedule he *mad work at his :Leasure and submit his work only otter he was abeolutolY positive of its results* The contemporary Soviet dissertation s, es Prof. igusnitsov mentions above, Usher in level than the A 4 strate disserOation, but lower than the preorevolutionary Doctorate, and the time is still distant when the Ciandidate dissertations shall reach the scope of the '-:is Ate diesertations* the 3oviet Doctorates shall reach the itoope of the preiwrevolutionary Doctorate* It sbell not happen until the lOwyear school reaehes in quality the teaching of pre *revolutionary gymnasium, the university reacbes the quality of the old university, the system et preparation ot Candidates will be analogous to form*r ster applieenta* and the preparation or Doctors be snalosous to the p paratton of preorevolutionary Doetc4, which, in the opinion of the author of this report Is impoesible until the Communist system exists 00 more, The present Candidste? of domes, is, however, se was noted previously, in Aisles, methematios, eherAistry, biolo technology etc equivalent to the ;riosn Pho D. degree, 4 while the Soviet Doctorate is considerably Usher, end in thie lies a considerable van of the Soviet system as opposed to the rican system* This tact of tiv, superiority of Soviet Doctorates, is ilot only the opinion of this author, but ite recosnised by many responsible scientists* A notable example is Dr. achard M Dorzoth of the Bell Telephone laboratories, E 4 t 140 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RnPRi_ninA ? Icifiea in Part - Sanitized Copy Ap roved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 quoted in this by Harrison Es Salisbury in the article on Dr* Kapitsa on po 3 ea. 2, of the Wdnesday, July 11 1956* lasue of the New York Times, At Ws time* while the Communist Party in Russia is twins all possible ? an to gain domination of the whole world* and the 114,140 is forced to dsrend Itself and lead the deems or the free'world0 and wale the USA has now the fulleolvantage over the 11441i in riculture* Industry* transportations and free initiative of its people* the level ot science is of the utmost koortance? America la fully able at the pr sent t to effeet the needed ehang2a to pl*rove its educational system* and Is potentially able to maintain the finest ducational Aisteim in this world* far surpassi that of the Sovi too It thaa es are not effected however we mag be lad to ' eventual Joviet scientific supremacy* witich would be dlaastrous tor the fre* world* ;. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Rele'ase @ 50-Yr 20J13/05:vng A Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 MAJOR SOURCES USED IN REPORT "Dlrektivy W(b) 1 Postanovloniya Sovete9so Pravitelostva o Narodnom Obrasovanil sa 1917.1947 Cody plroctives of the V1411and Resolutions of the at Government on National &Nos ion for Years 1917494714 Nosoow, 1947, L, of C. Call No.; it KR2280 .A1 1947 'incyclopedia Americana" Vol. 27. DivestIva" No. 49* Pobruary 26 1956. "Narodnoye Khogyaystvo SUR atatiatiohoskity Sborritic" (National Economy of Statistical Collection) 1956. t4i142710111100 Obrazovenlyea by To. 14. NOOrnokly, 195. "Ns LAW 022 rodric 1955, No Utredno Noectowi Obrasovantie" 1948. I. of C CCU No 0 .A2 1948. ? Obrasovarilye No. 1 1950* No 8 1954, No. 1, 2, 1955. and 9 1955 ? Obretovattire v ? $R (Pu 952. by Ye. 14. liodynsklq. York Jul 11 19560 Lie Education in USSR) isatelya Upravlenlya Oniversiteto Of A iniatration of Universities in Bohm4hud iv. New York, 1954. "Prosveerheheniya v SSW" (Iducat Nedynekty0 19550 "Soviet Profeeslona 3. npower Washinston. D. CO3 19550 14$ v S8 ) by Prof.Vo1odmir R) by To lotto:Lae DeWitt vochnik dlya Postupaiushobikh v Sre MI bum Zsvedentya v 1956 g0" Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-0inanpnn9Annoonrw, c ra Spe talonyle -6000660017ZOnl?1701-0-1-8dCll-V10 ?0/60/?1,0Z -1A-09 ? eseeiei -104 panoxIdv Ado Pez!4!ueS -1-led LI! 1084!sseloaCI *946/ 15IN Pull "556T *IT rifin, e :g ft ea 47 econ set '1 *oo tiOt ?45 *om -vaet 0 ou -etet '6 .041 'L6t 'II "061 IS .014 Alms womAk AW41104 *V10 taw mem Isom it p ? toe( sittom itateaget ntivioAst VC16T. .10A WIN mart memo, vtottodens, *0100 ?I 946/ A valusown Wuqmpti Omni% A qA qoqnsIod attp mutlootagdga 9-ZOOOZZ0017ZOnl?1701-0-1-8dCll-V10 ?0/60/?1,0Z -1A-09 ? eseeiei -104 peAOJddV AcF65-pazq!ueS u! PeWsseloaCI Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 giales asites ostabli raid Wm. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ,L.labsirsea in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Untver4tiea in USSR Pollowing are the 33 Soviet universities with their addresses, dates at establis)( nt and tamdstetsi A) story tseulltet. Specialty, history. B1 Philolo fasulsto 0 Speolaltiess Aserbaydshan lansuase and literature; AUS81041 and Utast 1; library science and ball* ; Journal ; Iranian languages and literature, C) LAW taeulftet. 4pesisoltys jurisprude e. loaXlmathematical taculitet. ape tallies, mathematics; physic!), IS) Chemistry tsculot t 44altyl chemist 16001 cialtiest a) Goo ialtiesi sits; phr taiO4 tat taw zooiosi? foul' e 0 ey and se 400 0 Correspondence so tionts cisltiest ma tica; hist* t enoe used mineral 14 A) apectialtys him 34 Philolosy taeuiftet Is:Sliest Belorussian e and literature; j ?C) law t Specialty, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release - 5O-Yr 2O3/Qq ? rsiA liters* als cisme liters Russian ueclassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 D) Physicakomathematical 2so4ltet deities/ mathematics) physics. E) Chemist? taculobet. 4444410 I try F) Mlology fecurtot, cialties; botany') zoology asologyoseopsiphy faculitet, claltiesi geology' and seareh for sites sits) physical geography; economic goo II) Correspondence section. Specialties/ history; ' loruis*an %age and literature; Russian lonspage and Meraturs; Ournali jurisprudenoe; mathematics; lea eography; econmala ge hy; bot zoology' user mineral vs es ished 1519, ot acul#tet* 0 snd itserature ussian science and bib logrsphy; and lite tun; German and literature es facallUet, insmaes ard ere till C) law faculftet. opecialtyt Jpruno, 0 calomel cialtie physics; 0$ tot of phoysical tet ct me sling and t? ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release lart* history; crcitts literature 50-Yr 201a/09/03 ? riA_DiThrl'o., Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 soU ociomes taloa I tot* taw. zoology; soil eolorwo and agro4thomistryl rsoulltet* logy smi search for sites of 004 mineral oolou and onginooring geology* MIA tot * oat hydrolown physical goo ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 ? CIA RDP81-01043R0074nn99nnn9_c Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 a: C) Chemistry taaulltet. Speoisitys elismist270 D) Pivology taaultt t Speoialtiess botany) zoology 2) XI. ;motion* Speetaltiost sian lamas? and literature; mathematics) boWiory; zoology* 141 Correspondenae section* 4ecisatiesi Ukrainian lang zi llterature; Russian and literature; mathematics YO LI,* t im M 4olot v x, vlif ; es a one 2 AI His acultteto Spacialtil htstory* ' Bi) Philology tacul$tet. 2,eala1t1.es: Arm/L-4a idrewmge and 111wratmre; Rogan la and litsrature iinglish I Iguage d 4iLorature Iranian aopages and literature; 44,man 10 c and 1 terature; Prenah :Language and lit %%mum 4, C) Boonomio3 fagulsteti 4,41;U:fittest Aunt% of national eo may; aoacovnt rrudence. 0. Physic zati al taculOteto tioe; plysios; mechanics, 4 Chemistry facalltet 4ecia1tyi ohemistry* F) Mology ta4ortet* tany; zoolny* 0) Oe ...#..0. raoulltet* . 4paotatleel al4a1 geogr ; oncs li, Correspoodenae seotiOn. .41alti si finances ,,.-.4. credit; p1r ting0, geograohy* tqtr,t4ii ot national ec ? ar .1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 6 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 8) Law fouliteti, Apocialt's prispruderas, C) thystoal*matheastioal :aim:Met* Spocialtiost methomatics; physics, Cheast tacul*Utt Spoolaltari 00 I) ortlyt IC) ilL4otratipsoll soicace race t t ? SpeolaItiest botiov zoology. r) ;Hol tuulltxt. Specialtios$ polo " 4na pro citing tor elmtst petroleam and Oposits; geoloi survey ,Id search tor sites ot use- f4 miAeral t4 G) facul'oto 3poci4tAael physical go 7) economic goo H)4#orruipon4eno, 9,cottano Apeololtios, lunS-,,I,e and li4,z0r4turo hiatfort t pht,vicalvozract; %kortollo .72,ograp Wenn z ? 44 veyw, V I ti ef314, * litstorpwitya1 riu ta tet hiseotAmo,4i letvace 40atatiost 41 ' ' vagivAse 4 it totilt MO iy ,K.1, ? 4) Latt St44111 4.1tyl jUrittputt looathcmatt a t121ote'4. Uu ta4 otalcal 0 um; mal 04) olaltyt Eilol # 040$ A '4WVO r 4A1' 4,4 r) 4441a3 wineral 14 of , of si 0) s lard $ 1, .0^1c0140. a*. 10 tem 004011t:,t* 410It2,11,ca1 survey &ophyaio At tittparoil ainoral peLum d Sa3 t oul'Ueto 1 al oosrap 0 tic iota lowo (4; Wit Pode zoarol for tea ot oftiag, is or seoches sad pro$* otv and prospacto, deposites0 000m, eography tom Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDPRi_ni nit-4 flf10 A nnevInnnn ? .IL - oanitized_Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 H) C;orresponden to ae tiono ;$/v ialtiest Russian lanspago an iltorature; Tartar langu awl literutoirc; history; mathumati a; botany; oology? AO Kazakh S as Ui s is, ! 4irov Ma v aya un,, ts s A) History ta,alltot* AsIty; history, Philolo17 tai,ul!tet* 6peiAaltiost Kazakh languito and llteratiaro* riasolan language ankl literatdre; journalism, 41, 0 Law tasAiilftet. SpeQialtys jurisprudeme* SoonomUs ta4u11tot* Specialtiest Industrial 04onom rzit; a000tAnting* 6) Physioa*mathematiJai ta414 3pc4i1t.iu mathematio; physic40 IP) Chemistry facAlitoto Aotti: chemistry. 0) Biologyosoil scUeme ?tot* 4cQialtissl botany; aoology. 4 Geography 1.414;ulttot40 IniAaltios; physiGal &ograp 1) Correspondeme section* Kazakal Iangaap an litteraare; R4 an lanvage ancl literuturt4 hUtory; mathematioa; journalism; botany; zoo*. zooiny; lariztopritm:;e; oQonoml4a; finanues and u*ellt; *loal pograpby* ',rude itortomi(g) '1n4wet an4 ilonomii:; go ' ver I* P A Historpophilolo y history; Russ 46orsklye4 uares And lit t ettablisted 19400 'e and Iltorature; 71nno Physicalmathematioal 44414et9 4it1ties: mathomatios; physifgl. 4) Forestry e forest ??? t neering faegliteto engineering* Declassified in Part Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 201:linamo 1,1 I ueclassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ricultural taaulitet* Speolaltiess asronomy, gooteohnis* 0 Correspondence section* 3pecialtleat wiatilimmi44400; histor$; Russian langu o ani Mem. tura; "Pinnodougorehlye" languages and literature* 1,1 veit tin it h vehe 3 OV, aya *; A) History tacul'tet* spoialtyl history* !Loonomlos faaulitet* 040cialty: political ezonomies, ) Philosophy ruallteto 3piXtjs*t philosoph$40 psyl, 0 Philology raiwIltet* 4peoia1tiess Ukrainian lansua4,to unA 1/44;ratAre* Russian and literature; ' lioh 1 uavo and IlLeratax French 1 and literature* Jouxuallam faoglqiet* Jpecialty: journalism. F) Law faculltet* ?vet otaity jarlsprkierwe G chataceeminatiusatiws faoul, tot* vf,t11,1?mati3s; trobanica# Occialties1 H) laity* co tacalltst* to. 1) Chemistrv fa ul'tet* 4oci4tys chemistry* J) titolosyftsoll soienze taoul,tet* 3pecialtiess botany; zoology* It) Geology tactalttet* laltiess eo eurv4 rU 4F sits; hy4ro10 and L) ap acul'toto Jpecialties 8 phy ical g t m) corroapon* e seotion* ecialtleas at ties; pho ; history; HUstilan lang and ltteratare; 4ingitalt learch or site f useful nanoerIng stolo geophIsic eonomic spograp1y0 physi al se r,* ucononti o? d litera ure; Ukrainian e and :Littera ure; French Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for 2013/09/nn ? riA_Di-NrmA " ?-? iii rart - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 language and literature; philosophy; political eco zoology; 40000aliss, jurtsprudenos? A History saulttets Specialty; history. a) Ph1Zoi taoullteto Specialties: mix language and literattirei ; establish 191 d o ature; 1iutan Una C) Po 1 e tacui tet Specialties; English language; German 1ang D) Boo csoolaw aoulltet# Specialtlest industri e40091106; jurispra nce# Phymicalleathomatical tacull,te Specialties, botany; zolgogy 3pe ialtiess 0 Mal Otecialtiess facult?et physical too ; ea? SW 8010040 taculqete botany; zoolo 11) Correspondence seotion "ottoialti al Russian I and It tics; bot wi? zoology; Industrial e 400 uage and 1 s tsoul lidav terature, tet? credits C) thYs osialtiess 10) Chemis ?Laity; Mol oultourial coo ise4;109 urej vtnot c tanyj u loprwleno ricult oral hmule et* ) soil solo e and Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy ApprovedfR I O-Yr 2013'inclim r?, ^ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release ? 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ? established 1919; Soviet est. 19404 A nista N?philol taloa 'tett tattoo htStOTlJ Latvlan :Language and literature; Russian language and literatures ? .11) Zeonositos tocul,tet? ZpeoiaMe.* industrial economies; Mane iin4 area cultural economics; juriaprudence? Physicaloosatheniatical factilitet* :4peate1tiotis phis; mathematice4 Ctimptry faoultteto Specialties* cheatstryj 3i1Lateteohnoloug, 13) o304,r AwAt teto 4poolaltiest zoolo V) Osotraphy raculotet cialtiess physical geo eoonam44 go 0) Construction e ,ering Plata I tot eislotiest induittriali and civil construction$ ricultural construction' arehiteo tura* ti) ,ohanica ctechriology) At*. cialtiest alachineobuilding technology, ,Jtal cut;t1 tJine and Itstrtments, electrical stations, nettgalte and el* ; oleo** 141tication ?et industrial antorpri a and lila illations 47 ? I) Svonl aootion, Nialtioas maehinsobuil toahnology4 murpal /Jutting mahinea and instrumento; e14otrical otations$ netWOr?gb and ayaterso, inaut an4 olvil oconotruation; $14 h and telonhone uoitataticatiorase Correimularmse tietttifig eialtioal 4vian 1 4; and literitura; hiatorn hy, economic geograp 4 literatures Russian language SAN jurisprudetnee; p sioal 13) % 'MMUS taculttot. dealt paitical etoonomloso , Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50 Y 2013/09/03 ? ?-) , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 (1) tacul#tet. 3peolaltiesi oesphyl psychology :4 Pala fseulotet cialtieso Romelin Impose and literature, SomanowOormanto languages and Weratures English language literature; German lamae and literature; Preach lawno and literature; ah 14100110 and literatures Swedish language and literature; horwestaa language and literature; Danish luso. and Ii4erature) Itslian I and literature) Slavic Uaguages anci literature, toligh e and literature) Czech language and literature; en3. sna literature, classic oblac i Greek and iterature; and rauxel 4journa1ismo 0 faculottet Specialties* tern 1 and litoratves ChLMI 1 an4 literature; KoreanI and literatovj an4 literaturo; Vietntmoge 1 kt' ant literbture; and Iltorau, Tr154164 1 a an literature; Tokio and literatarel Arabian luntooges an4 Moraturel P) LAW taculltet4 3peolalty; juriaprudenao ftwiloa taoulstet cialtiess ph ci$; pop 11) Pleolmiesistath tics departwent4 141tiest mat atio4) obanloo; ast X) itiaoulotet* laity*, o 0 24410 EA me taoul,tet* oialtieas tun 1 $ lo1O to ot mon and saval0; ao ewe 4nd t he f *tot. 0rn t I 04g aurv y and mart* t itoa t tutuX , o tiv4o 04 a 3 f / totti itil &who 'zr hj104417 Section* an j Otorsio 000 4,- 41, 10 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 s? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 eq. N) (orresporAdenoe sectlono 3pe4altiess aatheliuttios; history; Russian language and 1110er Ours; 4nglish language and literature; German 1 Alf and literature; politioal economies; philosophy; jurisp bOtany; zoolosy; phplcal geomphY; ettonomiu SeograPhY) icoanaligme LI 3t? ro t vovi ve 8 0, A) History tasulitet*, ialtys history* XI) Philolo. Raeulite ocialtiest Ukrainian :11Ainet a41 llwratare; Russian I ita an literature; 314vie 10 uages an licoraturot Pollsh language and lititrature; ,,,044seh wiliage and literature; classic philology: Omek lamp: m 0 Mi eto,Are j ti LitigOage and II Leratuhre 4 ) j0411:na11 ra0 al, t t ? ? 014141 jon1iwa* D) Foreign lang a faeuiste1400 3poola1tleas Engllsh language; Gera= taaul,toto lalVt prispruden000 P) Physlos f?31.111toto acialtyl DI loo :::..ohanicuomatha3T.ttul eolaltp mathem4tUso Ch Ilitatnt roe te 4ecialtyt obwaistovy* I) Molog$ tallu:t to laitio vow; zoologyo 3) Ocolo acal'toto ecialtiest geological survey and searh, for sites tusett4 mineral de sits; geolocy p4tiX t altos or asetul c4apoeits faou' ttetio Frenah lailsaageo . . f. Vetlialtiess it ala there 16 no enro loont teto, eoPaphy; twonomic Iwo or these spvcialties). 1) Corrospoottetwowotiox!, pecUte* historv Ukrainian la* 4 lit t ; Russian 1 a4 literature; mathematics; ju pradene botanw. AA Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @_50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 icu In rart - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 an annex to Po 0 Mists 011 0441ties1 htstozr 0 r 1 vont* faaulstet? Ilan language and literature ? shed in 1916 aa 14 Um ts4u1itst0 Specialty' jurisprudsnoso C) Physlosksesthomatical tsoul'tet Speolaltisst mathematics; physics .0) Monts tac44tet, 43414143 stry atolugy tactil I Wt Sp W14404 botany; zoolo Specialt1 14posits; 0) ? taculitet, polo and se eology and e , hr taculttcto cialtiest physical goo 0) Twychnol*, factul,tat eialtiegs tec #logy of in* equit nt and tea 1 of heat 4rea h fax, a neeri s ot usof31 mineral ology* aconomic I) Corr. 41cia2tioss zool physi section, Ice; history abstanc* not at of metals,* no? botany; 170 C) iburnsli ialtro J t ? ' \ ; '? H''H;?? ? Declassified iny 10 Sanitized Cop A proved for Release 50-Yr 2013ingim ? f".1 A _ i-art - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 DI ?hula ikihv fasulotits ialtiest t# losephy; psychology* It) Economia tossulitet. Specialty; polibical economics, P) Law taoulitst oialtys jurtsprude ego 0) Physics Sioulitetoo Specialtisss Ayala; seep as, H) Mischanicsomathamatics faculltet. 4peotalkin geohaz4ons3 astronomy ,i) Ch n trr maltUet*4 ecialtzts obomistryo 0 lo soil science 3pecia3tiest taro 1 ) physiolo of p an a; or men and animals Antbropo owl soil 00 entle and tt) A iscult4s, cialtiesi palmy awl search for sites ot useful mineral deposits) seology 4144 pr,AP ,, , * t att,ea ot potrolom and 4opGstts; losioa , lovely / * It or aorta t 4 thodo ot sesroh*s prospecting of sites alta; geochemistry' hydro,'hology sad e r4 uomet; LG:oo metaorol mute station; osi physics; history; Rua; son botsgys zoology; phoical ge r "1"14161 "411 "A41-!1! attanj vtitanckt la (;) Phyaloal 43/41104111 and Literatures 'tioal rue I tot Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013incvnl ueclassified in Part - Sanitizeclmax.4.0D roy_tt for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 0 Chemistry taculltet* Speklialtyt ohemistry. E) Biology t.oulotot. Spcvialtiess botany; zo4logy* F) Geography facul,tets Jpecialtiess physical goolsraphy; oaonomic geography* 0) Correspondonoe sactiOn. Jpecialties: history; Rusolifin language and litrerature; Ukrainian languasit and literature; mathematics; physidal ge*Anp ; economic geography; boLany; 400logy. Rostov S ate Univ si im V I svovi?nis sfollus r r eA,4 Historyvhiloirty faculiteto Spiecialtioat hi tory; Russian :Vivi as' ,i); established 19 ani literataire. 8) Myst w4hematical fao4l4ot. ialtie4$ mothemutica; phys! Q44; meatanios. C) Chemlatry faoulitet laltyt ah6m4siwy* Otolo o 1 s ine &tl'tet, Jpoiatiet botany 400lo Osologpogeograph*If faoulttet. e babies: physioal seogr y; eol"41mla geoseaptily* P) Law tacalitet. ialty; jurisprud nau, 0) Correspo d4no.; section, cialties: hl Wry; mathe tics; Rus Ian e; boa fly; pnywical g ographi; ea vo History a ul e ? Spa laity* hiatory. Philo 4 tai*i 'tee. Speolaltyt lab an an4 liter ? 4 gootraphy* and literatu C) k iMtheaaies sou teto Jpecialtiess mathematics; meohani so D) Physics taculstet, 400a1141 physics. 14 4. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Relei@i_?_0-Yr2013/09/n:1 ? rIA_DninnA , A ueclassified in Part - Sanitized COpy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Ci2edetz7 faculttet* 3pecialtyt hirststx, F) Biology faculttet* Specialties: botany; zoology* 0) Osology faaulitet* Specialties: olosical survey and search for sites of useful mineral deposi a) geology an4 prospecting of sites 4f usetul ?Lto?ral leposito H) Geography tacalltet* I oialties: physical geogr by; sOopomio geosraphy* I) Correspondence section* 4ecia1ties: Russian It.--uale and literature) history; inatheritaties; botany; zoologa; physio i eogr ; eoonomio geograpirt* am a *a A) History fa ulftetp Specialty: astory* B) Philology raculttet* ecisitiest Uzbek long and literature; Aussiai* language and litrature) journalism* C) Eastern faculltet* 3pec.i1atiest Indian lang literature) IranowArshanian 0 Law taoulstot* 4ec1aityt juripradonce* " ) p al tles t eloal utathoztalit 0) Obeilist aialtyt he ' q A d literature; Uw language and es and literature* u104et* 0) Biology soil scienag faculftet* 4ecialtirst botany; zoology) soil scion?andothei otos; pOsice 11) Geology taculltet 4peola1tio11 geological sum y and search for site 0 useful aineral 44posits) hylrogeology and %lingering geology* ,,mraphy taculltet apeciutiest physical seograPhri toonomie of soil* 151 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release' 5'0-Yr 2013/09gn ? ^ 1 srtphy; hydrology Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ,7) Correspondence section, 3pecia1ty: jurisprudence, 24 TL. L3 v r na ; established 1948, A) Nistory*philology kaculotete Specialties: history; Tadzhik language and literature; Russian language and literature, B) Law faculttet, Specialty: Jurisprudence C) Economics faculltet, Specialties: industrial economics; agricultural economies, D) Physicalrmathematical raculitoet, Specialties: mathematics; physics, 2) Natural sciences faculltet, Specialties: geological survey and search for sites of useful mineral deposits; botany; zoology, 11 Correspondence section, opeuialties: Jurisprudence; industrial, economics, agricultural vaonomics; trade economica, Tartu State Uhivera t ax' u $ ns oy 0, Yullkooli, 42; established 1802 A) Historpophilology facul,tet, Specialties: history; Estonian langur e and literature; Russian lang?e and literature; library soien e and bibliography, 00 Law faeulltet, Sp cialty: jurisprudence* C) Sciencesoatbamatica tacul'tet. Specialties: mathematics; phisicu: :;klemistry; any; zoology; physical geograp economic geography* D) Economics faculitst, Specialty: finances and credit. E) Medical science tacuistot, Specialties: the healing art; phx eeuttcs stomatology; phyaical conditioning, 19 Correspondence section. Specialties: history; Estonian language and literature; Russian language and literature; Jurisprudence; mathematics; physical conditioning library science and bibliography. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RnpRi_ninAoon , Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-R0P81-01043R002400220002-5 1934$* A History Pieu1ste$0 i Speolaltiest historyj philosophy) peyoholosy aq Philology fasulttst0' 1 , 3peotaltiesi aessogian 14004, and literature) Russian laws. and literature) journalism; Iranian 1ansuas00 and literature; 1 TuxUlo languasea and literatursi ismitasao C) INNWeipm if 1 s and literature t$QtZIt*t. aialtiaa Ush swag, literature; airman lansuage and Uterature; noh i401U0$0 and literature UononLos faculstet* , ?stoat '4s Manses and credit) *mounting* E) Law frasalotet* aisLtys jurisprodottoo. P) Neohanies?mathessatios taaulftet 3peolialtiees matheaatiosi meobanios* 0) Physics faoulitot* Specialty: physics, 11) chimistry taoulotet* SVsoialtys ohemistriy* I) Kola ulttet, speoialtiess taw) zool Yvi agerapwfaaul otaltiest phrtioal UrVeY ara arch tor s 4 ' t t ; economic $e 'Cul mineral X) Corresp44,nae motto oialiAless ao untins finances and (treat; Industrisl 000nosioci spa Va. talUses history) USSIAA literature* B4 onoaau?4 aoi.L*tot* oialtiess jurisP ) planning of national economy, oulturel two cs* C) Physios L'tei 4poolaltys physics* , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03:It CIA-RnpRi_ni n ft Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 D) Nsahsaisaomsthematics tas4ltet0 apecialtless asthmatics) mechanic** 111) Chemistry taculotet ? ialtyl chemistry P) Biol *soil SOWN. tacul,tst* Speetaltiest taw zoology* a) 640010170101.01MAY faaulttst* cialtiess geological surrivir and search tor sites or useful M deposits) chemistry; slog 1000,604; economic seosraphy, soil hydrology; meteor* osy* il) COMOSpan nee oeetion. !AM's* history; Russian languaga an4 literature stsic.j botanr; zoology; physi al 0 04, economic geography A Philo * ecialtiets and literature; literature; MAW= e; rman laws's* faaulttet* ialtiest atom jurieprudena C) Phys calmmathematical facul 4 limelosatliess t tics; hstcs.6 Technol ulttot isltiest stzisl and civil r sopir and sewer** ol. deltic** 1) slcal 3pecia1tyl 041410 hy taculft t I cool 4)ph,ysital somitt1 t me on necrtns); 014rOble ction* ume Od lite ur W$iM I e? jurispruden ei his $ Specialties* and literature; tany; zool Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ,4r7:"rt III ranSized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 A MLstory.p $psoialtissi ht?toryj Russian laws, and literature 2) *Ma iaal tasulitoto SposialtioSs stablutaaties) physics. C Cheats twat I tit. isItyt tri? ;lb sstsbl1ishsd194) tap mid litorsturej 14 ?X SpesialtieOt 11) oisitys the hea1ifl its. 11) Conyespondenee 4340ottorto apecialtiest historts Ukrainian las langusge mid literature; mat tics; same Mull/ tee. and literature; Russian 414; zoslogyo tet ecialty rot* Philolt " eoialtiest and literature$ sian German i. 3p eisItiest 3peeidtitts Volta d 1933. TAU lte ure; Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy APproved for Release 2 50-Yr 2013inwm 920 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ) ftateslowithemettiosl tioulltsto SpeatAltiest mothosties, meolaniosi physieso 0) Obeid, tsoulttet 4peolaitys tanfil Siolop tseafteto Speolaitiest botany; so4osy0 19 Geology result, ?to 43404 ogled survey and searoh ot sites of useful ral de 14s4 geology An4 prof:00)4AI% of sites of useful net41 leposits, 0) Gorrespondome se iotOrto oisltiess history; sitin msttos physiow journal $ bo ' a) Philo)A feoul,tet* * lvaltios$ Ian i uses an4 litareture; ard Uteretare Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50 -Yr 2013/09/03: -RDP8 - fl a Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Al Hiallory taoulttet, esisit's histerr, 10 Philai faaulobst, Oialtiess and lit raimmis and litersturs, Osman lansmap and Morita., 0) Physioaleiniabonatiaal tsaulltsto Spootaltioss mathamaties, Moos. 4 Mods Speolaltys lo oialtioat 40.41altys taaulototo 6147 *soil Wien** f otet, tam goolsly. taaulltot cal geopelty. ot sections *torn Utesinlan Menton; Lan lops? and ten WO; and literature; maths* ,t04.4isstt The data in this k9p4Adt, ?il* tram k liling in lonatit ens ofvvua " It illora stvapso kb v it oh* VOtSiatrit Nalitkit, NOS', l Sad atitett IA V. ys V by Tee So 340tions4h . 08 R* Of Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Rele ase 50-Y M "Nand* 106 t aavadenitya) 09/03 . 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Ztg 69T Ii 851,4 C 9Z; a 695.TT (opuvonowq eteotirog UM* Puy WOW 1114r41 14401140* JO troops Ut notooit ozietail italnuovoite ur reuertliong 4.112111 Puy uonvelliti Puma?o stoottee uT itlueViSt 414) lasquiti V "TM TeArtoodom ;re otte ifta eke tea slid *VOA JO 1,404,1U4rJM 404A00 04430 utrniamuTopy Tommou team? im PIWITTM14 T otuortoltte0 Tec141144114$ MA 110 Ammo remligo meaj.morvi sago formin Tentormitse luTmortoj 9-ZOOOZZ0017Z0021?1701-0-1.8dClei-V10 C0/60/CLOZ JA-09 aseepei Joj paAaiddv ;(doo pez!PueS Ped UI PeuissPnAn 4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release ? 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 TAW& a Graduation of 41tetaiellaste in =sat trot& litisber adszeational Inztattiations Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 ueciassitied in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 V. 101040 C Numbers of licientifie Workers in thousands) 1 j Total number ot scientific workers 11 In scienceoresearch establishments 0.2 223.9 in hitoner educational institutions In industry, administra t4on1 etc. the total number or s ntifio workers holdiug the degree of Doctor or Sciences Candidate ot Scines holding the title or Professor Docent 4nior Junior Research Pellew and Assistant 0 ? Declassified in Part Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 50-Yr 2013/09m 45* 7.3 9*0 8.3 9#5 78.01 16.2 17.1 ruk ID rs r, ????? ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release ? 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Table D Numbers of Aspirants (grad. students workins for the depot or Candidate of Selenees) in I= at end of year, indicated 4, 1 * 1955 4 4044 940 1950 Total r vspirants thousands) Including' In er edacitiorlal Usti utions In soiencelwroseare4 establis 41tits 41101001004400.1A400060.mroVoweignmio.PIN001.44.0*.iliArmorappotavtil c 16.9 13.2 00 4 21.9 124 (i( % Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release ? 50-Yr 2013/09/03 : CIA-RDP81-01043Rnn94nn9,,nnno_ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr i043/09/03 ? CIA-RDP81-01043R00240027non7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Co .y Ap ? roved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03: CIA-RDP81-01043R002400220002-5 Table V Enrollment of Aaptranta (at end of year indicated) tn ',? - :rd'? . Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/09/03 CIA-RDP81-01043R00240029non7