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- <text id=89TT0944>
- <title>
- Apr. 10, 1989: Restructuring The 3 R's
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 10, 1989 The New USSR
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 96
- RESTRUCTURING THE 3 R'S
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Though socialism still rules the curriculum, students are
- encouraged to think for themselves. But did anyone tell the
- teachers?
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Traver/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> Galina Boyko, principal of School No. 32 in Moscow, was
- teaching Russian literature to a class of 13-year-olds when a
- boy shot his hand into the air and asked about man's need for
- religion. Boyko, a 32-year veteran of the classroom, was
- understandably startled: religion has long been taboo in Soviet
- schools. But instead of avoiding the issue, she led her students
- through a 30-minute debate on the universal search for faith.
- "Before school reform, parents would have come to me, frightened
- that religion had even come up," Boyko said. "Now no one is
- surprised."
- </p>
- <p> In School No. 79 across town, Principal Semyon Boguslovsky
- sat at a table with a handful of teenagers, each dressed in the
- blue blazer that most Soviet students wear. When Boguslovsky
- said free discussion in the classroom was possible on every
- subject, Volodya, 16, quickly spoke up. His face red with anger,
- Volodya said, "There is much talk, but nothing has really
- changed. We are already tired of talking." Instead of silencing
- his young charge, Boguslovsky said nothing, but his features
- took on a boys-will-be-boys look of resignation.
- </p>
- <p> A few years ago, Boyko would not have handled the topic of
- religion with such confidence, nor would Volodya have had the
- last word. Now fresh breezes of tolerance are wafting through
- many Soviet schools, from first to tenth grade. Always
- considered a potent means of molding character, schools have
- been transformed into little laboratories of restructuring.
- Under Gorbachev, they are to change citizens from sheep into
- self-starters. Said Boguslovsky: "Soviet society requires not
- just a person who carries out orders but someone who thinks for
- himself. Our children are not mannequins, and our school is not
- a fortress."
- </p>
- <p> To help children cope with the demands of a changing
- society, many teachers are encouraging a spirit of inquiry. Some
- ninth- and tenth-graders are choosing their own elective
- courses. Rote learning, long the mainstay of education for the
- 42 million students in the nation's 130,000 schools, is
- beginning to yield to free debate. Like America's system of
- local school boards, councils made up of trade-union and party
- members, parents and students have been created to give people
- more control over their children's classrooms. Boring textbooks
- that only timidly touched upon the terrors of Stalin have been
- withdrawn. Until new textbooks become available, articles from
- newspapers, enlivened by the candor of glasnost, serve as the
- main basis for history lessons. Once banned 20th century
- classics, such as Andrei Platonov's Juvenile Sea, have found
- their way into classrooms.
- </p>
- <p> Despite these shifts, change is taking place within a
- narrow framework. Children must still be taught socialist
- values; how educators will reconcile that with the promotion of
- a freer learning environment remains to be seen. Some Soviets
- do not anticipate major problems. Said Boguslovsky: "I'm a
- Communist Party member, but I speak openly. To me, the two
- things are not mutually exclusive. I can be a Communist and also
- speak the truth."
- </p>
- <p> Skeptics are not so confident. They say schools cannot lead
- the way to reform, they can only reflect society, not shape it.
- Some of the harshest criticism comes from Uchitelskaya Gazeta,
- a pro-reform teachers' newspaper that regularly berates the
- State Committee for Public Education and the Academy of
- Pedagogical Sciences. Those two mammoth bureaucracies oversee
- the nation's school system and train its 4 million teachers.
- Reformers believe that both block educators eager to try more
- innovative methods.
- </p>
- <p> Some parents blame the teachers. For years, teachers have
- been one of the most conservative elements of Soviet society,
- barking orders like drill sergeants and demanding ready
- obedience. In many schools, parents are called in for collective
- meetings, where they hear their children denounced before other
- adults. Any mother or father who tries to defend his child does
- so at the risk of seeing him later punished by his teacher.
- Boyko agreed that many teachers are not prepared for reform.
- "They don't have the strength to change, or they think the old
- ways are just fine," she said.
- </p>
- <p> Gennadi Yagodin, appointed last year as chairman of the
- State Committee for Public Education, has been blunt about the
- failings of teachers. Many cannot be replaced or re-educated,
- he says; the system is simply stuck with them. Money is another
- problem. Yagodin has promised to double the budget for new
- school construction and teaching materials. But the biggest
- need, he feels, is for free thinking. Says Yagodin: "The school
- badly wants more democracy." In the end, only a generation of
- new teachers, trained in the era of glasnost, may be able to
- carry out the sweeping school reform so crucial to changing
- Soviet society.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-