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Restoring Teachers to Their Rights: Soviet Education and the 1936 Denunciation of Pedology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

E. Thomas Ewing*
Affiliation:
History Department, Virginia Tech.
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In early 1937, one-third of sixth graders in a school near Leningrad were not passing their Russian-language course. Their teacher, Tomsinskaia, told the school director that the failures were due to circumstances beyond her control: children had received inadequate preparation in previous grades, textbooks were in short supply, and pupils had “weak reading habits.” Other teachers in the Krasnosel'skii district offered similar justifications for pupils' poor performance. Sakhanova claimed that low levels of achievement were due to “bad home conditions.” Velichko asserted that her seventeen failing pupils all suffered from inherited conditions such as “mental retardation,” “underdevelopment,” or “congenital laziness.” Semenovskii, who had completed higher education and considerable teaching experience, admitted he had no explanation why one-half of his pupils were failing every year.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2001 by the History of Education Society 

References

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25 These recommendations were later criticized in L. Vladimirov, “Chemu uchili pedologi molodykh uchitelei,” V pomoshch’ uchiteliu No. 3 (1936), 19.Google Scholar

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39 For the changing images of Soviet heroes in this period, see Katerina Clark, “Utopian Anthropology as a Context for Stalinist Literature,” in Stalinism. Essays in Historical Interpretation ed. Robert C. Tucker (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1977), 185-194; Siegelbaum, Stakhanovism, 210-246; and my “Becoming a Stalinist Teacher: Ol'ga Leonova and the Politics of Soviet Education” (unpublished paper, 1996).Google Scholar

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49 Arshinov, Vykorchevat’ iz soznaniia,56.Google Scholar

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51 External Research Staff, The Soviet Union as Reported by Former Citizens (Washington: U.S. Department of State, 1952-1956), 4.Google Scholar

52 Pronin, Pedagogicheskaia oshibka,4. See an identical “ultimatum” in Ponomarev, “Po shkolam,” 36.Google Scholar

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54 Harvard Project on the Soviet Social System, Schedule A, No. 493, 14-15, 19, 28-29; Schedule B4, No. 428, 15-16. See similar recollections by a former teacher in Abraham A. Kreusler, A Teacher's Experiences in the Soviet Union (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1965), 23-24.Google Scholar

55 Project, Harvard Schedule A, No. 1495, 16-17.Google Scholar

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59 NA RAO f. 17, op. 1, d. 63, ll. 12-14; G. Kuprianov, “Pedagogi eshche ne ispol'zuiut svoikh prav,” ZKP 2 December 1936, 4; Vvedenskaia, “Uchit’ i uchit'sia,” 3; Borukhovich, “Zadachi,” 7; “Za bol'shevistskuiu rabotu,” 4; “V Krasnosel'skom raoine,” 7; “Piat’ let raboty,” 2; Kolesnikova, “Za bol'shevistskoe vypolnenie,” 32-33; “O zadachakh zhurnala,” 10-11.Google Scholar

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63 Fitzpatrick, Everyday Stalinism, 7579.Google Scholar

64 The subsequent fate of Blonskii revealed the complexities of Stalinist repression. Even as he was subjected to vicious public attacks, forced to repudiate his ideas, dismissed from positions, and confronted with the arrest of his own son, Blonskii nevertheless continued to research, write, and even publish papers before his death, apparently from natural causes, in early 1941. Shortly thereafter, an obituary described him as “a brilliant and original” scholar and “a great loss for Soviet pedagogy and psychology.” Making no direct mention of pedology, this obituary referred only to Blonskii's capacity to overcome certain “mistakes.” “P. P. Blonskii,” Sovetskaia pedagogika No. 4 (April 1941), 126-127.Google Scholar

65 Fradkin and Plokhova, “Istoriia raspravy,” 23-24; Bauer, New Man, 128-133; Piskoppel and Shchedrovitskii, “Mificheskoe i real'noe,” 134; Karpova, Obrazovatel'naia situatsiia, 121-122; Nikolenko, Gubko, and Ignatenko, “Zlokliucheniia nauki pedologii,” 119-120; Joravsky, Russian Psychology, 353; Sirotkina, “Pedological Decree,” 8-9.Google Scholar

66 Sharov, Pedagogi i ucheniki,3; Kolesnikova, “Za bol'shevistskoe vypolnenie,” 32, 39; Ponomarev, “Po shkolam,” 36; Bogdasarova, “Vse usloviia sozdany,” 3; Kuprianov, “Pedagogi,” 4.Google Scholar

67 For discussion of the Constitution in terms of the tension between regime propaganda and popular perceptions, see J. Arch Getty, “State and Society Under Stalin: Constitutions and Elections in the 1930s,” Slavic Review 50 (Spring 1991), 18-35; Davies, Popular Opinion, 102-108.Google Scholar

68 This interpretation draws on recent scholarship which examines the ways that the meanings of policies and practices in the 1930s were constructed through an interactive, although unequal, relationship between regime and subjects. Stephen Kotkin, Magnetic Mountain. Stalinism as a Civilization (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995), 198-237; Fitzpatrick, Everyday Stalinism, 67-88.Google Scholar

69 Project, Harvard Schedule A, No. 493, 22-23.Google Scholar

70 For a different perspective, which connects the “individualization” of teaching to more subtle forms of self-regulation, see Kate Rousmaniere, “Good Teachers are Born, Not Made: Self-Regulation in the Work of Nineteenth Century American Women Teachers,” in Discipline, Moral Regulation, and Schooling: A Social History eds. idem, Kari Dehli, and Ning de Coninck-Smith, (New York: Garland, 1997), 117-134.Google Scholar