Education and Professional Employment in the U.S.S.R.

Front Cover
National Science Foundation, 1961 - Education - 856 pages
 

Contents

SOVIET PRIMARY AND SECONDARY
71
Proportion of women among Soviet
74
611
75
General aims of Soviet primary and secondary education
77
Charts
85
Adult education and alternative equivalents to secondary general
90
139
92
Boarding schools
97
Changes in the structure of Soviet
98
Curricula
103
Politics atheism and moral education
119
Extracurricular activities and partisan youth organizations in Soviet
125
Quantitative trends in Soviet primary and secondary schools
130
Enrollment in the system of Soviet
132
94
145
612
146
507
147
340
149
The teaching staff in Soviet primary and secondary schools
150
Chapter III
155
The Soviet system of vocationaltechnical education 156
156
Secondary semiprofessional educationgeneral setting
162
Quantitative trends in Soviet semiprofessional education
185
Aggregate enrollment in Soviet sec
186
158
192
107
197
Semiprofessional school facilities and teaching staffs
203
Administrative subordination of Soviet higher educational
223
Types of instruction programs enrollments and parttime education
229
Composition of enrollment in Soviet
232
Entrance requirements supply and selection of applicants in Soviet higher education
242
Current admission procedures
243
612
244
The selection of higher education stu dents in historical perspective
246
Recent changes and debate on the selection of higher education students
248
Entrance examinations
256
Supply of applicants and first year admissions
258
Firstyear admissions by type of program and field of study
265
Distribution of firstyear entering stu
266
Instruction programs in Soviet higher educational establishments
274
Instruction programs in Soviet universities
276
University programs in physics
277
218
279
University program in chemistry
280
University program in the humanitiesRussian language and literature
281
University program in a social sciencepolitical economy
282
Electrical engineering
285
Chemical engineering
287
Civil engineering
288
Operations and maintenance engineering and other programs
290
Engineering economics and management
291
Industrial practice in Soviet engineering programs
292
Engineering thesisthe diploma project
293
Medicine
294
Veterinary medicine
295
Agronomy
296
Teacher education
297
232
298
Fine arts
299
Higher Communist Party schools
300
Summary appraisal of Soviet higher education programs
301
Qualitative factors
302
Instruction methods
303
The instruction load
304
Examinations and grading
305
264
306
Textbooks
308
The use of movies as a new instructional device
309
Laboratory equipment and research facilities
310
ADVANCED DEGREES AND SOVIET RESEARCH
373
Award procedures for the doctor degree
383
343
390
Quantitative aspects of advanced training and the award
392
Comparison of number of aspir
396
352
405
candidate of science 193759
406
Composition of research and academic personnel RAP
409
396
415
Soviet research establishments and the employment of RAP
422
Reorganization of the Soviet research and development establishment
428
EMPLOYMENT OF PROFESSIONAL AND SPE
437
418
439
Total number of graduates and the employment of Soviet higher
443
Growth of the Soviet work force of workers and employees
462
Total population of and gain
469
614
479
The Soviet intelligentsia and professional and semiprofessional
481
Leading administrative managerial and specialized personnel in
485
420
492
Soviet industrial employment and managerial administrative
496
193
500
Historical trend in the proportion of specialists with formal train
502
The total number of Soviet graduates
508
Leading personnel ETMP and specialists in construction
517
Employment leading personnel and higher education graduates
523
Social aspects of Soviet professional manpower
529
Professional wages and incentives
537
POSTSCRIPT
547
Appendix to Introduction
549
Appendix to Chapter I
555
Appendix to Chapter II
575
470
577
194
579
Table IIA4 Estimates of hypothetical
581
556
591
579
597
Supplement to table IIIA1G
599
522
602
173
606
Table IIIC1 Number of Soviet sec
624
524
625
lishments as of 1959
627
Table IVB20 Pedagogy teacher
628
Table IVAO Distribution by previous
634
173
676
174
701
Table IVB4 PhysicsUniversity pro
713
460
718
Table IVB21A Curriculum of inter
745
Appendix to Chapter V
751
527
759
Table VB5 Distribution of RAP total
768
755
775
VIA2SP composition of
777
Appendix VIA3 Soviet professional
783
Table VIB2P Soviet professional
789
463
791
Table IIB4 General curriculum
795
Table VIUS4 Number and ratio
807
326
809
BIBLIOGRAPHY
815
421
822
INDEX
837
677
839
329
841
423
845
482
846
425
851

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