The erosion of vospitaniye (social upbringing) in post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan: Voices from the schools

被引:8
|
作者
DeYoung, Alan J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kentucky, Dept Educ Policy Studies & Evaluat, Coll Educ, Lexington, KY 40506 USA
关键词
education; Vospitaniye; social upbringing; Kyrgyzstan; secondary schools; national identity;
D O I
10.1016/j.postcomstud.2007.03.005
中图分类号
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号
030207 ;
摘要
Independent Kyrgyzstan has inherited the Soviet school system, including vospitaniye as an essential part. Soviet social policy was driven by the belief that building communism partly depended upon the creation of the "Soviet man." Such an individual would demonstrate unwavering commitment to aims of the October Revolution, and desire to undertake the technological and scientific training required to achieve collective purposes. The resulting social cohesion among like-minded individuals would thus reinforce the economic and political aims of the USSR. A primary institutional location for the creation of such individuals was the secondary school, formally organized to achieve two distinct but equally important goals: the transmission of formal knowledge (obrazovaniye) and the process of social upbringing (vospitaniye). This paper first considers the critical nature of vospitaniye as an aim of the USSR, an aim typically underestimated in the current discourse of reforming post-Soviet schools. It then suggests contemporary dilemmas voiced by practicing educators in several Kyrgyz schools who are still charged with social upbringing, but in a climate where the ideals and values upon which vospitaniye was initially created appear no longer viable. (C) 2007 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The Regents of the University of California.
引用
收藏
页码:239 / 256
页数:18
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] From coal to cool: Reordering nature in post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan
    Sturod, Anne Gry
    TOURIST STUDIES, 2019, 19 (02) : 141 - 163
  • [2] Islamic finance in the post-Soviet Central Asia and Transcaucasia: the evidence from Kyrgyzstan
    Nagimova, Almira Z.
    JOURNAL OF ISLAMIC ACCOUNTING AND BUSINESS RESEARCH, 2022, 13 (08) : 1197 - 1215
  • [3] Contesting and negotiating religion and ethnic identity in Post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan
    Radford, David
    CENTRAL ASIAN SURVEY, 2014, 33 (01) : 15 - 28
  • [4] Changing meanings of Kyrgyzstan's nut forests from colonial to post-Soviet times
    Schmidt, Matthias
    Doerre, Andrei
    AREA, 2011, 43 (03) : 288 - 296
  • [5] Challenges of Reforming the Civil Service in the Post-Soviet Era: The Case of Kyrgyzstan
    Liebert, Saltanat
    REVIEW OF PUBLIC PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION, 2014, 34 (04) : 403 - 420
  • [6] A cognitive approach to the post-Soviet Central Asian pasture puzzle: new data from Kyrgyzstan
    Jordan Levine
    Aiganysh Isaeva
    Ian Eddy
    Marc Foggin
    Sarah Gergel
    Shannon Hagerman
    Hisham Zerriffi
    Regional Environmental Change, 2017, 17 : 941 - 947
  • [7] A cognitive approach to the post-Soviet Central Asian pasture puzzle: new data from Kyrgyzstan
    Levine, Jordan
    Isaeva, Aiganysh
    Eddy, Ian
    Foggin, Marc
    Gergel, Sarah
    Hagerman, Shannon
    Zerriffi, Hisham
    REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE, 2017, 17 (03) : 941 - 947
  • [8] The Changing Epidemiology of Viral Hepatitis in a Post-Soviet Country-The Case of Kyrgyzstan
    Akmatov, Manas K.
    Beisheeva, Nurgul J.
    Nurmatov, Asylbek Z.
    Gulsunai, Sattarova J.
    Saikal, Kylychbekova N.
    Derkenbaeva, Aisuluu A.
    Abdrahmanova, Zamira O.
    Prokein, Jana
    Klopp, Norman
    Illig, Thomas
    Kasymov, Omor T.
    Nurmatov, Zuridin S.
    Pessler, Frank
    PATHOGENS, 2023, 12 (08):
  • [9] Labour migration and National Human Resource Development in the context of post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan
    Tynaliev, Urmat M.
    McLean, Gary N.
    HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL, 2011, 14 (02) : 199 - 215
  • [10] ATTITUDES AND BELIEFS OF PARENTS ABOUT CHILDHOOD VACCINATIONS IN POST-SOVIET COUNTRIES THE EXAMPLE OF KYRGYZSTAN
    Akmatov, Manas K.
    Mikolajczjk, Rafael T.
    Kretzschmar, Mirjam
    Kraemer, Alexander
    PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL, 2009, 28 (07) : 637 - 640