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that would together build a better future. Yesterday we split the atom, today
we sent Gagarin to space and tomorrow we will bend nature to our will.
Communist propaganda required
a unified educational system, and unified
socialist schooling was duly introduced. In the 1950’s, some aspects of the
Soviet model were systematically adopted because an educated worker-
communist was ‘better’ than a complicated intellectual. The communist
educational system was for the masses,
collectivist, dogmatic, permeated by
ideology, indoctrination and egalitarianism. ‘We are all equal’ gradually turned
into ‘nobody is unique’. Being different was undesirable, laughed at and
punished.
In didactic terms,
this period was, to a certain degree, a return to
Herbartism with all its accompanying problems: transmission of ready-made
information, in some cases adulterated and filtered through the Communist
prism; student passivity; encyclopaedic
content of lessons; monologue-based
methods; one-way communication; rigid form; teacher in the role of a worker
‘processing’ the student, ‘filling’ or rather ‘washing’ his/her brain. Of course,
there were numerous exceptional pedagogues who, within the constraints of
the totalitarian regime, performed pedagogical work of high-quality. Still, these
were exceptional cases.
The totalitarian educational
system had its brighter sides, too: large-scale
eradication of illiteracy, tolerable general level of education in the population,
high level of factual and even encyclopaedic knowledge, absence of serious
social problems (drug abuse,
bullying, etc.), high level of discipline in some
pedagogical institutions (pre-school, special institutions).
In terms of administration, educational reforms followed in quick succession
but the new communist man and an advanced harmonious society were
nowhere in to be seen. Purges of ‘reactionary’ teachers were a frequent
occurrence. Intellectuals were put out of sight to archives and boiler room and
suffered other forms of persecution. The flagrant failure of the communist
project generated widespread dissatisfaction but the establishment maintained
the pretence that everything was alright and that life in the socialist bloc was
better than in the West. Manipulated figures served to demonstrate the
sophistication of the socialist society. The totalitarian regime’s immorality and
serious economic problems eventually culminated in the revolutionary events of
1989.
It is still too early to judge the success of the post-communist period. A greater
historical remove will be needed before we
can say whether pedagogical
practice benefited from the neoliberal paradigm.