education and economic growth in russia

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Education and Economic Growth in Russia On The Project «Education, Well being and The Emergent Economies of Brazil, Russia and South Africa» Anna Shvedovskaya, Ph.D Moscow State University of Psychology and Education CapeTown, South Africa March 7–11th, 2011

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Презентация Анны Шведовской, Международный симпозиум «Глобальные вызовы и социальные изменения», 7-9 марта, г. Кейптаун, ЮАР

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Page 1: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

Education and Economic Growth in RussiaOn The Project «Education, Well being and The Emergent Economiesof Brazil, Russia and South Africa»

Anna Shvedovskaya, Ph.DMoscow State University of Psychology and Education

CapeTown, South AfricaMarch 7–11th, 2011

Page 2: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Russian educational system

• Pre-school education (nursery care – from 1,5 years old, kindergartens – from 2,5 to 6-7 years old) – now made compulsory for older preschoolers

• Secondary school (elementary – 1-4 grades, junior – 5-9 grades, junior high – 10-11 grades) – compulsory

• Professional technical schools; professional colleges

• IHE

Page 3: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Pre-school education strong points

• Long history of development (in the frames of Soviet egalitarian and total employment ideas)

• UNESCO (2010) marked Russian experience of pre-school education as worth studying and translating in the other countries

• Alternative types of pre-school education: lekoteks for children with special needs, home-based kindergartens run by families with many children (but at the moment they are options in some big cities only)

Page 4: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Pre-school education problems

• Lack of places in kindergartens (especially in contrast with current pronatalist policy)

• Suggestions to admit more children per one group (sanitary norms have recently shifted form 20 to 25 children) – risk of creating “left-luggage room” for children

• Preparation for school is often transformed into drilling and school-like activities (childhood and play are not regarded valuable in practice though Russian psychologists insist)

Page 5: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Secondary education strong points

• Public schools provide social support (e.g. free meals for children from low SES families) and some types of extracurricular activity, free or quite affordable.

• Schools have to collaborate with child protection services, police, local healthcare (children are taken there for regular medical checks – “dispanserization”) etc.

Page 6: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Secondary education problems

• Problems with professional orientation for the future (preparation for certain IHE not learning about the actual profession)

• Ambiguity about the Unified State Exam (taken in 9th and 11th grades, also used as IHE entrée points) that was made compulsory in 2009

• Who is in charge of vospitanie (social and moral upbringing) – school or family? Lack of multidiciplinary school psychological services to deal with issues of bullying etc.

Page 7: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Higher education strong points

• In some regions IHEs are cultural centers, higher education is still regarded as a marker of personal culture

• IHEs are now being reformed to collaborate actives with the business (with special emphasis to IHE in STEM that were traditionally of very high quality in Russia)

Page 8: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Higher education problems

• Not connected to the labour marked. President Medvedev, February 2011: “We don’t need so many economists and lawyers”

• Traineeship is often formal, so IHE alumnus posses only theoretical knowledge

• Demand for more skilled labourers (i.e. for development of professional colleges)

Page 9: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Public and private education

• 658 public (federal and municipal) and 450 private IHE (2008). Moscow is the center for higher education: there are 264 IHE, 109 of them are public. Of 7.5 million students, 1.2 million attend private IHE.

• Total amount of institutions of general secondary education in Russia is 51.543; 33.007 of them are located in the rural areas. Approx. 700 private schools; 250 of them located in Moscow and 50 – in the Moscow region (2009).

Page 10: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Russian Government connects the notions of well being (quality of life), education and economy

Goals of the Ministry of Science and Education

Goal 1. Providing access to high-quality education for all the social strata as the basis for social mobility and decrease of social and economic inequality.

This goal corresponds to strategic goals of the Russian Federation Government, i.e. “Increase of the level and quality of life of the population (concerning the citizens’ demands for education)” and “Ensuring dynamic and sustainable economical development” (concerning efficient mechanisms of employment and fulfilling the economy’s demand for working resources).

Page 11: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Funding education from the Russian Federal budget

Indexes 2001 2002 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Funding education from federal budget (in milliards rubles)

55 82 162 212 295 354 413 386

% of GDP 0.61 0.75 0.75 0.79 0.89 0.85 1.02 0.89

GDP (in milliards rubles)

8944 10831 21625 26904 33111 41668

40420 43187

Page 12: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Education levels of the Russian population

Index Indexed in ..

2000 2001 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Goal Achievement year

Educational level of people aged 18–72: Per 1000 the amount of people who have

Higher professional education

People 172 189 223 224 226 228 230 232 238 2015

Technical education People 347 373 383 409 420 425 430 434 448 2015 Secondary education completed

People 241 244 263 243 231 225 220 215 198 2015

Average length of education period (for children who are 6 at the moment) Years 14.3 14.8 15.6 15.8 15.9 16.0 16.0 16.0 16.0 2010

Page 13: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Employment of professional education institutions alumni

Page 14: Education and Economic Growth in Russia

A. Shvedovskaya, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education

Contact us

Dr. Anna [email protected]

Skype: shvedovskaya

www.mgppu.ru/enwww.PsyJournals.ru/en