a continuation one of the other. They were two different types of schooling
It is true that during the last years there was a strong tendency to establish
a certain coherence between these two systems.
The variety of types of schools which existed in pre-revolutionary times
in Russia was a great asset from the pedagogical stand-point. Thanks to
it, children of different social and mental standards, possessing different
talents and inclinations, were not obliged to be pressed into the limits of
one and the same program. The parents had the possibility of choosing
between schools of different programs and systems for the education of
their children.
In 1914 there were 1800 standard second-grade schools (with an atten-
dance of half a million children) standing under the jurisdiction of the
Ministry of Education. Besides these state high-schools there existed a great
number of private high-schools, giving the same rights as the state schools
and. moreover, every Ministry had its own second-grade schools, which,
besides pursuing special aims were capable of giving a full second-grade edu-
cation to an additional 200,000 children, boys and girls. This type of
instruction was a preparation for the University.
The development of these second-grade schools was worked out according
to a systematic program. The Ministry of Education alone founded 60 new
second-grade schools yearly. Even during the World-War, in 191), some
new schools were founded, notwithstanding the difficulty of coping at that
period with such great expenses.
The programs of these schools had been much modified during the
last years. Count Ignatieff was Minister at that time, and his idea was that
the second-grade school program should not only be a preparation for a
University education, but should in itself be a complete education. The best
type of this kind of education was the “Commercial School”: also the
second-grade special technical schools of which we have already spoken. The
cost of schooling was not above 40 to 60 roubles per year (about 4 to
6 pounds). Children of all classes were admitted. There was only one small
group of privileged institutions, specially set apart for the children of civil
servants or for the children of military officers.
Great attention was constantly paid to the perfection and improvement
of the educational system. This was done both by the State institutions
and by the social institutions. These systems did not present something
stereotyped and unchangeable; they were constantly being modified and
elaborated to suit the demands of the times. During the last 20 years the
Committee, whose business it was to go into these questions, worked
unintermittenly. In this respect both the legislative institutions and the
Government strove to meet the expectations of public opinion, expressed
in the press and in the activity of the so-called “Parents Committees”. The
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