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9 - New directions in education

from PART II - THE SEARCH FOR A CHINESE ROAD, 1958–1965

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

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Summary

According to the conventional periodization of post-1949 China, the Great Leap Forward of 1958 marks the end of direct Soviet influence and the begining of a new Chinese road to socialism. Ironically, one of the major principles underlying the changes introduced into Chinese education at this time might well have been inspired by the critique of the “Stalin model” of education that developed in the Soviet Union after his death in 1953. Resolutions first adopted there in 1956 concerning the role of labor in education were not widely promoted in Soviet education until they were officially decreed in 1958. Known as the “Khrushchev reforms,” they aimed at closing the gap between education and practical life. In promoting them, Khrushchev complained that senior secondary school graduates who did not gain admission to college were unprepared for production work. “There are even certain young people,” he remarked, “who are unwilling to go to work in industry or farming, thinking it beneath them.”

The Soviet reforms of 1958 were therefore designed to prepare all secondary students for work regardless of when they terminated their schooling, and production training was included in the curriculum. At least 80 percent of the new students admitted to Soviet institutions of higher learning each year were to be enrolled from among those who had worked at least two years after finishing secondary school.

The Khrushchev reforms were never successfully integrated into the Soviet educational system, and did not survive the political demise of their chief advocate. In China, where a similar debate over labor education was also developing in the mid-1950s, the changes of 1958 had a more complex history.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1987

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References

Chan, Anita, ‘Images of China's social structure: The changing perspectives of Canton students’, World politics (April 1982).Google Scholar
En-lai, Chou, ‘Report on Government Work’, 18 April 1959, reprinted in Bowie, Robert R. and Fairbank, John K., eds., Communist China, 1955–1959.Google Scholar
Kwong, Julia. “The educational experiment of the Great Leap Forward, 1958–59: Its inherent contradictions.” Comparative Education Review, 3 (October 1979).Google Scholar
Pepper, Suzanne. China's universities: Post-Mao enrollment policies and their impact on the structure of secondary education: a research report. Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan, 1984.
Robert, D. Barendsen, ‘The agricultural middle school in Communist China’, CQ, 8(October-December 1961).Google Scholar
Shirk, Susan. “The 1963 temporary work regulations for full-time middle and primary schools: commentary and translation.” China Quarterly, 55 (July–September 1973).Google Scholar
Ting-i, Lu, ‘Education must be combined with productive labor’, Hung-ch'i (Red flag), No. 7 (1 September 1958).Google Scholar
White, D. Gordon. “The politics of Hsia-hsiang youth.” China Quarterly, 59 (July-September 1974).Google Scholar

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