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A Summary Report on the Educational Systems of the United States and the Soviet Union: Comparative Analysis. Revised.

Authors :
National Commission on Excellence in Education (ED), Washington, DC.
Ailes, Catherine P.
Rushing, Francis W.
Publication Year :
1982

Abstract

Education in the U.S.S.R. is much more strongly oriented toward the scientific and technical fields than is that of the United States. This may be an asset in the development of specialists with the ability to attain the short-term technological targets of the Soviet economic plan. However, the more flexible, theoretical, broader-based higher education system in the United States may produce specialists with an ability to innovate, with an ability to adapt to technological change, and with a greater latitude for interfield mobility as the demands of the economy change. A comparative analysis is presented of: (1) the structure of education in the two countries; (2) general education--elementary and secondary; (3) transition from incomplete to complete secondary education; (4) specialized secondary schools; (5) higher education; and (6) graduate training. A set of statistical tables providing a quantitative comparison of entrance, enrollment, and completion of the various stages in the educational process in the two countries is appended. (JD)

Details

Language :
English
Database :
ERIC
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
ED227106
Document Type :
Reports - Evaluative<br />Information Analyses<br />Speeches/Meeting Papers