Logo image
Democratic aspects of Post-communist schooling
Conference paper   Open access

Democratic aspects of Post-communist schooling

L.B. Perry
46th Annual Comparative and International Education Society Conference (Orlando, FL., 06/03/2002–09/03/2002)
2002
pdf
democratic_aspects_of.pdfDownloadView
Author’s Version Open Access
url
Conference WebsiteView

Abstract

The fall of communism in 1989 brought a renewed interest in the educational systems of central and eastern Europe. Many foreign scholars claim that post-communist schooling is undemocratic, or at best transitionally democratic. For schools to democratize, they argue, teachers must become less authoritative; teaching methods should focus more on critical thinking skills, rather than memorization; schools should become warmer, more informal, and student-centered; and authorities should develop new civics textbooks and curricula. The belief that schooling in the post-communist region is less democratic than in the western school systems is based on two assumptions: (1) school atmosphere and relations, teaching methods, and curriculum are indeed anti-democratic in the post-communist countries; and (2) education's role in fostering democratization is limited to these in-school, micro-level mechanisms. The paper addresses these two assumptions and considers democratic aspects of post-communist schooling, such as the way schools are funded. It concludes that, rather than western educators feeling superior when they study education in post-communist countries, they should realize these post-communist countries can offer insights into some of the most pressing problems in education at the beginning of the 21st century.

Details

Metrics

141 File views/ downloads
80 Record Views
Logo image