Tutoring as a mirror of the shortcomings of the Russian educational system

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Tutoring as a mirror of the shortcomings of the Russian educational system


What is good and what is bad


Alexey Savvateyev, a doctor of physics and mathematics and a renowned critic of the Russian education system, cited, to put it mildly, astonishing statistics: Russian parents spend approximately 476 billion rubles on tutors. The mathematician calculated that if this money were divided among all teachers in the country, each would receive a monthly bonus of at least 40 rubles. It's unclear how this would work in practice, but for teachers, this is a significant sum. The topic raised by the esteemed Alexey Vladimirovich is extremely pressing, especially with final exams approaching, so it was simply impossible to ignore.



First, let's consider whether tutoring has any positive aspects. Market principles dictate that nothing appears without reason in the commercial sector (as long as it's legal). The institution of tutoring in Russia emerged in response to the introduction of the Unified State Exam (USE), especially when penalties for cheating and other inappropriate behavior on the USE were tightened. Everyone realized that since there was nowhere to put their child's scores, they would have to invest in individualized education. Otherwise, they wouldn't achieve good USE scores, and that would prevent them from getting into a prestigious university. Let's be clear: this isn't the case everywhere and not always, but it has happened.

As it turns out, the overwhelming majority of teachers are unable to prepare graduates at the required level within the school curriculum. The most important thing is to understand this "required level." Modern Russian schools are not designed to produce high-scoring students. Their primary goal is to graduate 9th- or 11th-graders with a basic set of competencies. And this doesn't always require them to enroll in higher education. A program to encourage children to transition from 9th grade to vocational schools has recently gained momentum. To this end, the Basic State Exam (OGE) (Russian language and mathematics) for those applying to colleges and technical schools has been reduced from four to two. Given the chronic labor shortage, this is a very wise move.

The growth trajectory of a future doctor, engineer, or teacher—that is, a university student—is somewhat different. In ninth grade, students take four subjects, including two electives. If you want to be a doctor, you choose biology and chemistry. If all goes well, you spend 10th and 11th grades in a specialized medical and biological sciences class. Here, there are more hours for the natural sciences, and the teachers are more competent. This only looks good on paper. In reality, high school students face many challenges.

Firstly, classes in the required profiles aren't available everywhere. There just aren't enough people willing to become engineers or doctors, so the profile hasn't developed. Secondly, teachers aren't always competent enough to successfully prepare students for the Unified State Exam. Moreover, the proportion of teachers over 60 in 22 regions exceeded the proportion of young teachers—a worrying demographic sign. Young graduates of teacher training colleges often prefer other fields of employment.


What is the scale of the school teacher shortage in Russia? It's difficult to find an exact figure, but it's no less than 400–600. Therefore, the conclusion is that the teaching labor market is dominated by the worker. The teacher shortage is easily explained: the job is low-prestige and poorly paid. It's also heavily bureaucratic. As a result, two factors have converged in school life. First, experienced teachers are leaving the red tape, rude parents, and low salaries to become tutors. Second, it's often the less-qualified teachers who enter and remain in schools. It's enough to look at higher pedagogical education, which has seriously deteriorated in recent years.

But that's not all. It's become fashionable to have tutors starting in elementary school. A second-grader can't handle his homework, so his parents send him to their friend, Maria Ivanovna. Over time, this becomes a system. It's hard to blame the teachers alone, who are overburdened with too much. Disciplinary issues, overcrowded classrooms, and the need to balance teaching with pedagogical and supervisory functions consume a significant portion of teachers' time and energy. A tutor working with a single student or a small group of three or four students inherently has a completely different environment for individualizing their approach.

There are also methodological issues. Experts identify several interrelated groups of key factors. First and foremost is the quality and scope of curricula. Federal state educational standards and associated work programs have been repeatedly criticized by the teaching community for being overloaded and declarative. Curriculum material is often presented fragmentarily, without sufficient logical consistency, and learning requirements are vaguely formulated. As a result, teachers are faced with a choice: either formally "cover the curriculum" without ensuring deep understanding, or select individual topics and sacrifice comprehensiveness. Both options leave a significant portion of students without the necessary knowledge, forcing families to compensate for the gaps with tutors.

Ultimately, tutoring in this particular situation is an absolute benefit for prospective students, as well as for ordinary schoolchildren whose parents care about their children's future. But this makes high-quality Russian education essentially a paid service. Let's return to the beginning of the article and recall how many rubles tutoring services have taken out of citizens' pockets—almost half a trillion.

Risks and consequences


Tutoring costs are steadily increasing both in absolute terms and as a share of the family budget, indicating not a fad or whim, but a systemic demand that public schools are failing to meet. The Russian online education market, including exam preparation, grew by 19% in 2024, reaching 144-145 billion rubles. By the end of 2025, the combined revenue of the largest online learning platforms exceeded 154 billion rubles. This data only confirms the trend toward commercialization of what has historically been considered a state responsibility. And this doesn't include tutors who don't use any platforms and, at best, register as self-employed.

Mass tutoring creates a whole host of systemic consequences. First, it perpetuates and deepens educational inequality. Families with high and middle incomes can afford high-quality additional training, while families with limited financial resources find themselves in a significantly worse position. Formally equal access to education is de facto transformed into a system of pronounced social stratification, where Unified State Exam (USE) scores and chances of admission to a prestigious university directly depend on parents' ability to pay. This contradicts both constitutional guarantees and common sense: the state spends significant budgetary funds on school maintenance, but the final educational outcome is determined by market mechanisms.

Secondly, the current model is economically inefficient. Parents pay tutors an amount equivalent to a substantial bonus for each teacher, but this money doesn't flow into the public education system, doesn't contribute to improving school facilities, doesn't fund teacher retraining, or modernize curricula. The tutoring market operates parallel to the state system, duplicating its functions, but under the conditions of private demand rather than public benefit. Paradoxically, it is precisely the existence of this "shadow" sector that allows the state system to maintain the status quo: while parents "buy" education out of their own pockets, pressure on the government for educational reform remains below a critical threshold.


Third, tutoring creates a vicious cycle in staffing. The most talented and ambitious teachers, seeing that private lessons are paid several times higher than the school salary, leave the system or combine their main jobs with tutoring, redistributing their best resources to those who can afford it. Schools, meanwhile, lose their talent pool, and the quality of public education continues to decline, fueling the demand for tutors.

International experience shows that this problem is solvable with political will and a systemic approach. In Finland, where our officials previously identified the best education system, tutoring is virtually nonexistent as a widespread practice thanks to highly qualified teachers, well-designed programs, and a respectful attitude toward the profession. In South Korea, where tutoring has historically been widespread, the government has implemented a series of reforms aimed at reducing the academic burden and increasing the role of schools in exam preparation.

In China, for example, the government has been taking strict measures in recent years to restrict the commercial tutoring industry, while simultaneously investing in improving the quality of school education and the status of the teaching profession. Let's look at the details. The motivation to restrict tutoring in China was not without reason. First, parents spent enormous amounts of money on tutors—the market was estimated at $100 billion. This made raising a child very expensive, especially in large cities. The Chinese government wanted families to be able to afford more children. This is useful information for anyone working at the government level to promote the birth rate in Russia.

Secondly, the Chinese education system is extremely competitive (especially due to the Gaokao, the university entrance exam). Children often study from dawn to dusk: school plus a huge amount of homework plus tutoring. This has led to severe stress, health problems, and even suicide. The policy of limiting tutoring is aimed at giving children more time for rest, sleep, and physical development.

What should education officials do about tutors? Banning them legislatively is unlikely, and it's ineffective—they'll continue to operate as before, in the financial gray zone. Specific measures being discussed by the expert community include several areas.

The first is a significant increase in teachers' salaries to a level competitive not only with tutoring but also with other skilled professions. The second is a reform of secondary and higher pedagogical education with an emphasis on practical training, methodological preparation, and continuous professional development. The third is to finally protect teachers from the parent community, which seems to have found a kind of lightning rod in schools. This simply frightens teachers, dramatically lowering the status of the profession.

As always, the only thing left to do is to find the political will to make the bright future of schools a reality.
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  1. +6
    3 May 2026 05: 46
    My opinion may be controversial, but I see improving the quality of education as reducing class sizes from 30-40 to 15, no more than 20. Yes, this requires increasing the teaching staff. But they exist, essentially, like tutors. Of course, teachers should have a decent salary. And they are public servants who should receive free housing. Just like the military, police, and medical personnel. They all perform vital work for society.
    I see the quality of education with 15 students in my daughter's English-language school. Even with that number, all the students spoke English fluently after graduating, which they found useful when they entered various universities. But does anyone who graduated from a regular high school speak such a foreign language? Another issue is the student's choice of career path. In Soviet times, there were numerous free clubs in Pioneer houses or palaces. Students would explore the various clubs and choose what they liked. They could change clubs several times until they settled on the one they liked best. After that, perhaps not everyone chose their own path—university, technical school, or vocational specialty—rather than where their parents forced their children, thinking they knew what they were doing with the best of intentions. hi
    1. +2
      3 May 2026 07: 23
      Quote: V.
      Yes, for this we need to increase the number of teachers.

      The quality of teachers needs to be improved further. I speak as the father of an 11th-grader. Most of the teachers are just going through the motions.
      Quote: V.
      I see the quality of education with a class size of 15 students in the example of my daughter, who attended an English-language school. Even with that number, all the students spoke English fluently and well after graduating, which they found useful when they entered various universities.

      My son's history teacher is a professional, and the whole class knows history quite well, even though most people don't need it at all, and the class is ordinary, and the school isn't "historical".
      and so - conceptually, I agree with you...
      1. 0
        4 May 2026 16: 03
        History, as it stands today, is a literary art form. And a dishonest one at that. And the situation is getting worse year after year. In Soviet times, a careful reader could find in a textbook that Germany declared war on Russia in 1914. Now, however, that statement can easily earn you two dozen downvotes right here on the forum.
        Before, if you asked a teacher where Carthage or Troy was, they'd tell you they hadn't been discovered. But now they'll say, "Here they are, and try to disagree!"
        That is, it's not a science, but a kind of almost religious teaching. While a teacher once knew that there were more than 7 years before Peter the Great and knew why, now they don't, but you can ask the AI.
    2. +2
      3 May 2026 08: 41

      And these are government officials who should receive free housing, like military personnel, police officers, and medical personnel.

      In which parallel universe is this?
    3. +3
      3 May 2026 08: 57
      Quote: V.
      Teachers should have a decent salary. And they are government employees who should receive free housing.

      "Where's the money, Zin?" (C)
    4. Ash
      +1
      4 May 2026 02: 14
      That's precisely why your opinion is questionable. Back in the Soviet Union, children were already divided into different language groups at school, based on their developmental level. The same thing was observed in technical schools, and language schools were generally recruited from kindergartens all over the city.
      My wife is an elementary school teacher, and from her experience, I can only say one thing: the number of mentally retarded children is growing exponentially. And the government is only contributing to this. Teachers' salaries are no longer attractive to schools; there are a ton of deterrents. Just 20 years ago, children could be diagnosed with various conditions, which would have sent them, at best, to a special education class. Now, nothing like that is possible without parental consent, and the number of mentally retarded children in regular classes is growing. Consequently, the workload on teachers, who lack even the basic knowledge of how to deal with these special needs children, is increasing. Last year, the highest number of teachers ever in modern Russia left schools. It's not even about the meager salaries; most people leave precisely because of aggression from students and their parents, who are completely uncontrollable, and school administrations only condone it.
      And finally, a simple example that caused my wife to leave one of the schools about 15 years ago: for a C in a subject, one of the mothers openly threatened to rip my wife's private parts into a Union Jack. To avoid a scandal, the head teacher arbitrarily changed the grade without even informing the teacher. Now this head teacher is the principal, and to top it all off, a member of parliament from the most popular party. Will anything positive change in our education system with such members? I highly doubt it.
    5. +1
      8 May 2026 21: 53
      "Our people's teachers must be elevated to a level they never have reached, are not reaching, and cannot reach in bourgeois society. This is a truth that requires no proof. We must work toward this state of affairs through systematic, unwavering, and persistent efforts to elevate their spiritual development, to comprehensively prepare them for their truly lofty calling, and, most importantly, most importantly, to improve their material well-being."

      V. I. Lenin "Pages from a Diary".

      In the first decades of Soviet power, perhaps that was the case. But then...

      On April 12, 1984, the Supreme Soviet of the USSR adopted a resolution “On the main directions of reform of general education and vocational schools.”
      Some key provisions of the reform:
      — Reducing the maximum class size, especially for graduating classes.
      — Improvement of existing textbooks and creation of new ones.
      — Securing the possibility of in-depth study of individual subjects from different cycles in grades 8–11, at the students’ own discretion, for the future.
      — A combination of vocational training in grades 10–11 with mastery of common professions.
      — Increase in salaries for teachers, educators, methodologists, and industrial training specialists.
      — The launch of a program for the widespread construction of modern schools, workshops, and training and production centers, especially in new areas.

      As a student at the Nizami Tashkent State Pedagogical Institute, he hoped that this educational reform would be implemented and dreamed of becoming a school principal...
      But then 1985 came and... you know who... came to power.
  2. 0
    3 May 2026 05: 52
    Let me point out that the problem with school education did not arise overnight, but rather evolved alongside market relations following the collapse of the USSR and the acceptance by the majority of liberals in the government of the Anglo-Saxon and European model in all spheres of political, economic, and social life in the Russian Federation.
    I will not discuss the methods and techniques for eliminating the shortcomings; they are quite transparent. The Soviet education system was one of the best in the world, as proven by the numerous victories of our schoolchildren in international competitions.
    If we talk about the author’s ways to improve quality in three ways: by increasing salaries, reforming education and protecting teachers from all sorts of crazy parents, This must be approached wisely, since domestic education, like our army, pension reform, and healthcare, have experienced several shocks from optimization and modernization, but there is still a sense of incompleteness, which is a brake on improving the lives of Russians.
    1. -3
      3 May 2026 06: 39
      Quote: ZovSailor
      This must be approached wisely, since domestic education, like our army, pension reform, and healthcare, have experienced several shocks from optimization and modernization, but there is still a sense of incompleteness, which is a brake on improving the lives of Russians.

      So you simply didn’t notice a competent and consistent approach!
      Government (official) money is not spent on pensioners, education and medicine - the main consumers of the state budget!
      The best people may well not receive pensions (in many cases, their great-great-great-grandchildren don't need pensions either), and they earn enough to afford high-quality private healthcare and education in private schools. Or, well, tutors.
      As the great Chubais said (though they say he actually took out a pension of several hundred thousand), "A 20 million dollar market won't cut it! But energetic, effective managers will realize their potential!"

      While you're making (or dreaming rosy dreams?) plans for improvement, you don't understand that that's not the goal at all! The goal is to gently, through reforms, show the world true capitalism—that everything has a price, a commodity-money relationship.
      And you're talking about free medicine and education!
      1. +5
        3 May 2026 07: 25
        Quote from tsvetahaki
        But energetic, effective managers will reveal their potential!

        Here he was mistaken, it turned out that the main thing is the loyal ones, and not the best... with the best, maybe it would have been better... laughing
        1. -1
          3 May 2026 09: 04
          Quote from tsvetahaki
          But energetic, effective managers will reveal their potential!

          Here he was mistaken, it turned out that the main thing is the loyal ones, and not the best... with the best, maybe it would have been better...


          To eliminate the USSR as a competitor, the paradigm of personal prosperity as a common good was instilled in people's consciousness. Remember: "The Decembrists fought 'to eliminate the poor!'" "Everything that isn't prohibited is permitted." So, effective managers deployed the "make a quick buck and get out of here" model. The smartest and most resourceful took advantage of the easily marketable oil, gas, and metals, rather than exploiting the low-level scrap metal extraction from bankrupt enterprises.
          And the domestic policy was crowned with the slogan: "We don't need machine tools, we'll buy what we need."
  3. +4
    3 May 2026 05: 54
    A logical replacement for the corrupt system of university admissions without the Unified State Exam, which developed in the 80s in the USSR. Moreover, I'd like to point out that there's a sense that this system was "corrected" in an organized manner. At least, that's the impression one gets. When the human factor in the final exam (graduation segment) at school and university is replaced by a mathematical algorithm, THIS comes into play. A schoolchild who has conscientiously mastered the curriculum and developed the skills to study it is quite capable of mastering the Unified State Exam on their own. Even after a significant period of time, with minimal preparation (precisely because of the learning skills acquired in school). I'm the same way myself. After 40, I passed the Unified State Exam and went to correspondence courses. What should I do in this situation? Degrading the quality of teaching, shifting learning objectives to parallel channels, even to mythical "educational components," and adjusting curricula into such an unimaginable mess that students won't be able to master it even with the teacher's help, and which may be of no use in the future. In short, making tutoring "inevitable" by any means necessary, citing the "necessary complexity" of the Unified State Exam system as a whole. The situation is ideal, since "the system is to blame, not the teaching." Furthermore, relegating education to the status of a "pure service" (with all the rights of a "consumer") allows the learning process to become obscure in the absence of any means for enforcing education. In short, the good and effective idea of ​​mechanizing the assessment component of education, designed to free it from the human factor and provide, along with a genuine equalization of educational attainment, the opportunity to deepen knowledge in various fields, has gradually been transformed into a market-based tutoring system. Naturally, not all teachers are involved in this system. Most simply reap the fruits of an impossible teaching structure with floating material, fluctuating curricula, an incredible workload for teachers, a brutal attitude, and salaries resembling those of 2006. Where the money goes from the approximately 6 trillion rubles spent on education annually, with 1,3 million teachers (the main "means of production" in the system) and salaries of 28-30 thousand rubles, will remain a mystery for a long time.
  4. +4
    3 May 2026 05: 55
    That's right, and with this policy, things will only get worse. I literally just read about a ban on parallel imports for some popular computer and laptop manufacturers, supposedly to support domestic production. But they've already suggested buying radios as an alternative. And in education, it seems the electorate needs to be able to get something from point A to point B, to be able to ask questions, admire what's happening, consume all kinds of produced content, and, well, to keep their mouths watering...
    1. +6
      3 May 2026 07: 27
      Quote from turembo
      And in education, it seems, the electorate needs to be able to get something from point A to point B, not be able to ask questions, admire what's happening, consume all kinds of produced content, and not be too salivating...

      and the delivery of "ready-made material", specifically "aul" material, fits in perfectly.
  5. + 10
    3 May 2026 06: 02
    The main advantage of tutoring is that students, and especially graduate students, at good universities can earn enough to eat. Almost all of my students have tutored or are still doing so because they can't live on their stipends, their parents aren't wealthy, and there's no other job with a similar schedule—two hours on Saturday, four on Sunday, and weekday evenings. Some students at Moscow State University practically neglect their studies and recruit a crowd of schoolchildren, earning upwards of 200, which is more than any other job can provide.

    As for tutoring by children, it's not that the children aren't taught enough in class to get a perfect score. They are. It's just that when there are 20 students in a class, the student's head is in the clouds, what goes in one ear and out the other, but when there's a tutor sitting over them, they have to study. As one of my friends, who spent 10 years tutoring, used to say, almost all the students are lazy amoebas, incapable of opening a textbook and remembering what they were taught yesterday without being forced.
    But of course, all this is pointless—the Russian economy doesn't need so many people with higher education, Japan has fewer people with higher education, and 80% of professions require only 5-6 years of comprehensive schooling. The obsessive desire to get into a university is simply unhealthy nonsense, like employers demanding that anyone who shuffles papers from one place to another has a higher education, or that parents somehow believe a child with a university degree will earn more than a welder or a plumber. Yeah, right now, graduates of top universities working in their professions would be lucky if couriers earned more. lol
    1. +3
      3 May 2026 09: 58
      As one of my friends, who spent 10 years as a tutor, used to say, almost all students are lazy amoebas, incapable of opening a textbook and remembering what they were taught yesterday at school without being forced.

      That's true. Parents paying for a tutor is essentially paying for their child's laziness.
    2. 0
      3 May 2026 12: 16
      Incidentally, in Japan, the level of our college or technical school is also considered a form of higher education. My point is that the very concept of higher education is interpreted differently in different countries.
      1. 0
        3 May 2026 14: 46
        It's pretty much the same as ours, the Bologna system. 70% of our youth receive higher education, as if we were Taiwan, and everyone would end up working in high-tech factories, not as delivery drivers, loaders, salespeople, and baristas.
        1. +1
          4 May 2026 16: 21
          I don't believe your figures. But even if the 70% figure is true, that's not the problem. The problem is still the quality of education. In my city, I see traffic lights and traffic management so organized that it makes me think of a complete lack of education, not just among managers but even among all engineers.
          1. 0
            4 May 2026 16: 37
            You don't need any special education to set traffic lights; you just need a good head on your shoulders. By the age of 18, you either have one or you never will.
            Well, and education, of course, has long been divorced from life; they teach what the academic department has come up with to give more hours to the teacher.
            1. +1
              4 May 2026 17: 19
              You won't believe it, but my colleagues with a university education don't even understand the principles on which this should be done, and those with an engineering education keep quiet.
              Moreover, these mathematics graduates don't understand the principles of traffic management! They don't understand the advantages of direct travel on public transport. Curtain call!
              Although Queueing Theory and Game Theory are, as it were, disciplines at the intersection of mathematics and philosophy.
              1. +2
                4 May 2026 18: 05
                There are computer games where you literally get a flash of insight into how to organize everything correctly in just a couple of days. It's much better than the mutterings of a teacher. I remember playing Cities Skylines; it's primitive, of course, but it really shows you how to properly build interchanges and organize traffic in the city. At least there you can try different things and see the results, whereas, for example, every morning I cross a six-lane road with three pedestrian traffic lights, the last one already blinking, and I'm walking fast; slower people simply can't keep up. You can see the results on the disgruntled faces of the pedestrians there, but apparently the traffic managers don't care. laughing
                1. 0
                  4 May 2026 18: 33
                  I'm curious; when I have time, I'll look into this game. It'll be fun to compare my own views with the game's settings.
                  1. +1
                    4 May 2026 18: 48
                    Well, of course, everything is primitive there – cars don't crash if you do something stupid, pedestrians can stand at a bus stop for a week waiting for a bus, a metro can be built in a second – if you have the money. But when you've never even thought about how it all works, it's like a revelation: this is how it really is!
                    1. 0
                      4 May 2026 19: 04
                      Alas, in reality, those responsible for roads have no idea how traffic should be managed. I estimate that somewhere between 7-10% of GDP is lost due to poor traffic management and accident deaths and injuries. This is truly subversive activity; it's a second war against the people, with so many road casualties.
                      And the problem is that GOSTs are unclear and unclear, or inappropriately clear where this is completely unnecessary.
                      1. 0
                        4 May 2026 19: 28
                        Well, I have a feeling that at some level of promotion, reptilians come to you at night and inject gasoline into your brain. Because of this, a normal employee becomes a degenerate boss who does crazy things. This is the simplest explanation for why everything is done half-assed, and doing it right costs just as much, maybe even less, but no—they have to make a mess of things so everyone has to pay for it later. And supposedly normal bosses are the ones who stay out of things and don't cause any harm. And not the ones who do everything right. request
    3. 0
      5 May 2026 12: 08
      The manic desire to get into a university is some kind of unhealthy nonsense.

      Unhealthy, but understandable. Even back in the Soviet era, a university diploma ceased to be simply a specialist's certificate. It became a kind of certificate of belonging to the nobility. Because:
      so that the employee who moves papers from place to place has a higher education

      Without a higher education, the only option is a shovel. But with a metallurgy degree, for example, you can easily become a manager at Roshydromet. One was recently caught corruptly.
      I believe this nonsense is one of the main reasons for the collapse of the Union. They violated the foundation: freedom, equality, fraternity.
  6. +5
    3 May 2026 06: 06
    The bourgeois state needs feeble-minded, physically underdeveloped citizens. That's why they need such education (the Soviet one didn't suit them), such healthcare, and a love of money...
    Our government has shown a tremendous desire to create unbearable living conditions for Russians...
    1. +5
      3 May 2026 08: 58
      Quote: yuriy55
      Our government has shown a tremendous desire to create unbearable living conditions for Russians...

      People are perceived as a resource for pumping out money. Literally. They don't say it outright, but actions speak louder than words. The pump works relentlessly: at one end, life is squeezed—taxes, levies, rising prices; at the other, everything is multiplying: the super-rich are multiplying, the oligarchs' billions are growing by leaps and bounds. And this is happening in difficult times, in the midst of war.
  7. +4
    3 May 2026 06: 23
    Unfortunately, there is no universal solution in this situation.
    There is only one way out: after receiving a free higher education, a young specialist works it off at school.
    To avoid any offence, this should apply to all university profiles.
    Regarding apartments, cars, and other perks. They exist today, but you have to go to the countryside, to the village...
    Regarding the "additional workload," officials from the "Ministry of Education" are creating it themselves. Why a handwritten diary? If there's an electronic one? Although, in my opinion, the latter is completely unnecessary. A traditional one fosters positive character traits in a child. An electronic one is only necessary for communication with parents. Incidentally, it's not maintained in a timely manner. More accurately, it's kept for show.
    Well, somewhere like that.
    1. +4
      3 May 2026 07: 32
      Quote: Kote pane Kohanka
      There is only one way out: after receiving a free higher education, a young specialist works it off at school.

      In our city, there are currently between 10 and 0 "free" spots available!!! in a class of 30, and these spots will clearly be filled by those with benefits, not straight-A students. So higher education is practically paid for for 90% of the Russian population...
    2. +3
      3 May 2026 08: 46
      Vladislav,
      good morning,
      The idea that "upon receiving a free higher education, a young specialist works it off at school" is from the realm of serfdom.
      And here the example of the USSR is irrelevant. There was a universal distribution system; if you didn't know which factory you'd end up working in or whether you'd return to your own school as a teacher, you were stuck.
      Nowadays, education, whether paid (for the vast majority) or free (for the minority), is obtained in order to earn money: here and now, and not to go to the "village".
      You don't have to look far for examples here, you can see for yourself...there aren't that many volunteers for free.
      Under the current system, no one will go to the "village", and if they do, they won't be of any use there.
      Currently, according to the Ministry of Education, one in four schools lacks a physics teacher. In fact, the number is probably higher, because I'm listing anyone who isn't specifically assigned as a "physics teacher," even the gym teacher, and both words sound similar, beginning with an "f."
      So that the director could report to the higher-ups that the staff is full, otherwise: no bonus, for starters...
      Let me repeat: the issue here is not a question of absurdly copying the actions of a highly developed civilization in our country, but of systemic changes in all education, taking into account the economic realities of raw material capitalism and the paths of its development (if such are visible on the horizon).
      In short, when the entire pipe has rotted, you can't save it by taping the leaking section. Although the leak may stop for a while, that's all.
      hi
      1. 0
        3 May 2026 12: 08
        In short, when the entire pipe is rotten, you can’t save it by wrapping the leaking section with tape.

        Good day Edward!
        Unfortunately, this is everywhere. In fact, everyone is engaged in an imitation of vigorous activity, and not actually working.
        Redistribution remains in law enforcement universities, and unfortunately, the enrollment is nominal. No one wants to get into bondage. For example, at the Ministry of Internal Affairs, if you graduate full-time, you're required to work for five years or reimburse the state for tuition.
        1. +1
          3 May 2026 12: 34
          + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
          Yours!
      2. +1
        3 May 2026 12: 20
        Eduard, you should know that state universities generally have more publicly funded students than fee-paying students. Go to the websites of any university, both prestigious and less so. Look at the admissions targets. I know kids from the provinces who are studying at Moscow State University and the Higher School of Economics on a state-funded basis. A colleague's son studied at MGIMO on a state-funded basis.
        1. +1
          3 May 2026 12: 28
          Sergey,
          Good afternoon, I even teach...there is no difference in knowledge.
          I looked at the official data - 52% paid.
          But, in my opinion, the cooler the university, the less free it is.
          Moreover, today it’s free, tomorrow it’s paid – it’s all over the place.
          Of course, students try, but the rules for them are constantly becoming stricter.
          1. +1
            3 May 2026 15: 35
            There are also transitions from paid to unpaid programs. The majority of fee-paying students are in the social sciences and humanities. Lawyers, economists, psychologists, sociologists, and so on. Many study in full-time, part-time (evening), and distance learning formats, although these formats have been significantly reduced recently. For medical professionals, much depends on the program's focus. For example, the vast majority of future dentists are fee-paying students. Although, as they say, there are plenty of people with law degrees, there are not enough good lawyers.
            1. +1
              3 May 2026 15: 43
              Although, as they say, there are a lot of people with a law degree, there is a shortage of good lawyers.

              And when they persistently “built” the “rule of law” laughing
    3. +3
      3 May 2026 11: 28
      Quote: Kote pane Kohanka
      There is only one way out: after receiving a free higher education, a young specialist works it off at school.

      Mandatory? That's how it was in the USSR. And not always! If we do things like the USSR, then maybe we should bring back socialism? I wouldn't be against it.

      Quote: Kote pane Kohanka
      Unfortunately, there is no universal solution in this situation.

      Yes. There's a very universal and effective solution. Start paying teachers (and doctors too!). Do we have a market economy now, or what? In a market, if there's a shortage of something, prices are immediately raised and the shortage is solved. Why isn't this happening with teachers? Because our richest officials in the world simply don't want to pay. They want to skimp on the people's education. There's no problem here. It's artificial.
    4. +1
      3 May 2026 14: 48
      Quote: Kote pane Kohanka
      When receiving a free higher education, a young specialist works it off at school

      Well, someone definitely won't mind working when you're 24 and surrounded by schoolgirls. feel
      1. -1
        4 May 2026 16: 33
        You, and the person you're responding to, have forgotten the most important thing. The Soviet system promised free housing to young professionals for five years. It didn't always fulfill this promise, and it didn't apply to everyone, but at least it was a practice.
        Without this, other effective methods must be offered, such as repayment of educational loans.
  8. +2
    3 May 2026 06: 32
    Its main goal is to graduate 9th or 11th graders with a basic set of competencies.

    A student receives a basic set of competencies by the 4th grade.
    By this time, he is already a fully qualified consumer in terms of knowledge.
    1. 0
      4 May 2026 16: 35
      No, they don't. At least they need skills from labor lessons and the curriculum, like they used to in high school, but that's later.
  9. +3
    3 May 2026 07: 22
    Yes, this guy Savateev is truly doing a great job, trying for years to reach the top to save school education, so to speak. So far, he's reached Minister Kravtsov, but as Savateev himself says, we need to go even higher, since the Ministry of Education won't solve much, because the problems are also being created by digitalization enthusiasts... It's understandable, considering the huge sums being allocated to all this AI stuff.
    1. +4
      3 May 2026 08: 28
      Yes, this comrade Savateev is really doing a great job,

      I really like his position, and I like his criticism too.
      But like all mathematicians (i.e. people who deal with abstract concepts) he is a hopeless muddlehead in the real world.
      He has nothing coherent to offer. His idea of ​​returning to Stalin-style education is mind-bogglingly naive.
      1. +4
        3 May 2026 08: 57
        Be that as it may, he is at least trying to do something, unlike many chatterboxes who are waiting for a revolution and the arrival of the next Lenin...
        1. +2
          3 May 2026 09: 08
          From a management perspective, unfortunately, he is "beating up the froth," and "about Stalin's education" is completely off the mark.
          In management, revolution is sometimes the only way to save a company, an organization, and even a country. I am writing about my management experience.
          "Doing something" is what our officials do - "doing something" is not about real management.
          P.S. And about Lenin, if he hadn’t come... hi Russia would have been smaller than today's Russian Federation already in 1918.
      2. 0
        4 May 2026 16: 41
        What is so difficult and impossible about returning to education as it was under Stalin?
        The methods and textbooks of those times are well known. I personally used a solution book (GDZ, II) from the 50s, which was available at second-hand bookshops.
        1. 0
          4 May 2026 18: 01
          What is so difficult and impossible about returning to education as it was under Stalin?

          Seriously, no jokes...
          1. Education during Stalin’s period corresponded to its time;
          2. This was the stage when the country was transforming from an agrarian and semi-wild one into an industrial one, i.e. it was simultaneously going through a "cultural" and several industrial revolutions that had been missed earlier.
          3. The goal is to protect the country from the impending war.
          4. The country was semi-literate (more than half of the citizens) and it was necessary to somehow raise the level of knowledge to the level of potential opponents, where universal primary education had already been achieved in the mid-19th century.
          4. If we speak in the language of modern management, it is a start-up period: hence such a pace of development.
          5. Education in the subsequent periods of the USSR became more modern and adequate to the requirements of the country's development and economic component...until perestroika...
          Because we are witnessing historical regression, using textbooks from Stalin or Brezhnev won't help much...
          The system above the details
          1. 0
            4 May 2026 18: 24
            The points.
            1. Times are always the same, certainly in the field of education.
            2. What does the transition from agrarian to industrial have to do with this? We're talking about school and higher education as goals. Educational programs and tutoring are different things.
            3. The goal of securing the country was always there. Russia was constantly attacked, with only brief pauses. Stalin, in fact, experienced the longest period of virtually war-free times, from 1922 to 1941.
            4. Semi-literacy and repetitiveness are from different areas, they do not intersect.
            5. The country's greatest achievements were based on Stalinist and even Tsarist education.
            This is the creation of a nuclear bomb and space flights.
            Just a little later, this terrible horror happened, when they stopped making arches for passage in houses and began to make roads purely primitive, without roundabouts and places to turn around.
            I thought you had something substantive, like maybe your teaching methods weren't preserved, or your diaries and notes weren't accessible. But you... Oh, you bastard...
  10. +5
    3 May 2026 07: 58
    Otherwise, you won't get good Unified State Exam scores, and that won't get you into a prestigious university. Let's be clear: this isn't always and everywhere, but it has happened.
    It's immediately obvious the author is out of touch. It's an economics department. It's a city with a population of over a million. It's the region's main university. There are 450 first-year spots in the department. Of those, 435 are fee-paying. The remaining 15 are free for children of those who fought in the war, for fraternal republics, for the disabled, and for gold medalists. There's no need to even mention for-profit universities; they only charge a fee. Therefore, no Unified State Exam will help anyone get into a prestigious program. Only money.
    1. -4
      3 May 2026 09: 19
      I wonder what specialty these 450 are for? If they're for economics, law, and management, then you're right. The country doesn't need specialists in these fields in the numbers that universities currently have. Consequently, even commercial placements in these fields at universities have been limited. Meanwhile, the number of state-funded places for engineering programs is increasing. And it's now quite possible to enroll in them with at least a satisfactory score on the Unified State Exam.
      1. +6
        3 May 2026 09: 55
        Quote: Vik_Vik
        I wonder what specialty these 450 are for? If they're for economics, law, and management, then you're right. The country doesn't need specialists in these fields in the numbers that universities currently have. Consequently, even commercial placements in these fields at universities have been limited. Meanwhile, the number of state-funded places for engineering programs is increasing. And it's now quite possible to enroll in them with at least a satisfactory score on the Unified State Exam.

        There are few budget places for any specialty, but for legal economists there are 1-3 per group, for engineering 5-7 per group of 30... and getting in there even with excellent scores - taking into account those eligible for benefits - is almost impossible, not to mention "somewhat satisfactory" ones... Don't push theory from TV, my son is applying in the summer, I studied it in detail... The situation is better in Moscow, but people from all over the Russian Federation want to go there (including those eligible for benefits), so in the end, the opportunities are not better...
        1. 0
          4 May 2026 14: 07
          There are few budget places in all specialties, but for legal economists there are 1-3 per group, and for engineering 5-7 per group of 30.

          I understand your point, your daughter applied last year. But don't exaggerate, for example, to MAI for engineering (she's not the only one at your university). request ) It was quite competitive. 205-220 points. Depending on the specialty. What, he won't get it? You can apply to five universities, and I think each one offers five tracks.
          And this is just an example. Look at similar programs; you can even transfer later up to and including the second year.
          The main thing there is to get a foothold, otherwise the children and wives of SVOshniks will drop out completely in the 1st or 2nd year.
          This is of course a separate story. bully
          1. +1
            4 May 2026 19: 41
            Quote: Arnok
            I understand your point. Your daughter applied last year. But don't exaggerate. At MAI, for example, the engineering majors (which aren't the only ones at your university) were quite competitive. 205-220 points.

            I wrote exactly these figures about Stavropol, we have normal universities, state ones and not branches - one, SKFU... I already wrote about Moscow, that it is better there, BUT.. People from all over the country flock there and there are basically 30 places in groups.. and it is difficult to pass.. Those with benefits - they beat any scores, although MAI was surprising - it really has a lot of budget - not like in the south (Stavropol, Krasnodar, Rostov) and he doesn't want to go to Moscow.. He wants to go to St. Petersburg.. And preferably also archeology... But in general, the advice is useful - thank you.. The minus is not mine hi
            1. +1
              5 May 2026 10: 05
              He wants to go to St. Petersburg... and preferably also to study archeology...

              Good luck to you and your child! Don't forget to spread your applications among as many different universities as possible. This can be done through Gosuslugi.
              And before I forget, here's some advice: try going to open days and ask your boyfriend out too. They explain administrative procedures, applications, and so on very well.
              It really helps me gather my thoughts. You can apply to your nearest university. Just for information, the procedures are the same everywhere.
              1. 0
                5 May 2026 13: 14
                Quote: Arnok
                Good luck to you and your child! Don't forget to spread your applications among as many different universities as possible. This can be done through Gosuslugi.
                And before I forget, here's some advice: try going to open days and ask your boyfriend out too. They explain administrative procedures, applications, and so on very well.
                It really helps me gather my thoughts. You can apply to your nearest university. Just for information, the procedures are the same everywhere.

                thanks a lot hi
      2. +1
        3 May 2026 22: 44
        I wonder what specialty these 450 are for? If it's for economists, lawyers, and managers, then everything is correct.

        What makes you think they're not needed? Have you looked at the job market lately?
        1. 0
          4 May 2026 19: 44
          Quote: Arzt
          What makes you think they're not needed? Have you looked at the job market lately?

          By the way, you're right, but we need lawyers, not people with law degrees who don't know basic things... I've seen enough of those... laughing
          1. 0
            5 May 2026 08: 44
            By the way, you're right, but we need lawyers, not people with law degrees who don't know basic things... I've seen enough of them... laughing

            It's like that everywhere. With experience, everything comes with experience... wink laughing
            1. 0
              5 May 2026 09: 51
              Quote: Arzt
              It's like that everywhere. With experience, everything comes with experience...

              Well, not exactly about that, but that too... but when a graduate doesn't know the difference between a GPC and a GK, it's like not knowing the difference between a capacitor and a resistor... well, that's the kind of worker he is. laughing
  11. 0
    3 May 2026 08: 41
    There used to be no tutors. Education was absolutely free and accessible to everyone. This was especially true for higher education. The USSR occupied a leading position in the world in terms of education. The Soviet education model was the benchmark for fundamental mass education. The same cannot be said about the Russian Federation. But in the Russian Federation, you have to pay for everything, starting in elementary school. It's impossible to pass the Unified State Exam without tutors. Literally every parent says so. And everyone who wants to go to university pays money to numerous tutors.
    1. +4
      3 May 2026 09: 14
      Quote: Stas157
      There were no tutors before.


      There were. I myself worked part-time as a tutor, helped with university admissions, helped with dissertations, and even more... although that was during the perestroika era.
      1. -2
        3 May 2026 10: 58
        Quote: Illanatol
        Were

        I think if the USSR had even one tutor for the entire country, people like you would also be shouting, "There were tutors in the USSR too!" You don't even consider the issue of quantity, ratio, and proportion?
        1. +2
          3 May 2026 13: 09
          What does "if" mean? I used to do it myself, and I didn't think it was anything bad. So why bother yelling? Who knows how people worked and worked odd jobs in the USSR. It's perfectly honest work, not profiteering.
    2. +3
      3 May 2026 09: 56
      In the USSR, there were numerous preparatory courses at technical schools and universities. These were essentially tutoring, and most importantly, preparatory courses had separate exams that counted toward admission.
      How was it? I remember taking a dictation exam as part of my technical training course. The teacher who read the text to us (she was also our instructor) read it slowly, emphasizing the punctuation with her voice.
    3. +5
      3 May 2026 09: 57
      Quote: Stas157
      There were no tutors before.

      Well, there's no need to overload this... It was better in the USSR, but there were plenty of tutors there too...
      1. -2
        3 May 2026 10: 55
        Quote: Level 2 Advisor
        there were plenty of tutors there too

        I haven't seen it. I received my secondary and higher education in the USSR completely free of charge and without tutors. And you think there's no difference between what was and what is now? Oh, these generalizers!
    4. 0
      3 May 2026 14: 53
      Tutors are needed because of competition. Not everyone will get in, there are limited spots, and everyone goes to school, so they need some kind of bonus to get ahead. Now, thanks to the internet, tutors have become much more comfortable; no one needs to travel anywhere. A student from Moscow, sitting in the university cafeteria with her cell phone, can teach a student from the Belgorod region.
      1. 0
        3 May 2026 15: 39
        Quote from alexoff
        Now, thanks to the Internet, it has become much easier for tutors

        My son prepared for the Unified State Exam with a tutor from another city, online. And she was better than the tutors who came to our home.
  12. +4
    3 May 2026 08: 46
    The current authorities don't need to educate the population.
    Gref told the story.
  13. +3
    3 May 2026 08: 49
    Tutoring has existed since the tsarist era. Don't touch it.
  14. +2
    3 May 2026 08: 52
    A small slogan: Young people! Apply to the Ministry of Defense's universities!
    1. ANB
      0
      3 May 2026 10: 44
      Young people! Apply to the Ministry of Defense's universities!

      The competition there is higher than in many civilian universities.
    2. 0
      4 May 2026 16: 47
      There weren't many of them before. In our city, everything closed.
  15. -5
    3 May 2026 09: 21
    Quote: Kote pane Kohanka
    There is only one way out: after receiving a free higher education, a young specialist works it off at school.


    Why? Simply put, the education of this young person should be covered by the specialized company with which this future specialist will sign a long-term contract.
    Or let this person pay for his own education. No money? Let him take out a loan, even a preferential one if the state is interested.
    Even now, after graduating from universities, less than 50% of graduates work in their field.
    If there are not enough highly skilled jobs, then there is no need for so many students.
    1. +7
      3 May 2026 10: 01
      Quote: Illanatol
      If there are not enough highly skilled jobs, then there is no need for so many students.

      And at the same time, ban asking about a diploma as a selection criterion when applying for a job (where it seems a higher education degree is not required)? laughing
      1. 0
        3 May 2026 13: 18
        There's no need to ban anything. But if a diploma isn't required for a given job, there's no point in asking. A diploma alone isn't enough to prove a person is truly a good specialist. Especially considering how many and what kinds of universities have emerged in the post-Soviet period.
        So it turns out that someone with a university degree works as a courier, and in some places, supposed specialists with outright fake degrees are employed. Either they were tricked into enrolling in a fee-paying department, or dad simply bought the degree, or the university is on par with a Soviet technical school.
        1. +1
          3 May 2026 14: 55
          Quote: Illanatol
          But if a diploma is not required for this job, then there is no point in asking.

          but they will definitely ask, and then they will say - forget everything you were taught at university, in life everything is completely different wassat
          1. 0
            4 May 2026 08: 20
            In short, there is no point again, just a simple finger-twiddling on the part of the employer.
  16. 0
    3 May 2026 09: 52
    The most important thing in education is motivation!!
    I realized back in school that if you're doing poorly academically, there are three reasons:
    1. No desire.
    2. No abilities.
    3. Combination 1 and 2.
    From my own experience as a "tutor." We had a friend in our class, Sasha, so to speak. He was a skier, an athlete, and I think he'd made it to Candidate Master of Sports by the 8th grade, but that's not certain. His math skills were... terrible.
    So, they assigned me to him. He wanted to study, but I wasn't the one motivating him. Result: 1986, 8th grade, exams. Written algebra. He got a C, and an honestly earned one at that. So, he was proud of it!
    Actually, I was once jokingly offered the chance to become a tutor, but I immediately responded, "I'll ruin my career as a tutor with one question. Who's the motivation? If it's me, then I'm too kind. Instead, hire some corporal and buy him a cane. And tell him that if he breaks it on a child, no big deal, you'll buy him a new one. But if the child doesn't show the desired results, you (the tutor) will be left without candy. If it's the parents who are the motivation, then with the money you pay me, you'd be better off finding good courses online, taught by a professional teacher."
  17. +2
    3 May 2026 10: 20
    Parents pay tutors an amount equivalent to a substantial bonus for each teacher, but this money does not flow into the public education system, does not contribute to improving the material resources of schools, does not finance the retraining of teachers, and does not modernize curricula.
    And that's a good thing, otherwise this money would have gone to the bureaucrats responsible for the current state of affairs and been squandered. But this way, at least the teachers are definitely getting it.
  18. +1
    3 May 2026 10: 45
    And we also have inclusive education, yeah. So, I sympathize with today's teachers.
  19. +2
    3 May 2026 10: 47
    As long as there is such a Minister of Education there will be no sense!
  20. +3
    3 May 2026 10: 49
    That's nothing.
    At my school there simply weren't any teachers for a number of subjects.

    because everyone went into business.

    Alas. Nothing can be changed. How much does a teacher earn now, and, for example, a City Education Department official? Or a principal appointed from among the officials?
  21. 0
    3 May 2026 11: 53
    Today's school, which originated in the USSR and required formal secondary education, is ill-suited to today's conditions. For many professions, the knowledge acquired in high school is practically irrelevant. School should combine two approaches: 1. Provide the necessary theoretical minimum. 2. Provide practical competencies, preparing for practical life. High school is not needed for this. Who can say they fully benefited from high school chemistry if they are not a university student with a chemistry specialization? Then why study it (or rather, "pass it")? Preparation for university studies should be placed on a separate level. The most logical approach is to use the Chinese experience, with its division of schools into stages with strict rules for progression from stage to stage. If your level is such that you can push a wheelbarrow on a construction site, then there's no need for you to learn the basics of mathematical analysis and derivatives and integrals. With the Chinese approach, a child has a constant incentive to learn; it shouldn't be forced upon them. And, of course, we need to remove as much of the educational function from the school as possible—that's the parents' job. If you misbehave at school, violate discipline, or are disturbing others' learning, you'll be suspended for a week. You'll have to stay with your parents and study independently—there won't be any discounts on the exam.
    1. 0
      4 May 2026 17: 00
      I haven't worked in chemistry, but knowledge of chemistry is essential throughout life. The only thing is that the scope and content of knowledge need to be adjusted. Some of the inorganic chemistry knowledge in the school curriculum was outdated back in the 80s, and a good half, if not 70%, of the organic chemistry from those days is completely unnecessary. Modern metallurgy and alloys need to be added, and organic chemistry needs to be supplemented with knowledge of various types of plastics and their properties.
      From experience: 8 out of 10 professionals not only don't understand the difference between outdoor cables, but don't even know that there are different types of cable and conduit for outdoor and indoor installations.
  22. 0
    3 May 2026 12: 49
    It's a system. It won't work. They need to make teachers' salaries 100-150k, compared to 250k in Moscow, while also removing some responsibilities, which means raising the administration's salaries even more and shifting responsibilities to them (they'll be very unhappy and angry). Traders will also take notice and drive up prices. It'll be a vicious cycle of money. The outlook for the administration's treatment of teachers and the professionalism of those who rush in after the long ruble is also unfavorable. If we freeze market prices and create a truly independent teachers' union, then there are options.
    But this is a different system.
    1. +1
      4 May 2026 17: 39
      Not quite so. The main problem for those with a higher education is the lack of opportunities for self-realization.
      What does a worker do when they need extra money? They post an ad on Avito or find a part-time job somewhere.
      A person with a higher education cannot do this; his self-realization in the labor market is seriously complicated.
      They created a professional network called LinkedIn abroad. But here, as soon as I signed up, it was shut down without offering an alternative. And, if I remember correctly, it was the first to be shut down.
      On the contrary, we are introducing completely outrageous professional restrictions, such as professional standards where they are not needed, or dismissal without departmental education as grounds.
      1. 0
        4 May 2026 20: 08
        I agree, self-realization is crucial. And many of us don't work where we'd like because of the market. For me, working part-time in the big city is more profitable. For example, as a teacher of subjects unrelated to the Unified State Exam, Basic State Exam, and other such nonsense, I'm not in great demand as a tutor. As for other degrees, yes, it's even frightening that my ancient, half-forgotten skills are in demand. I've begun to notice that the decline has already affected me, too, because I'm slacking off on a general level.
        Nobody wants anything - just a "salute" and "bucks." And, you know, you get used to it. And that's how it is. It's the system.
  23. +1
    3 May 2026 13: 58
    This isn't a reflection of shortcomings—it's, in my view, a well-thought-out system. We're moving (running) toward a class-based, caste-based society. Through education, its quality and accessibility, we can form classes (castes), which is what's happening now. This also applies to healthcare and housing affordability.
  24. 0
    3 May 2026 15: 53
    System problem:
    The school has been transformed into a social service for boarding pets.

    Parents are waging a systematic struggle to reduce the intellectual burden on their children, abdicating their responsibilities and demanding that their rights be respected.

    Demanding teachers are driven out of schools.

    Twos and threes are no longer acceptable. If a teacher doesn't want to be fired by parents, they won't even give a C.

    Objective control methods show a constant decline in academic performance.

    During the Unified State Exam, many schoolchildren cannot tell time using a clock with hands.

    The principle of inclusion kills motivation. Inclusion was conceived as a flower, but in reality, it's been reduced to a mere word. There are no wheelchair-bound students in school, and social degenerates can't even be removed from class from childhood.
    The group learning workflow is killed.

    Gaming addiction has become widespread.

    Most parents have succeeded in getting urine drug testing for high school students cancelled.

    The curriculum is moving towards simplification.

    Ridiculous attempts at social animation turn the atmosphere into "a holiday in a madhouse during a flood."

    Children cannot learn a quatrain for the holiday.

    Children cannot sing a holiday song themselves.

    Music and drawing lessons have become a form of detention, as there is no incentive to earn grades.

    Parents are seeking a ban on giving homework assignments that require "memorization."

    The hours for second foreign languages ​​are constantly being cut. Parents are pushing for the complete abolition of the second foreign language.

    We have a victory of militant feeblemindedness consolidated in the second generation.

    Over the past 15 years, there have been no complaints about the curriculum being simplified. However, there have been a flurry of complaints about the curriculum being too difficult.

    Physical education has become a mere stroll. Students can't do a forward somersault, and working with gymnastics equipment is out of the question.

    Schools are overcrowded, and many recreation areas have been converted into classrooms.

    Additional free education is killed.


    But the tutors are to blame, of course.
  25. 0
    3 May 2026 17: 24
    So Medvedev told teachers that if they want to earn money, they should tutor instead of waiting for a pay raise from the state. (The interpretation is arbitrary, but the gist is the same.) And everyone got him right. My kids simply don't have math or physics at school! This isn't a village, it's the capital of Crimea. And no one wants to do anything! Special thanks to Medvedev for the instructions on how teachers can make money!
  26. -1
    3 May 2026 18: 31
    Teachers and doctors.
    Here they are, the brakes on the Russian economy.
    Everyone was given computers, many were given smartphones. Work less and enjoy the progress.
    Why does the therapist, when seeing me, enter data into the computer, but the nurse writes down what is dictated and entered into the computer with a pen in a regular medical record?!
    Why, if the specialist I need works at another clinic, the first thing I do is create a medical record? There are three clinics in the city. Three paper records. Three receptionists. And I'm alone. And everyone enters everything into the computer. The data from which I receive after a written, paper record of incoming applications, addressed to the head physician. In the form of a printed copy.

    Mishustin, in my personal opinion, has brought about a small revolution at the Federal Tax Service. And Yegorov continues to do so. Yes, not everyone likes it. Even those who aren't trying to avoid taxes but rather don't know how to file their tax returns correctly.
    Just imagine that VV has to write his message to the Federal Assembly in his own hand, on paper, with a fountain pen.
    Otherwise, the Federal Assembly will not listen to him.
    Or the fast payment system will start working like this... You quickly write down on paper that you want to quickly transfer money from your such-and-such account to another person's such-and-such account, quickly bring the paper letter to the bank, the bank quickly checks your passport, checks that your handwriting matches the one you had 10 years ago, and instantly sends the money to the account you specified.
    The recipient quickly shows up at their bank after receiving the paper letter, identifies themselves by presenting a passport and a handwriting sample provided 12 years ago, and becomes the owner of the 400 rubles the husband sent his wife to take their child to the clinic by taxi.
  27. -1
    3 May 2026 18: 33
    Quote: dnepropetrovsk
    So Medvedev told teachers that if they want to earn money, they should tutor instead of waiting for a pay raise from the state. (The interpretation is arbitrary, but the gist is the same.) And everyone got him right. My kids simply don't have math or physics at school! This isn't a village, it's the capital of Crimea. And no one wants to do anything! Special thanks to Medvedev for the instructions on how teachers can make money!


    This is already such a fairytale character. "Medvedev at school"
  28. 0
    3 May 2026 18: 36
    Quote: Max1995
    That's nothing.
    At my school there simply weren't any teachers for a number of subjects.

    because everyone went into business.

    Alas. Nothing can be changed. How much does a teacher earn now, and, for example, a City Education Department official? Or a principal appointed from among the officials?


    A normal manager, for example Fedorov, who is an eye specialist, himself determined a salary range of 10.
    And did a normal Security Council employee determine some kind of fork?
  29. 0
    3 May 2026 23: 27
    I graduated from high school in 1998, then entered university without tutors, thanks to the old-school teachers who imparted knowledge. The history teacher, when she came to our class for the first time, warned us that she would be teaching a university course in history (even though she herself had improved her qualifications at university) and that we would be "tormented" with notes... But according to these school notes, neither I nor my sister (according to my scribbling) had any problems at university and knew 90% of the syllabus in advance... Yes, the workload was a departure from the "program," but in the future it relieved more... Something like that, and whoever wants to learn will learn and will interest the teacher in imparting knowledge. Gaining knowledge is a dialogue between the one who desires it and the one who gives it.
  30. 0
    4 May 2026 04: 34
    Everything is moving towards the fact that the constitutionally promised benefits will gradually become paid for.
    How the state has removed municipalities from accountability to residents in the housing and utilities sector, while collecting taxes from management companies and homeowners' associations. It's convenient to collect taxes without being held accountable and distribute them at its own discretion, breeding corruption and irresponsibility.
  31. 0
    4 May 2026 08: 31
    Our citizens understand football best, but the coaches and players are all idiots. In politics, all the politicians are simply clueless. In war, everyone quotes some Chinese guy. And in education, too! I won't even mention medicine, where there are EVERYONE. Why do we need doctors when the internet is full of advice... and then they're all swarmed to the cemetery? I took the time to read all the comments... Well, in the USSR, there were tutors, and they were passed down by word of mouth, without widespread publicity. Not as many as now, but they existed. I've long believed that there should be fewer universities than there are now, and they should be top-tier educational institutions that produce the necessary specialists. The prestige of higher education has plummeted, with the number of so-called commercial universities graduating who-knows-who, just for the sake of a diploma. As for children... several generations are growing up with clip-based thinking, a memory like a fish - three seconds - hello again. What's easier than swiping your finger across the screen and laughing at a video for a few seconds without memorizing it, what's easier than having an AI give you an essay, just rewrite it... As for salaries... oh, that's a tricky thing, the difference for the same job is several times... in Moscow, a teacher's salary and in the Moscow region, cross the Moscow Ring Road... and hello... My wife's brother, a physical education and life safety teacher, is the class leader in a rural 9-year school in one of the Black Earth Regions *80 thousand... quite for a village... Well, and the parents... yeah... they know perfectly well about rights, but for some reason they forget about responsibilities...
  32. 0
    4 May 2026 14: 05
    I know that tutoring is in high demand in Germany, but I can't say (or probably say) anything bad about the education system there; it's considered ideal, one of the benchmarks in the world.
  33. 0
    7 May 2026 16: 54
    The current government isn't about the state. It's obvious that children are the country's future. The biggest investment should be in children. Fees for all clubs and activities are symbolic, just for record-keeping. At least summer vacations are symbolic, like in the USSR. And the main thing is participation; no need for supermen, leaders, and the like.