Page:Education and Art in Soviet Russia (1919).djvu/36

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DOCUMENT No. 8

Regulation Concerning Admission to a Higher School
(University) of the Russian Socialist Federative
Soviet Republic

1. Every person, regardless of citizenship and sex, reaching the age of 16, can be admitted as a member of the student body to any of the higher institutions of learning without submitting a diploma or testimonial papers attesting graduation from a secondary or other school.

2. It is forbidden to demand from persons seeking entrance any certificates whatsoever, except their identification papers.

3. All school institutions of the Republic, in conformity with the decree on joint instruction, dated May 27, 1918, are thrown open to all, regardless of sex. All persons responsible for violating this decree shall be tried by the Revolutionary Tribunal.

4. Admissions of students (freshmen for the 1918–1919 course) already made on the basis of either school certificates or competitive examinations, are hereby declared void. New entrance conditions in accordance with the requirements of the general provision on the higher schools of the Republic, now in course of preparation, shall be published not later than September 1, 1918.

5. Tuition fees in higher educational institutions of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic are henceforth abolished. Tuition fees already paid for the first half of the academic year 1918–1919 shall be refunded accordingly.

Chairman of the Soviet of People's Commissaires, V. Ulianov (Lenin)

Acting People's Commissaire of Education, Pokrovsky,

Chief Clerk of the Soviet of People's Commissaires, V. Bonch-Bruevich,

Secretary of the Soviet, N. Gorbunov.

The teaching body in Russia now holds frequent conventions and congresses, and expresses itself freely on the conduct of the schools, a condition of affairs that will arouse the envy of their American colleagues. And their deliberations. consequently show a depth of appreciation of the problems set before them such as is rarely found among American teachers. Document No. 9 shows how idealistic and yet how profoundly practical are the ambitions of the Russian school teachers. This document is in the form of a resolution passed at a congress of teachers in Moscow, on June 6, 1918.

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