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Psychology at High School in Late Imperial Russia (1881–1917)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
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Secondary education is one key area in which academic disciplines build their identity and legitimacy in the public realm. The public image of a science is, of course, constructed by a variety of means and on different platforms, including the generalist media and the lively industry of scientific popularization. However, the school occupies a unique role in representations of science because of its greater degree of formal continuity with the academic environment. The successful institutionalization and maintenance of any discipline depends on it taking root, in some form at least, in the system of public instruction. Because education both fosters and depends on disciplinary reproduction, the concrete shape that school subjects take is of great consequence to the long-term development of related sciences.
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References
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95 Zhdan, A. N., “Moskovskoe psikhologicheskoe obshchestvo (1885–1922).” VP no. 4 (1995): 82–92, 87.Google Scholar
96 Blonskii, P. P., Rezul'taty ankety po voprosu o postanovke prepodavaniia psikhologii v srednei shkole (Moscow, 1910).Google Scholar
97 See Feoktistov, , “Psikhologicheskii khlam',” 163.Google Scholar
98 Miloradovich, , “Psikhologiia v srednei shkole,” 1–3.Google Scholar
99 Solov'ev, , “Kritib i bibliografiia,” 5.Google Scholar
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101 On what follows see Afanas'ev, , “Vopros o psikhologii v srednei shkole,” 30–42.Google Scholar
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