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Russian Higher Education
Russia's
higher education system started with the foundation of the universities in
Moscow and St. Petersburg in the middle of the 18th century. The system was
constructed similar to that of Germany. In Soviet times, every person in Russia
compulsorily attained a secondary education. The pursuit of higher education
was, and still is, considered to be a very prestigious honor. More than 50% of
Russians hold a degree.
Due in great part to the demands of international
educational organizations, the Russian system of education has begun to change
over the past four to five years. Universities began transitioning to a system
similar to that of Britain and the USA: 4 years for the Bachelor's degree and 2
years for a Master's degree. Russian universities are still in the midst of
change; some of them offer the new system and others are still functioning
according to the prior 5-year system, particularly in programs such as law.

Lucas Stratton '03 with his Academic Supervisor, Dickinson-in-Moscow students in their
poet Vladimir Mikushevich, professor at RSUH. phonetics lesson.
The
academic year lasts from Sept 1 to mid June everywhere, with long summer
vacations from July 1 to Aug 31. The duration of a single class period is
usually an hour and a half, the equivalent of two academic hours. The
"academic hour" in Russia is generally 45 minutes, as opposed to 50
in U.S. In a large city university, such as RSUH, the atmosphere is quite
different from the cozy environment of Dickinson College. The university does
not provide a large variety of extracurricular activities – many students who
were born in Moscow and live mostly with their families, not in dorms, find extra
activities and friends outside of campus life.
Read how our students describe their classroom experience:
"There were two other students from the Dickinson program
in my class, another American, a Korean, and some French people. The thing that
made me most nervous at first was the fact that I'd be learning Russian from
professors who would also be teaching us in Russian. That's a lot of Russian! I
was taking four classes taught in Russian: grammar, modern text (basically just
reading and learning vocab through reading), phonetics, and a class about
Russian mass media. For these classes all the foreign students were split up
according to their Russian level. I liked all my professors, some more than
others. The phonetics professor was the most energetic. The most difficult
class was probably Mass Media, which coincidentally also was featured the most
serious professor. She informed us that she is a "conservative, structured
person" and that she won't be smiling or act all cheerful in class because
we were talking about serious topics," Kara Elder’ 11
Pat Kearns in Mass Dickinson students in the RSUH Professor Kremleva with Dickinsonians
Media class classroom in the class about Russian fairy-tales
"My experience in Moscow wouldn’t be complete without mentioning school. Going to the university was very intimidating at first. If I had to go somewhere other than where my classes were, it never failed that I would get lost! I think it was important to be able to go to the university and be among Russian students. It is also so amazing how much your language skills improve after studying in Moscow. There is no better way to learn than being immersed in the language every single day," Jenny Webb '05