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Secondary education for girls and a path to university education for women was extremely limited in Tsarist Russia.One path of educational training for the daughters of the Russian nobility were the Institutes for Noble Maidens (Instituti blagorodnykh devits), cloistered private academies which housed primary and secondary students and offered basic scholastic and cultural training.
[1]: 528 Tolstoy, meanwhile, had become concerned about the number of Russian women going abroad for education, particularly to Switzerland. [ 12 ] : 43, 59–62, 74–76 In April 1876, at Tolstoy's urging, Alexander II permitted the creation of courses for higher education for women, although admission to men's universities was still barred.
1–7 January – New Year's Day and Holidays; 7 January – Christmas (Orthodox) 23 February – Defender of the Fatherland Day; 24 February – Defender of the Fatherland Holiday; 8 March – International Women's Day; 10 March – International Women's Day Holiday; 1 May – Spring and Labour Day; 17 May – Constitution Day; 29 May ...
[9] 47.7% have completed secondary education (the full 11-year course); 26.5% have completed middle school (9 years) and 8.1% have elementary education (at least 4 years). The highest rates of tertiary education (24.7%) are recorded among women aged 35 to 39 years (compared to 19.5% for men of the same age bracket).
Modern view of the facade, with a Lenin statue in the foreground. The Smolny Institute (Russian: Смольный институт) is a Palladian edifice in Saint Petersburg that has played a major part in the history of Russia, notably as a center of women's education, and the headquarters of the Bolsheviks during the early stages of the October Revolution.
Ozerskaya F. S. Female Education // Essays on the History of the School and Pedagogical Thought of the Peoples of the Soviet Union in the 18th and First Half of the 19th Centuries – Moscow, 1973; Barbara Alpern Engel (2004). Women in Russia, 1700–2000. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521003186. Archived from the original on 2018-04-01.
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The Conversations about Important Things takes place every Monday from 09:00 local time, during the school year and after the flag-raising ceremony. [10] [14] Since 20 February 2023, Channel One Russia's Good Morning programme included a segment involving Important Conversations, every Monday at 08:36 Moscow Time (UTC+3).