… Earlier I felt, as does everyone from the city, that the popular striving for education is more or less limited to the major industrial centers, that village Russia was an expanse still largely untouched by schools … it seemed to me that it was the mission of the government and educated society to introduce to the dark masses the very idea of the need for education, and I thought that it would take several decades before the people would feel the necessity of schooling. Now, having heard these vibrant voices, not only from (European) Russia, but also from the borderlands, I see a completely different picture. Now I see clearly that the people already fully recognize the value of education, and do so with equal force throughout the country…
Comment on a survey of popular attitudes conducted by the Moscow Literacy Society, 1894
Most works on Russian educational policy contain an underlying assumption: namely, that the size and shape of educational systems are largely determined by what sociologists of education call “corporate actors” organized groups united by shared commitment to specific goals such as egalitarian reform, economic growth, national integration or social controlor by the interplay of such groups; According to this interpretation, the major impetus for educational change comes from those directly responsible for education policy-making; in Russia, this included the central government and the educated Russian elite, acting through the zernstvos, municipal dumas, and after 1906, the national Duma. Influenced by trends in social history, however, some historians are beginning to argue that “primary actors,” or the population as a whole, playa major role in determining the scale and even structure of educational systems. In other words, these historians place exphasis upon social demand, rather than supply, as the major factor in educational growth.