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At Moscow schools, Russian is taught as foreign language

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  • At Moscow schools, Russian is taught as foreign language

    Pravda, Russia
    Sept 10 2005

    At Moscow schools, Russian is taught as foreign language
    09/10/2005 10:52

    Moscow schools have to teach cultures of various nationalities of
    former USSR as schools become poly-ethnic now
    Fifty per cent of pupils in Moscow's school 987 are not Russians. The
    school administration even had to introduce lessons of Russian as a
    foreign language. At that, the school was given the status of an
    educational institution with a Russian ethnic component. Pupils of
    the school learn about native Russian holidays, they are not
    permitted to speak their native languages in intervals between
    lessons otherwise the school will turn into Babylon. There are
    children of 45 nationalities in the school; many nationalities are
    absolutely unknown to us - tsakhurs and tabasarans for example. Among
    the pupils, there are also one German, a Pole and a Yugoslav.

    In the first days of school studies first-formers keep together with
    their national groups, but then they easily communicate with other
    children in the school. It is just in middle classes that ethnic
    conflicts may arise between pupils at their parents' suggestion. But
    until this age children do not care to what nationality they belong.

    In 1987, ZIL automobile maker built four many-stories hostels for its
    workers. The enterprise welcomed non-residents of Moscow for work and
    promised that in several years they will have individual apartments.
    There were many Tatars and Mordvinians working at ZIL, and the people
    brought quite enough children into the world with the hope to get
    bigger apartments. So, by the year of 1992 the majority of pupils at
    school 987 were children from the ZIL hostels. Today, the
    automobile-maker cannot afford giving apartments to those families
    living in the hostels. It was decided that hostel rooms would be
    property of families living there.

    The school administration says there are four strong diasporas in the
    school: Azerbaijanians make up 11.09 per cent of the total number of
    pupils, Armenians - 5.99 per cent, Ukrainians - 5.81 and Tatars -
    3.35 per cent. Yeugeny Krasenets from the Economy and Sociology
    Institute states the ratio is typical of Moscow in general. Ethnic
    pupils of the school are children of those who migrated to Moscow
    from former Soviet republics in search of job. From eight to ten
    million of people have migrated from the CIS and Baltic republics to
    Russia within 1996-2005, and 50 per cent of the migrants settled in
    Moscow.

    In 1994, 90.5 per cent of people living in Moscow were Russians, but
    the showing dropped to 84.6 per cent in 2004. The number of migrants
    from Caucasus and Ukraine has increased within the ten years.

    There is a poly-ethnic center at the school that allows ethnic pupils
    not only study the Russian language but also learn more about their
    native cultures.

    In present-day conditions migrants cannot assimilate in Moscow. The
    head of the Education Department decreed that Moscow schools must
    accept children of any nationality, non-residents and those who are
    not officially registered in Moscow. Otherwise, schools may be blamed
    for violation of the constitutional rights. In the nearest tow-threes
    years the authorities plan to make migration temporary: guest workers
    will have an opportunity to work in Moscow for several years or
    months only and then will have to go back home.

    The authorities suggest that favorable conditions must be created for
    life of migrants in some regions of Russia somewhere away from
    Moscow. But today Moscow is in great need for man power, and the need
    is increasing every year. Demographers state that able-bodied
    population of Russia will drop by 2 million people by 2015. And they
    add that today migrant workers are the only method to compensate the
    demographic recession. The birth rate in Moscow is the lowest in
    Russia: 1.09 children fall on one female Muscovite over the
    reproductive period of her life. At that, children of migrants living
    in Moscow are also taken into consideration as well. The share of
    non-residents makes up 13.5 per cent in the total Moscow birth rate.
    Every seventh baby born in Moscow is delivered by a non-resident
    female.

    In the nearest time, in addition to migrants from Ukraine and
    Caucasus Moscow will have to receive migrants from Asian republics.
    Sociologists say that Central Asia may give Russia four million of
    able-bodied migrants. When the resources of the Asian republics are
    exhausted, Russia and Moscow first of all will have to welcome
    migrants from China.

    Moskovsky Komsomolets
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