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Original Articles

Employing the concept of the object in the discussion of the links between school pedagogies and individual working lives in pre‐ and post‐Soviet Russia

Pages 193-205 | Published online: 07 Aug 2006
 

Abstract

This article provides a theoretical discussion of the concept ‘object’ within Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT). It also introduces some of the methodological considerations that are raised in the study of the formation and transformation of objects of activity. A research project is described in which a theoretical discussion concerning the relations between the object and the subject within an activity system is progressed. The project explores the working lives of individuals in Russia before and after the fall of the soviet regime. It was discovered that school pedagogies that focused more on regulative rather than instructional discourse have succeeded better in preparing students for their working lives. Employing the concept of the object as a temporal trajectory has provided a key to understanding the subjects' personal positions and attitudes to their working lives.

Notes

This article concerns qualitative research and it only points to the tendencies that were revealed during the data analysis. The research does not generalize the results of the data analysis. Thus, every time we mention for example ‘the pedagogies’ or ‘individuals in the 1970s’ we mean the individuals who took part in our fieldwork.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Anna Popova

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