Famous Belarusian psychologist Olga Andreeva: “Men should be grateful to feminism - it gave them educated wives. Development of psychology in Belarus Current state of Belarusian psychology articles from the magazine



The development of issues in the psychology of thinking is of great importance for the development of the entire world of psychological science. The study of thinking has been and remains the subject of numerous studies by philosophers, logicians, sociologists, physiologists, psychologists, didactics, etc. Research in the field of problems of the psychology of thinking by domestic and foreign scientists makes it possible to enrich concrete scientific ideas about the essence of mental reflection of the surrounding world, as well as systematize existing knowledge about thinking. As part of the development of modern Belarusian psychological and pedagogical science, numerous studies are being conducted on human thinking at different stages of ontogenesis. Y.L. Kolominsky, E.A. Panko, A.N. Belous, Yu.V. Karandashev since the 70s?? V. Research is being conducted in the field of problems of development of mental cognitive processes of preschool children. Features of the development and formation of the theoretical type of thinking of younger schoolchildren are highlighted in the works of the outstanding Belarusian psychologist, a follower of the ideas of V.V. Davydov and his student T.M. Savelyeva. The psychologist's research has revealed the role of developmental education in humanities subjects in mental development in general, and in the formation of theoretical thinking in particular. V.M. Kovalgin, Ya.L. Kolominsky, L.N. Rozhina, M.S. Klevcheney, N.I. Murachkovsky analyze the problems of schoolchildren’s underachievement and the problems of improving their mental activity.


L.N. Rozhina, a student of A.R. Luria, P.Ya. Galperin, and her collaborators are conducting research in the field of psychology of art, showing its multifunctional role in the development of creative thinking in schoolchildren and students. The psychological and pedagogical foundations of the functioning of creative thinking and activity in conditions of continuous education are the subject of research by V.Ya. Baklagina, A.I. Petrushchik. B.A. Benediktov highlights the features of the teacher’s memory and thinking, the conditions for their development in schoolchildren, as well as some issues of the development of their creative thinking.


The scientific activity of G.M. Kuchinsky, an adherent of the ideas of M.M. Bakhtin, was aimed at studying the problems of speech, verbal communication and human thinking at all stages of ontogenesis. He revealed the relationship and correspondence between the forms of verbal communication between a person and another person and a number of similar forms of internal dialogue, and proved the role of internal dialogue in performing activities and solving practical and cognitive problems, and regulating human behavior.


Significant influence on the development of psychological knowledge about creative thinking The direction of artistic knowledge of the human psyche, which emerged in the 80s in Belarus, had an impact. The subject of research by representatives of this direction (L.N. Rozhina, A.P. Lobanov and others) was artistic perception and artistic facilitation, the results of which made it possible to state that integrative teaching of students is most effective.


Of particular importance in the modern educational process is the problem of forming a creative personality capable of building their own life activity (being its subject). The solution to this issue is impossible without developing in a person the type of thinking that would allow him to self-realize in a constantly changing world. T.M. Savelyeva, a follower of the ideas of V.V. Davydov, in her research proceeds from the fact that this type of thinking is theoretical thinking, which must be cultivated and developed at all stages of human ontogenesis.


Since the 90s, in Belarus, employees of the psychology department of the Research Institute of the Republic of Belarus under the leadership of T.M. Savelyeva have been actively conducting a number of scientific studies on topical issues theory and practice of education of a creative personality with developed dialectical thinking.


The results of many years of experimental research carried out in the Republic of Belarus under the leadership of T.M. Savelyeva, to identify the dynamics of the formation of students’ theoretical thinking and to determine the directions for the development of theoretical thinking in the system of lifelong education, made it possible to state the following. Education according to the D.B. Elkonin-V.V. Davydov (RO) system was the most effective in the development of the student as a subject of his own life activity.


In this regard, improving the system of modern lifelong education is impossible without an in-depth study of the laws of development of human thinking, the structure and stages of its formation, and the characteristics of the transition from one form of thinking to another.


UDC 159.923.2:331.101-057.86:37(476+470+474.3)

FEATURES OF PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY OF TEACHERS IN BELARUS, RUSSIA, LATVIA

E.B. Ermolaeva

graduate School Economics and Culture, Riga, Latvia T.G. Shatyuk

Gomel State University named after Francysk Skaryna, Belarus

T.V. Silchenkova Smolensk State University, Russia

In the context of the increasing complexity of the tasks posed to modern schools, the professional self-awareness of the teacher is becoming increasingly important. The development of research on the professional identity of teachers is associated with the currently observed turn to the personality of the teacher and concern for his interests and well-being. The article presents the results of the international study “Professional Identity of a Teacher”, in which school teachers from Latvia, Russia (Smolensk region) and Belarus (Gomel region), a total of 537 people, participated. Conclusions are drawn about the formation of professional identity by national groups of teachers and depending on the type of school (urban/rural). The results obtained update further research work and development of a program of psychological support for school teachers.

Key words: identity, professional identity of a teacher, model of the content of professional identity.

The concept of professional identity has become one of the most important topics in the social and socio-psychological sciences of the late 20th and 20th centuries! centuries. The relevance of the study of identity is due to the fact that the modern social situation confronts humanity with a serious choice: either to ensure its survival and further development, or to slide into confrontation and self-destruction. In this regard, there is growing interest in understanding the problems of social self-determination. The personal, productive, creative, special is becoming increasingly important. Subjective, local, national come to the fore. Moreover, many economic, economic, political and cultural problems ultimately turn out to be questions of identity.

The issue of identity is at the intersection of the interests of sociology,

history, cultural studies, cognitive psychology, personality psychology and social psychology. The phenomenon of identification, starting with S. Freud, has been studied by supporters of the psychoanalytic direction (E. Erikson’s epigenetic concept of personality development); representatives of the French socio-psychological school (within the framework of the theory of social representations by S. Moscovici); symbolic interactionism (the concept of balance of identity by J. Habermas); cognitive psychology (the theory of social identity by G. Tajfel and J. Turner, self-categorization by J. Turner) and other areas. The term “identity” is particularly widespread in the scientific literature and is associated with the name of E. Erikson, who defined identity as the internal “continuity of an individual’s self-experience”, “lasting internal equality with oneself”, as an important

the most important characteristic of the integrity of the individual, as the integration of a person’s experiences of his identity with certain social groups. The tradition of using this term in psychological literature is associated with the understanding of ontological truth: “a thing is itself and not something else.” Genuine means the identity between what is thought and how it is expressed in words, between what is in consciousness and how it is expressed in external behavior. In this regard, it can be discussed that a person’s identity is not given, it is given, its development can be discussed not in terms of “formation”, but in terms of “achievement” and “becoming”. Most researchers interpret identity as the result of a certain process (self-knowledge, “self-understanding”, identification, identification-

alienation, etc.) and emphasize its existential nature, along with its functional one.

Identity is discussed both as a feeling, and as a sum of knowledge about oneself, and as a behavioral unity, i.e. it acts as a complex integrative psychological phenomenon. We proceed from the fact that identity is a synthesis of all human characteristics into a unique structure, which is determined and changed as a result of subjective pragmatic orientation in a constantly changing environment. Identity is identity with oneself. To have an identity means to have a personally accepted image of oneself in all the richness of the individual’s relationships to the world around him, a sense of adequacy and stability of the individual’s possession of his own Self. Erikson considers the structure of identity as a complex personal formation that has a multi-level structure. He identifies three main levels of analysis of human nature: individual, personal, co-

cial. At the individual level of analysis, identity is defined as the result of a person’s awareness of his own temporal extent, the idea of ​​himself as a relatively unchangeable given physical appearance, temperament, inclinations, having his own past and future. At the personal level, identity is defined as a person’s sense of his own uniqueness, the uniqueness of his life experience, and identity with himself. At the social level, identity is defined as a person’s sense of belonging to significant social groups(professional, ethnic, religious, etc.). In the literature in Russian, the works of G.M. are devoted to the analysis of the main theoretical ideas about identity that have been developed to date. Andreeva, N.V. Antonova, E.P. Ermolaeva, N.L. Ivanova, Yu.P. Povarenkova, E.T. Sokolova, T.G. Stefanenko, L.B. Schneider and other researchers. So, D.V. Kolesov correlated the idea of ​​identity in logic and psychology: if in logic identity is understood as the absence of differences (sameness, indistinguishability, complete coincidence of features of compared objects, processes, phenomena of the surrounding world), then in psychology identity is the individual’s experience of his unity with some an individual or their group, or their commitment to something, an idea, a principle, a cause.

The issue of teacher PI has come to the attention of researchers since the 80s. XX century , although the teaching profession is one of the most ancient. Teacher's activities - necessary condition the existence of any civilization as a single integrity, since it ensures the continuity of tradition and cultural continuity in the development of society. This contributed to the formation of teachers of the past quite

expressed professional self-identification (albeit not always reflected). For a modern teacher, however, the issue of professional self-awareness is more acute than ever. The importance of the education sector for ensuring the sustainable development of society is constantly growing, and the complexity of the tasks facing modern school and university teachers is also growing rapidly. To withstand this acceleration, constant flexible changes are needed both at the institutional level (reforming the systems of school and university (pedagogical) education) and at the personal level: only a teacher with a strong and stable PI.

The development of PES research is associated with the currently observed turn to the personality of the teacher and concern for his interests and well-being. In contrast to the competency-based approach, which examines the teacher’s activities from the outside, as it were, from the point of view of the requirements placed on a professional, the study of PIP shifts the emphasis inside the teacher’s personality, explores his sense of self and professional self-awareness. These two approaches to the study of teacher activity are opposed and, at the same time, mutually complement each other. The professional identity of a modern teacher takes shape in the context of growing crisis phenomena in society. In many countries, negative trends in the socio-demographic characteristics of the teaching staff of schools have worsened: aging, feminization, outflow of young teachers from the education sector, secondary employment of teachers to the detriment of the quality of their main work. These factors make it difficult to form professional self-awareness of young teachers and, at the same time,

raise the question of the need to work on increasing the level of teachers’ PI, using international experience. The above theoretical aspects have updated the international empirical research professional identity of school teachers.

The purpose of the study is to compare the PI parameters of teachers in Belarus, Russia and Latvia. Psychodiagnostic tools were used to define the “Professional Identity of a Teacher” methodology” by T.V. Bogdanova, M.A. Widnere, E.B. Ermolaeva, S.V. Silchenkova, A.P. Veneers, which is based on a model of the content of a teacher’s professional identity developed by Latvian authors. The model includes six components: professional philosophy, professional knowledge and skills, professional roles, professional attitude towards work, cooperation with colleagues, professional representation behavior. The PIUso questionnaire consists of 60 judgments (ten judgments for each of the 6 components), which were offered to teachers for assessment in points from 1 (“completely disagree”) to 6 points (“completely agree”). According to the Cronbach's alpha method, the questionnaire obtained a score of 0.84, sufficient to consider it reliable.

The study was conducted in May - June 2017. The research bases were schools in the Gomel region (Republic of Belarus), Smolensk region ( Russian Federation) and the Republic of Latvia. The study sample included 100 teachers from Belarus (50 teachers from rural schools and 50 teachers from urban schools), 202 school teachers from the Smolensk region (96 teachers from urban schools and 106 from rural ones), and 235 teachers from Latvia (182 urban and 53 rural teachers). Below are the results of the study. In tables

1 and 2 present the average values ​​for Belarusian teachers.

each of the PI components in the sample

Table 1

Average PI diagnostic values ​​for rural school teachers (Belarus)

Age Number Average values ​​for PI blocks

people 1 2 1 4 5 6

Up to 35 years old 20 4.82 4.62 4.7 4.55 4.68 4.4

16-55 years old 29 4.91 4.47 4.62 4.6 4.49 4.28

Over 55 years old 1 4.6 5 1.6 4.5 4.6 4.9

For rural teachers the average is 4.59, while for urban teachers

the average value of PI in the Belarusian sample of co-teachers is 3.74.

table 2

Average PI diagnostic values ​​for urban school teachers (Belarus)

Up to 35 years 10 4.12 1.54 1.62 1.81 1.68 1.64

16-55 years 19 4.08 1.64 1.54 1.72 1.57 1.47

Over 55 years old 1 5.4 6 5.4 1.2 5.4 6

According to these data, Belarusian teachers of rural and urban schools under the age of 35 have a pronounced block 1 - “Philosophy of the profession.” As a result of applying the criterion φ* - Fisher's angular transformation, statistically significant differences were found between teachers of rural and urban schools (at p<0,01). У учителей городских школ низкий показатель по шкале 2 «Профессиональные знания». В возрасте от 36 до 55 лет у учителей сельских и городских школ преобладает блок 1 «Философия профессии» и низкие показатели по блоку 6 «Поведе-

development of professional representation,” especially among urban school teachers. Since the data on teachers over 55 years of age are not statistically significant (only 1 person each in the urban and rural samples), they were not taken into account when analyzing the Belarusian sample. They are also not shown in the diagram (Fig. 1)

Rural school - up to 35

Rural school - 36-55 years old

City school - up to

City School - 3655 years

Rice. 1.Average PI values ​​by block for urban and rural schools

Belarus

Data show that the level of PI of teachers in rural schools in Belarus is generally higher than that of urban ones. This can be explained by the high status of teachers in rural areas compared to workers in other professions. Fellow villagers listen to the opinion of the rural teacher; he is, in fact, the embodiment of literacy and culture. During the empirical study, it was revealed that among teachers in Belarus, the PI block “Philosophy of the Profession” was most developed. This means that for them, values ​​and beliefs, goals of professional activity, professional ethics, and the most essential general ideas associated with the profession come first.

Data for the Russian sample are presented in Tables 3 and 4. For rural teachers, the average value in the Russian sample is 4.1; for urban teachers this value is 3.86. The difference is noticeable, but not as significant as in the Belarusian sample. Similar to the Belarusian data, the highest PI values ​​of Russian teachers were identified in the “Philosophy of the Profession” block, the lowest - in the “Behavior of Professional Representation” block. In general, in the Russian sample there were no large differences in the PI of teachers in urban and rural schools, as Figure 2 demonstrates.

Table 3

Average PI diagnostic values ​​for rural school teachers (Russia)

Age Number of people Average values ​​for PI blocks

Up to 35 years old 11 5.15 4.67 5.00 4.74 4.75 4.00

16-55 years old 72 5.11 4.71 4.91 4.91 4.61 1.98

Over 55 years old 21 5.41 4.86 5.22 5.21 4.81 4.21

Table 4

Average diagnostic values ​​for professional identity of teachers in urban schools (Russia)

Age Number of people Average values ​​for PI blocks

Up to 35 years old 18 4.97 4.07 4.59 4.60 4.21 1.41

16-55 years old 59 5.11 4.91 4.91 4.88 4.61 1.94

Over 55 years old 19 5.10 4.76 4.81 4.94 4.48 4.21

Rice. 2.Average PI values ​​by block for urban and rural schools

The data show that teachers in rural schools over 55 years of age have the highest PI values. These are the so-called “old school” teachers who are conscientious about their work and see their mission in the teaching profession. Urban school teachers under the age of 35 have the lowest PI value. This can be explained both by a lack of work experience, the gradual development of one’s own PI, and an unclear vision of oneself in the profession.

Data from the Riga sample are presented in Tables 5 and 6. Data provided by

presented in Tables 5 and 6 indicate that Latvian teachers also have high scores in the “Philosophy of the Profession” block (more than 5), and they are higher than those of their Belarusian colleagues, but in general they are inferior to the scores of Russian teachers. The average values ​​for block 6 in the Latvian sample are also lower than for the other components, but they are nevertheless higher than in previous samples. Thus, in the average indicators of the Latvian sample there are no values ​​close to 3.5 points, which is reflected in Figure 3.

Table 5

Average PI diagnostic values ​​for rural school teachers (Latvia)

Age Number of people Average values ​​for PI blocks

Up to 35 years old 10 5.1 4.32 4.76 4.7 4.68 4.13

36-55 years old 28 5.16 4.63 4.81 4.92 4.74 4.20

Over 55 years old 15 5.22 4.69 5.02 5.15 4.95 4.17

For rural teachers, the average PI value in the Latvian sample is 4.74, for urban teachers - 4.11.

Table 6

Average PI diagnostic values ​​for urban school teachers (Latvia)

Age Number of people Average values ​​for PI blocks

Up to 35 years old 24 5.05 4.8 4.79 4.97 4.64 4.23

36-55 years old 109 5.24 4.6 4.77 4.9 4.66 3.95

Over 55 years old 49 5.29 4.87 4.97 4.99 4.6 4.16

Rice. 3. Average PI values ​​by block for urban and rural schools

Figure 3 demonstrates that all PI data for teachers in the Latvian sample, regardless of age, are close in value. The lowest values ​​are observed among rural school teachers under the age of 35. The highest PI values ​​are among teachers over 55 years of age, which is explained by their experience and dedication to the teaching profession.

Thus, as a result of the study, it was established that in three national samples, professional identity is formed at a higher level among rural teachers in Latvia (the average value of the overall PI is 4.74), followed by rural teachers in Belarus with an average value of 4.59. Apparently, the leadership of these groups of respondents, in relation to the formation of professional identity, is a consequence of national pedagogical traditions and the prestige of the teaching profession in rural areas. The lowest so far

PI applicants were identified in the groups of urban teachers in Belarus (3.74 points) and urban teachers in Russia (3.86 points). A number of interrelated factors can explain the low level of developed PI among urban teachers: the low level of prestige of the teaching profession, low (compared to representatives of other urban professions) salaries, teachers’ workload with paperwork, lack of motivation for young teachers.

The results obtained actualize further research work and the development of a program of psychological support for school teachers.

*The material is printed as a custom article.

LITERATURE

1. Kolesov D.V. Antinomies of human nature and the psychology of difference (On the problem of identity)

tification and identity, identity and tolerance) // World of Psychology. 2004. No. 3. P. 9-19.

2. Krasova E. Yu. Social and professional characteristics of teaching (sociological analysis) // RELGA.2011. No. 4 (222). [Electronic resource] - Access mode: http://www. relga.ru/Environ/WebObjects/tgu-www.woa/wa/Main?textid=2852&level1=main&leve l2=articles (date of access: 05/23/2018).

3. Schneider L.B. Professional identity. Monograph. M.: MOSU, 2001. 256 p.

4. Shpona A., Vidnere M., Ermolaeva E. Essence and structure of professional identity of a teacher // News of the Smolensk State University

endowment university. 2015. No. 1(29). S. 375381.

5.Erikson E. Identity: youth and crisis. M.: Flinta, 2006. 339 p.

6.Beijaard D., Meijer P.C., Verloop N. Reconsidering Research on Teachers" Professional Identity // Teaching and Teacher Education. 2004. Vol. 20. P. 107-128.

7. Statistika par izglitibu (2017). Riga: IZM [Electronic resource]. - Retrieved 05/23/2018 from: http://www.izm.gov.lv/lv/publikacijas-un-statistika

The manuscript was received by the editor on May 24, 2018.

FEATURES OF PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY OF TEACHERS OF BELARUS, RUSSIA AND

J. Jermolajeva, T. Shatiuk, S. Silchenkova,

In the conditions of increasing complexity of the problems put before modern school, the increasing value gets professional self-consciousness of the teacher. Development of researches on professional identity of teachers is connected with turn observed now to the person of the teacher and care of its interests and well-being.The article presents the results of the international project "Professional Identity of Teacher", in which school teachers from Latvia, Russia (Smolensk region) and Belarus (Gomel region) participating, in total 537 persons. Conclusions are made about the teachers" professional identity by national groups and depending on the type of school (urban / rural). The received results actualize carrying out of the further research work and working out of the program of psychological maintenance of teachers of schools.

Key words: identity, professional identity of teachers, model of the maintenance of professional identity.

1. Kolesov D.V. Antinomii prirody cheloveka i psihologiya razlichiya (K probleme identifikacii i identich-nosti, identichnosti i tolerantnosti). World psihologii. 2004. No. 3.S.9-19.

2. Krasova E. YU.Social "no-professional"nye harakteristiki uchitel"stva (sociologicheskij ana-liz). RELGA.2011. No. 4 (222). - Rezhim dostupa: http://www.relga.ru/Environ /WebObjects/tgu-www.woa/wa/Main?textid=2852&level1=main&level2=articles (data obrashcheniya: 05/23/2018).

3. SHnejder L.B. Professional "naya identicalnost". Monografiya. M.: MOSU, 2001. 256 s.

4. SHpona A., Vidnere M., Ermolaeva E. Sushchnost" i struktura professional"noj identicalnosti pe-dagoga. Izvestiya Smolenskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. 2015. No. 1(29). S. 375-381.

5.EHrikson EH. Identichnost": yunost" i krizis.M.: Flinta, 2006. 339 s.

6.Beijaard D., Meijer P.C., Verloop N. “Reconsidering Research on Teachers” Professional Identity. Teaching and Teacher Education. 2004. Vol. 20. P. 107-128.

Olga Andreeva is a well-known person among Minsk psychologists. A family psychologist, a member of the International Association of Family Therapy, she spends a lot of time traveling, preferring European tranquility to the diverse Belarusian reality. Olga created a successful, happy family and raised a son. At the same time, she calls herself a 100% feminist, as do her husband, son and all her friends. Onliner.by spoke with Olga Andreeva about gender prejudices, smart women, fading patriarchy and the benefits of feminism.

- What gender stereotypes and prejudices live in the minds of Belarusians?

Our country has every kind of gender prejudice there is. Belarus is very conservative in terms of gender.

- Conservative in a bad way?

Certainly. And what else if we are talking about gender prejudices? Gender conservatism has its origins in the Belarusian mentality itself. If you look at the collections of folklore that our researchers prepared, there is a lot of confrontation between men and women, there is no respect for the opposite sex on either side. In Belarusian songs, for example, men reproach women for importunity and excessive control, and women call men irresponsible, lazy, and drinkers. And at the level of mass consciousness, very little has changed.

At the same time, of course, in our society there are many educated, gender-sensitive people who understand that the role position of men and women is not a law of nature, but a social construct. This group of people comes into conflict with those who take an absolutely conservative position that does not fit into today's realities. Society is heterogeneous, although the conservative part still dominates. People with a conservative position certainly have the right to such a worldview, but what I always oppose is the aggressive imposition of this position on other people.

With husband Igor Andreev

- Can you be called a feminist?

I can be called one hundred percent a feminist. Also, my husband and my son are feminists. And all my friends are also feminists, without a single exception. I simply wouldn’t communicate with others. What do I mean when I talk about feminism? Equal rights for men and women. For me, this is not a question of struggle, not a question of who is better and who is worse. I start from the idea of ​​equal value for every person. We should be grateful to feminism as a movement for giving women the right to education, to work, to property, to human dignity, to make independent life decisions. I think men also benefited from this, because an educated woman is much more interesting, and there is actually something to talk about with her. It's probably better to be married for 40 years to an intelligent woman than to an idiot. There are also quite serious studies that confirm that the degree of development of a child in a family is mainly influenced by the level of education and social status of the mother. So if a man wants his children to be smart and educated, he should choose a smart and educated woman as their mother.

I'll repeat it again. Today, feminism is not war, it is the ability to see human fullness in each other. Relations between men and women are not a field for struggle, but the ability to appreciate and respect each other. If any man tells me that he is smarter than a woman, let him prove it. In truth, an intelligent, educated man will not believe that he is a priori smarter than any woman.

In Vienna, near the house where Freud lived

- How do you think people who want to have a happy family should behave?

I tend to think that there is no one recipe for a happy family. Each couple must create their own model of a happy family, which will suit only this couple. There are as many models as there are people. The main thing is that people can come to an agreement, create a field where everyone is respected, everyone’s needs are taken into account, no one is humiliated, and there is an opportunity to be yourself. It doesn’t matter what specific rules exist for this. The most important thing for a psychologically healthy family is mutual respect. After all, love is always shorter than life. I mean love in the sense in which it is understood at a young age. Over the years it transforms. Sometimes love, which appears as an absorbing passion in youth, has nothing to do with interest in the personality of the object of love. Such love will bring a lot of pain and little joy. You can't build a happy marriage on this. But respect for differences is the basis of modern culture and tolerance. A person learns respect from early childhood in his family; a chain of generations is needed here. This is the first thing.

And secondly, respect must be cultivated by society itself. What did we encounter during this hockey championship? The problem arose of how to teach the Belarusian service industry to be polite. All of a sudden. For two weeks. Because it suddenly became obvious that our trade workers lack good manners and education. That taxi drivers don't speak English. That the police lack friendliness.

Over lunch in New York

- As a psychotherapist, have you often encountered complaints from Belarusian women about gender discrimination?

Yes. Many clients complained that employers did not believe in their potential simply because they were women. Although in fact they were serious professionals. I know many cases of violence in families... All this stems from the fact that it is beneficial for an unsuccessful man to have the belief that all women are by definition worse than himself.

There is a wonderful book by the American writer Naomi Wolf, “The Beauty Myth.” It says that when women have achieved equal rights in many countries around the world, men have found one aspect in which a woman continues to be vulnerable - her appearance. And they hit there: “Yeah, you’ve achieved success in business, but you’re not beautiful enough, men don’t love you, you’re not married, which means you’re a failure.” That is, they attack women’s identity, which is often based on appearance and being in demand among men. That's just terrible.

It’s funny to me when our men start talking about Western women that they are scary. It’s just that girls in the West go without makeup. And no less beauty. Take away cosmetics and the opportunity to turn blonde from Belarusian women... What will happen then? Slavic women are “sharpened”: if she is not married or not in a relationship, then she is a loser. What if she prefers to be alone, but not enter into a relationship with a loser man? What to do then? Then the man tries to prick her.

That is why our girls often look for foreigners. Not for the sake of wealth, but to be with European men who are taught to respect women. After all, a woman needs respect more than material maintenance. In reality, most women earn no less than men.

In this case, is a woman's desire for a man to pay her bill at a restaurant a sign of something wrong?

You see, human relationships work a certain way. People have a sense of justice only when a balance is maintained between “taking” and “giving.” If a woman wants a man to pay for her in a restaurant, then the question is completely legitimate: what will be her contribution to this project? What will she offer for, sorry, paid food? If a woman is not ready to offer anything, then she must pay for her food. And if this is an element of courtship, which assumes that the man also receives something, then there is no question.

Let the woman place more bets on her own achievements. Then there will be no need for a man to pay for her. Women need more real ambition. After all, the most profitable investment is investing in yourself. If women understand this, their level of vulnerability will be lower.

- Do you think Belarusians’ ideas about the roles of men and women will change in the near future?

Nowadays, many people remain in couples only because of the fear of loneliness. This is a socially imposed dependency on relationships. It is formed in cultures with a low level of democracy, because people who depend on the attitude of other people towards them are very easy to manage. In fact, all social institutions in Belarus create a person who depends on the opinions of other people. Starting from school to mass pop culture. All these songs with the lines “I can’t live without you”... Yes, any person can live without another! All these institutions form a dependent personality, and then a person has the feeling that he alone will be lost, alone he is of no value.

But still, people come to the conclusion that in relationships the interests of both the female and male sides should be taken into account. And those who take a position of a priori superiority and dominance of men will still have to come to terms with the changes taking place in the modern world. This position is just very convenient. Then a man does not need to have any achievements other than primary sexual characteristics: no intelligence, no education, no results. He receives such an undeniable bonus from the moment he is born in this model! He gives himself the right to claim the best women without any effort on his part. But it won't work. This model won't work. Because we cannot remain aloof from the global social process. He's coming, and conservative people are trying to fight him. But how can you fight strong winds or waves? It's pointless, they'll beat you anyway. Conservatives are like a person who at some point decided that he does not need a smartphone and continues to walk around with an old Nokia. This person will be hopelessly left behind. We need to constantly master new technologies and understand social processes. They are as objective as technological progress.

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I. L. Kolominsky

Study of the patterns of personality ontogenesis in the Belarusian socio-psychological tradition

Kolominsky Yakov Lvovich - Doctor of Psychology, Professor of the Department of Developmental and Pedagogical Psychology of the Belarusian State Pedagogical University named after. M. Tanka, (Minsk, Belarus)

One of the goals of this article is to highlight those areas of research by Belarusian psychologists that are based on the ideas of L.S. Vygotsky about the social origin of higher mental functions, the internalization of microsocial forms of interpersonal interactions, as well as inextricably linked provisions about the social situation of development. Of particular importance are those sections of cultural-historical psychology that contain the foundations that determined our research program in the field of psychological cultural studies. The article presents in a thesis, “telegraphic” style the main directions developing the ideas of cultural-historical psychology of L.S. Vygotsky.

Key words: social situation of development, psychological culture of the individual, typology of interpersonal pedagogical interaction.

Study of patterns of ontogeny of the individual in the Belarusian socio-psychological tradition

Kolominsky Yakov,

Doctor of Psychology, Professor of Developmental and Educational Psychology of the Belarusian State Pedagogical University named after M. Tank (Minsk, Belarus)

Presented paper highlights those areas of psychological research in Belarus, which are based on the ideas of L.S. Vygotsky's social origins of higher mental functions, internalization of microsocial forms of interpersonal interactions as well as the social situation of development concept. Of particular importance are those sections of cultural-historical psychology, which contain the reasons that led to the author's program of research in the field of cultural studies and psychology. In the article main trends developing ideas of cultural-historical psychology of L.S. Vygotsky are presented.

Keywords: social situation of development, psychological culture of personality, types of interpersonal teacher interaction.

The development of social psychology cannot be imagined outside the context of the ideas that were formulated by Lev Semenovich Vygotsky, as well as his students and followers. The channels through which scientific ideas are transmitted are diverse and sometimes difficult to define. In my case, these are happy years of scientific apprenticeship with a direct employee and talented student L. S. Vygotsky, an outstanding psychologist, Lidia Ilyinichna Bozhovich,

who was the supervisor of my PhD thesis, and priceless moments of direct communication with her friends and associates of L. S. Vygotsky: A. N. Leontiev, D. B. Elkonin, A. V. Zaporozhets. Sometimes I call myself the scientific “grandson” of Vygotsky, and my students “great-grandchildren.”

Another fruitful path is the assimilation of ideas captured in books, articles, and the epistolary heritage of scientists. The text of tradition in this case becomes a mediator

in the formation of a new scientific direction, and the experience of understanding and interpreting the text is the key to its continuity and development.

It is known that L. S. Vygotsky owns one of the central socio-psychological and pedagogical ideas - the concept of “social situation of development”. In his interpretation, this is a special combination of internal processes and external conditions of development, as well as a person’s subjective experience of the current state of affairs. For L. S. Vygotsky, a social situation of development does not exist without the participation of a person in it, without his emotional and intellectual attitude, which determines the specifics of the situation as a whole. L. I. Bozhovich, developing L. S. Vygotsky’s idea of ​​the social situation of development, even introduced the term “internal position,” in which she summarized the mental-affective unity of human experience of situational conditions. Thus, she actually pointed out the insufficiency of role definitions for fixing the position of an individual in certain social conditions. So, for example, wrote L. I. Bozhovich, a child can be a junior schoolchild in role, and a preschooler in position1.

In our studies, the social situation of development is interpreted in a microsociological aspect, as a certain small contact group that changes its structure and meaning at all main stages of ontogenesis. In this regard, we, in a sense, agree with the well-known epigenetic position of E. Erikson, according to which human identity is a transforming psychosocial essence2. The starting microgroup is the “mother and child” dyad. This is followed by the wider family social microenvironment, then the peer group, starting with the kindergarten peer group, and so on. Moreover, at each stage, a growing person in a certain way realizes and experiences situations of interpersonal interaction, primarily relationships and communication, in which he acts. In our studies, we distinguished between “communication” and “attitude”, giving the latter category the status of an “internal” authority3. We consider relations in the plural - relations, since they are always

1 Bozhovich L.I. Personality and its formation in childhood. - St. Petersburg: Peter, 2008. - p. 176.

2 Erickson E. Identity. Youth and crisis: Trans. from English / General ed. and preface A. V. Tolstykh - M.: Progress, 1996. - p. 101-102.

3 Kolominsky Ya.L. Psychology of relationships

in small groups (general and age characteristics). -

Minsk, BSU, 1976. - p. 12-18.

are included in the order of interaction (real or imaginary) and only in this interactive context can they be studied and understood.

The sociometric and autosociometric methods we have developed - measurement procedures - and a system of quantitative and qualitative indicators, allow us not only to objectively study the position of the subject in a small group, but also to penetrate into the sphere of subjective awareness and experience of their relationships with peers (reflexive and perceptual coefficients, autosociometric installations, etc.). Speaking about autosociometric methods, it should be said that through their use we were largely able to overcome some of the “verbocentrism” of domestic psychology, which appeals to survey instruments, and focus on the implicit side of behavior, its internal “springs” that determine the social situation of human development.

Here, I think, it would be appropriate to cite the assessment of sociometric methods given by the famous social psychologists R.L. Krichevsky and E.M. Dubovskaya in the book “Psychology of the Small Group.” “In Soviet social psychology, a great contribution to the development of this direction was made by Ya. L. Kolominsky, who not only did a lot in terms of constructing various sociometric procedures, but, which is very significant, included the empirical method in a meaningful theoretical context. Note that the latter has no analogues in Western social psychology, where the use of sociometry as a method for studying interpersonal relationships, according to the foreign authors themselves, has long been “untied” from any theory”4.

An adult plays a special role in the social situation of a child’s development. Here we studied, first of all, the early features of interpersonal interaction in infancy. We proposed a distinction between two forms of socialization at an early age - objective sociality and subjective sociality, in which the adult is already represented in the emotional experiences of the infant5. In this distinction, we proceeded from the fact that objective sociality is the external, operational side of the subject’s behavior,

4 Krichevsky R.L. Psychology of the small group. - M., Moscow State University Publishing House, 1991. - p. 31.

5 Kolominsky Ya. L., Kharin S. S. Formation of subjective sociality in young children // Questions of psychology. 1991. - No. 6. - With. 22.

conditioned by the nature of his communication, and subjective sociality is the individual’s awareness of himself as a subject of activity, experienced as a sense of “I”. Due to the fact that joint activity is often carried out within the framework of a fundamentally different system of relations than communication, its psychological products will be different. In the course of studying the products of joint activities, it is also advisable to distinguish between their objective and subjective sides. Objective compatibility is considered as external, technological, determined by the method of obtaining a common result, interdependence of participants in the activity; subjective is the awareness and experience by individuals of the consistency of their actions, awareness of themselves and other members of a certain single community, like “we”.

Also in our studies, pedagogical interpersonal interactions were specifically studied. A typology of interpersonal pedagogical interaction was created based on the principle of correspondence between the internal state (attitude) and its external, behavioral implementation (communication). We recently conducted research on the selectivity of pedagogical interaction and assessment activities in its structure. Based on the results of many years of work, we published a collective monograph in which provisions on the professional and psychological culture of a teacher were developed, theoretical and applied aspects of interpersonal pedagogical interaction were outlined, and the evaluative activity of a teacher and its impact on children was described in detail6.

In terms of clarifying the content and functions of an individual’s behavior in communication processes, we proposed a distinction between the objective and subjective awareness of an individual. Communication as an exchange of information arises in a situation of uneven information potential. If we imagine those communicating as communicating vessels, then it is clear that the “information flow” occurs until the information levels of the exchange participants are equalized. We are talking here about objective awareness. To analyze real interpersonal communication, we proposed the concept of subjective awareness of the individual - the “Schehrazade phenomenon”. This is the ability of an individual to offer a communication partner exactly the information

6 Kolominsky Ya. L. Psychology of pedagogical interaction / Ya. L. Kolominsky, N. M. Pleskacheva, I. I. Zayats, O. A. Mitrakhovich. Ed. prof. Ya. L. Kolominsky. - St. Petersburg: Rech, 2007. - 240 p.

which he feels the need for (cognitive-emotional interest). An anti-information option is also possible: reporting unwanted information.

The problem of socio-psychological patterns of personality development, which we have studied in recent years, also includes the position we put forward about the personogenic situation of development, which allows, so to speak, to individualize the normative life path of an individual along the axis of ontogenesis. The concept of normative age-related crises was supplemented by us with a provision about such points of growth and life situations that act as determinants of the emergence of not age-related, but purely individual personal new formations7 [ibid.]. In the final work for this study, we presented personality as the highest stage of human development, to which everyone living, consciously or not, strives. Each individual, according to this attitude, is characterized by the “need to be a person,” which is “inseparable from creativity” and which is “always a joy”8. We consistently pursue the idea that it is not at all easy to be a person, that it is possible not to distinguish a person from a mask, that no one is immune from the loss of its “authenticity” and that a person is not received as a natural gift, but is acquired through hard efforts and, of course, , psychological efforts.

Our research clarified the psychological structure of the social role, which includes intrapersonal and extrapersonal components. Intrapersonal - emotional representation of the role, its experience by a person, its cognitive representation - awareness of the social significance of the role. The extrapersonal component is role behavior - the real activity that a person carries out, the implementation of a social relationship. With the loss of a (most often forced) social role (no longer a director, no longer a manager, etc.), a special emotional-cognitive syndrome arises, indicating a violation of psychological health, which we have designated as socio-psychological phantom pain (SPPP) by analogy with phenomena known in neurology, when a person feels pain in the ampu-

7 Kolominsky Ya.L. Psychology of pedagogical interaction / Ya. L. Kolominsky, N. M. Pleskacheva, I. I. Zayats, O. A. Mitrakhovich. Ed. prof. Ya. L. Kolominsky. - St. Petersburg: Rech, 2007. - 240 p.

8 Ibid., p. 25-27

rated body. We have also developed a system for the prevention and treatment of SPF.

A socio-psychological analysis of microgroup personogenic situations associated with the formation and functioning of personality led us to an important hypothesis about the multi-role structure of personality, which is generated by the individual’s participation in different social environments, including virtual ones. This circumstance prompted us to expand the context of socio-psychological research, moving out of microgroup and microsocial definitions into the space of macrosocial connections and relationships. So we were faced with the question of modern spiritual culture and socio-psychological cultural studies.

In the new problematization, we proceed from the fact that the peculiarities of the sociocultural processes occurring in Belarusian society have led, first of all, to the aggravation of educational problems, one of which is the low efficiency of teaching activities, which does not meet the increased requirements for the quality of general, secondary and higher education. This is largely due to the inability of education to reveal a person’s inner potential, to create in him the motivation to achieve success, independence and responsibility. The new life situation places exceptionally high demands on the teacher’s personality and activities and encourages him to search for a new place in the processes of socialization and inculturation of children and youth. In this regard, the problem of studying psychological culture as a creative transformative pedagogical activity that ensures both the achievement of the heights of professional self-realization and “subtle” cultural sensitivity - the basis of innovative behavior - becomes relevant.

The educational process, which is the object of study of many sciences, is a multifunctional, complex dynamic phenomenon. In relation to it, our attention is increasingly turning to the sphere of higher education, in which today a generation of people is being formed who, to one degree or another, will perform a pedagogical function in our society in the coming years. Or in other words: changes in education as a whole are largely determined by the quality of changes at its top level. This is why our efforts in recent years have increasingly focused

on the circumstances of higher and university education, to which we are trying to apply the scientific apparatus developed in the Belarusian socio-psychological tradition.

In our developments, we proceed from the fact that the central ones, determining all the activities of the university in a personal sense, are the socio-psychological systems of interpersonal interaction “teacher-student” and “student-student”. Pedagogical (educational) interaction between a teacher and a student has two main subsystems: internal, substantive, motivational and need-based, which includes such components as the emotional attitude of the teacher towards the student, attitude towards his teaching activity (pedagogical beliefs), attitude towards the subject of teaching; and external, operational, called pedagogical communication, during which the internal states of the teacher are realized, manifested and modified. The teacher and the student are connected by a two-channel interpersonal system: the subsystem “personality-personality” (intersubjective interaction) and the subsystem in which their interaction is mediated by the subject-methodological content of pedagogical activity - “subject-subject-subject interaction”.

Any conscious or spontaneous affective influence on a person brings about certain changes in his inner world. The teacher must simultaneously prove himself as an educator of the student body and individual students, as a research scientist passionate about developing a specific scientific problem, as a teacher with his own individual style of pedagogical communication, as an organizer and leader of student creativity in a variety of fields, as an older friend and competent adviser etc. Thus, in the process of pedagogical, interpersonal interaction, the simultaneous manifestation and development of the personality of the teacher-teacher and the future specialist-professional-student occurs.

In the educational system, the teacher with his cultural level, physical, mental, psychological and moral health, creative potential is the main figure. The moral and spiritual progress of society largely depends on the level of his professional culture. However, improving the educational (and educational!) activities of teachers

corps of higher education is impossible without a radical increase in its psychological and pedagogical culture.

What is the psychological culture of the individual? Psychological culture is the totality of those achievements that humanity has in the field of theoretical knowledge of its own psyche, in the field of self-knowledge, in the field of self-regulation, in the field of interpersonal interaction.

The relevance and significance of the problem of psychological culture of teachers is confirmed by the close attention to this phenomenon on the part of researchers. We find the scientific prerequisites for the formation of the concept of psychological culture in the works of representatives of “psychological anthropology” (A. A. Velik, G. Murray, V. I. Slobodchikov, M. Spiro, D. Honigman, F. Hsu, etc.) and cultural historical direction in psychology (L. S. Vygotsky, A. N. Leontiev, A. G. Asmolov, M. Cole, J. Werch). We also believe that the basis for the scientific development of the phenomenon of psychological culture as the internal structure of a person is laid in the works of the classics of foreign and domestic psychology (B. G. Ananyev, N. Ya. Basov, V. Wundt, S. L. Rubinstein, K. D. . Ushinsky, 3. Freud, K. Jung, A. Maslow, K. Rogers).

It is known that there are several hundred definitions of the concept “culture”, dozens of approaches to its study, theoretical concepts, models and types. A completely independent system of knowledge emerged, taking shape as the science of cultural studies. This very eloquently emphasizes the semantic diversity of a familiar concept, distinguished by its apparent simplicity. L. S. Kolmogorova, analyzing various approaches to understanding psychological culture, writes: “The problem remains of defining the concept of “psychological culture” of an individual, identifying its parameters and levels. Let us note that the term “psychological culture” is not included in any of the domestic psychological dictionaries. The reference literature provides definitions of its individual components (communicative culture, culture of behavior, culture of thinking)”9. Note that the concept of “psychological culture” has already appeared in the book “Psychology of Communication. Encyclopedic Dictionary"10.

9 Kolominsky Ya. L. Social psychology of personality development. - Minsk, 2009. - 336 p.

10 Psychology of communication. Encyclopedic Dictionary.

Under general ed. A.A. Bodaleva. - M.: Cogito-Center, 2011. - p. 116.

We, in turn, believe that psychological culture as an integral part of the systemic culture of society is multi-layered. It covers the existence of a person in two worlds: in his own inner world and in the world of interpersonal space. As for the structure of psychological culture, it includes ideas about one’s own mental processes, one’s own psyche, one’s own personality, mediated by knowledge or everyday experience, as well as methods of self-analysis, methods of self-knowledge and self-education, self-regulation. Psychological culture is located in two projections: orientation (theoretical projection) and behavior (projection of psychological activity). Psychological activity - activity in relation to other people and oneself - has two main areas: activity in relation to oneself and activity in relation to another person. The criterion of the first area is the preservation of psychological health. We have been carefully studying the latter circumstance over the past few years11.

In the course of the above studies, we identified the following types of psychological culture. Thus, there is a general psychological culture, which presupposes the presence of background knowledge in the field of psychology, which any person has. We can also talk about the professional psychological culture of people in socionomic professions (teacher, doctor, lawyer, etc.), technical professions, etc. All professions have this professional psychological layer. But for specialists in socionomic professions, what is primarily characteristic is that between them and other people, their “objects of activity,” there is a layer of their psychological culture.

Culture in general and psychological culture in particular, like any composite system, has the ability to self-organize. Changes occurring in the economy and state policy are reflected in complex ways at the level of transitory values ​​and transform personal orientations (meanings, norms). Between the culture of the community

11 Kolominsky Ya. L. The relationship between psychological culture and psychological health of the individual as a scientific and practical problem // Psychiatry, psychotherapy and clinical psychology: international scientific and practical journal. - 2011. - No. 4. - P. 120-130; Kolominsky Ya.L. Psychological aspects of health-preserving education of the population // Psychotherapy and clinical psychology. - 2008. - No. 1. - P. 6-10.

va, and today it is largely a global culture, and there is a certain correlation between the culture of individuals and groups. This correlation may be disrupted in certain life situations (usually crises). Science and education (as cultural intermediaries) are called upon to detect failures in cultural ties, respond in a timely manner, and include mechanisms and means for adjusting cultural ties and relationships. Due to the heterogeneity of social strata, the continuous process of cultural creation and cultural development is like circles spreading across water, the amplitude and frequency of which decrease with distance from the place where the vibrations originate. The decentralization of cultural relations requires not only diverse scientific and educational participation, but also different forms of this participation. Today, it seems to me, people involved in the formation of scientific and educational policies in our country do not fully realize the importance of scientific and educational cultural participation.

Psychological culture, as part of general culture, in the process of its development gradually penetrates into different layers and spheres of existence. Sensitivity to emerging values, the ability to formulate them in a situation of uncertainty of the “ideal form” is one of the signs of inclusion in culture. In order for culture to become the greatest reserve of experience and values, it is not enough for a teacher to have professional knowledge, skills and abilities, and to be psychologically literate. He must take the path of self-development, self-education, since in the process of self-creation the subject merges with culture, absorbs it, distinguishes himself in it, and is included in cultural creativity. This level is ensured by “psychological activity” - the work of a person in the intrapersonal and interpersonal spaces.

How can you develop professional psychological culture among students? For this purpose, a specially organized learning process is required in a university environment. The development of professional psychological culture will occur with special training as a transition from the lower, pre-conceptual level to the higher, conceptual level. Closely interconnected principles of the formation of psychological culture and principles of perception and assimilation of psychological information (psychological pre-education, personal involvement, introspective projection, psychotherapy)

petic expectation) will allow the creation of a fairly effective method of psychological education.

Psychological education today has not yet become a sufficiently effective factor in pedagogical activity. One could give an extensive list of the negative consequences of its lack. Its main consequence is obvious damage to the development of the internal spiritual sphere of the individual, its degradation, leading to psychological ill-health, manifestations of the “emotional burnout” syndrome, etc.

I really hope that the development of a scientifically grounded conceptual, methodological and methodological basis for the formation of the psychological culture of future educational psychologists will significantly optimize the quality of educational work and will contribute to the formation of the psychological health of the individual. ■

Literature

1. Bozhovich L. I. Personality and its formation in childhood. - St. Petersburg: Peter, 2008. - 400 p.

2. Kolmogorova L.S. Formation of psychological culture of schoolchildren // Questions of psychology. - 1999. -№1. - pp. 83-89.

3. Kolominsky Ya. L. The relationship between psychological culture and psychological health of the individual as a scientific and practical problem // Psychiatry, psychotherapy and clinical psychology: international scientific and practical journal. - 2011. - No. 4. - P. 120-130.

4. Kolominsky Ya. L. Psychological aspects of health-preserving education of the population // Psychotherapy and clinical psychology. - 2008. - No. 1. - P. 6-10.

5. Kolominsky Ya.L. Psychology of relationships in small groups (general and age characteristics). - Minsk, BSU, 1976. - 350 p.

6. Kolominsky Ya.L. Psychology of pedagogical interaction / Ya. L. Kolominsky, N. M. Pleskacheva, I. I. Zayats, O. A. Mitrakhovich. Ed. prof. Ya. L. Kolominsky. - St. Petersburg: Rech, 2007. - 240 p.

7. Kolominsky Ya.L. Social psychology of personality development. - Minsk, 2009. - 336 p.

8. Kolominsky Ya.L., Kharin S.S. The formation of subjective sociality in young children // Questions of psychology. 1991. - No. 6. - P. 21-30.

9. Krichevsky R.L. Psychology of the small group. - M., Moscow State University Publishing House, 1991. - 318 p.

10. Psychology of communication. Encyclopedic Dictionary. Under general ed. A.A. Bodaleva. - M.: Kogito-Center, 2011. - 600 p.

11. Erickson E. Identity. Youth and crisis: Trans. from English / General ed. and preface A. V. Tolstykh - M.: Progress, 1996. - 344 p.

F. I. Ivashchenko (b. 1920) “Development of self-confidence in low-performing schoolchildren”, “Psychology of work activity of senior schoolchildren”. Since 1991, he has been researching psychological problems of education.

L. V. Marishchuk (born 1954) wrote a monograph “Abilities for learning a foreign language and new approaches to the accumulation of vocabulary” and a doctoral dissertation on the topic “Abilities for learning foreign languages ​​and didactic technology for their development.”

E.A. Panko (b. 1939) Considered problems teacher's individual style of activity (six types of educators have been identified, differing in professional interests: a teacher focused on play; a teacher with an artistic orientation; a didactic educator; a harmonic style; a formal-pragmatic style; an indifferent style of education), attitudes of preschool children to the personality of the teacher .

Ya. L. Kolominsky (b. 1934) - specialist in the field of developmental, educational and social psychology. “Experience in the psychological study of relationships between students in the classroom,” where first in domestic psychology the sociometric method of J. Moreno was applied. He studied the development and formation of personality in small groups and teams at the main stages of ontogenesis in the process of joint activity, interpersonal interaction and pedagogical communication. Researched and described differential personality characteristics, designated as “socio-psychological observation”, important for activity in the “person-to-person” system, developed a procedure for measuring it. Developed a typology style of pedagogical interaction , established the determination of pedagogical mutual understanding by the subject content of pedagogical activity. Main scientific works: “Teacher and children's collective”, “Social pedagogical psychology”, “Psychology of six-year-old children”.

L. N. Rozhina (b. 1935) - Doctor of Psychology, Professor. Engaged in research into the problem of artistic knowledge of the human psyche. She defended her doctoral dissertation on the topic “Human artistic knowledge as a factor in the development of a high school student’s personality” (1994).



A. T. Rostunov (1920-1996) - Investigated the problem professional suitability and showed that it has a complex structure. In the psychological component of the structure of professional suitability, the leading role is played by professional motivation And professional features. The quality of work and training, the employee’s compliance or non-compliance with the requirements of the profession depend on them. Main works: “Formation of professional suitability” and “Psychological preparation of schoolchildren for work and choice of profession.”

The problem of the readiness of preschool children to study at school and the education of preschoolers in the works of Belarusian psychologists (A.N. Belous, Ya.L. Kolominsky, N.Ya. Kushnir, N.A. Panko)

Approaches of Belarusian psychologists to the problem of teaching, teaching and learning of younger schoolchildren (V.Ya.Baklagina, L.V.Marishchuk, T.M.Savelyeva, M.Z Yanovsky).

The problem of learning in infancy and early childhood in the works of Belarusian psychologists. (O.V. Belanovskaya, N.Ya. Kushnir, L.G. Lysyuk, E.A. Panko).

Problems of teaching and upbringing of students in the works of Belarusian psychologists studying the problems of higher education (Benediktov B.A., Benediktov S.B., Dyachenko L.A. Kandybovich, Ya.L. Kolominsky, S.I. Kopteva, A.P. Lobanov, L.V.Marishchuk, L.N.Rozhina).

Features of moral education in different age periods (A.M. Prikhozhan, L.N. Rozhina, V.E. Chudnovsky).

Formation of psychological readiness of schoolchildren for work and professional self-determination (F.I. Ivashchenko, E.A. Klimov, T.V. Kudryavtsev, A.M. Kukharchuk, A.K. Osnitsky, A.T. Rostunov, T.V. Senko, A.B. Shirokova, E.A. Faraponova).

Psychology of a teacher in the works of Belarusian psychologists (N.A. Berezovin, V.V. Butkevich, K.V. Verbova, Ya.L. Kolominsky, S.V. Kondratyeva, N.V. Kukharev, E.A. Panko, L N. Rozhina).

Problems of pedagogical interaction of subjects of the educational process in the works of Belarusian psychologists (N.A. Berezovin, K.V. Verbova, Ya.L. Kolominsky, S.V. Kondratyeva, E.A. Panko, S.S. Kharin).


HISTORY OF PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSONNEL TRAINING IN THE RB.

The activities of the department of logic, psychology and Russian language were the first attempt to train psychological personnel in post-war Belarus.

It is known that at that time logic and psychology were taught in grades 9–10 of secondary school, but qualified specialists in these disciplines were not specially trained, and they were taught by teachers of history, biology, language and literature, etc. In this regard, the need for training became obvious teachers of logic and psychology.

In 1947, a department of logic, psychology and Russian language was opened at the philological department of BSU. the courses of which were enrolled applicants, as well as some students of the Faculty of Philology of the BSU by transfer.

However, the existence of this specialization was short-lived. The cessation of the activities of the department of logic, psychology and the Russian language was caused by the gradual displacement of logic and psychology from school curricula, and teachers found themselves unclaimed.

DEVELOPMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY IN BELARUS IN 60–90 SOCIETY OF PSYCHOLOGISTS

Created in 1956 Society of Psychologists of the USSR . Belarus was among the first Soviet republics to formalize collective membership in this society. On May 30 – June 1, 1960, the First Founding Congress of the Republican Branch of the Society of Psychologists of the USSR was held in Minsk.

The congress was attended by prominent psychologists from Moscow and Leningrad, representatives of psychological science from Belarus, Belarusian scientists and physiologists, university teachers of pedagogy and foreign languages, school and boarding school teachers, and medical workers.

The program of the congress included speeches from Belarusian representatives of Soviet psychological science by Heresy, Kolominsky, Vodeiko, and Nikolaeva.

The key speech at the plenary session of the congress was the report of Professor Sokolov on the topic “The state of psychological science in the USSR and the tasks of psychologists.”

The Congress discovered flaws in the work of Belarusian psychologists: extreme diversity and sometimes lightness of scientific research topics. These shortcomings were a consequence of the fact that the republic's psychologists worked in silos. Disadvantages also include poor popularization of psychological knowledge among the population, especially among the teaching community.

The congress outlined the main way to overcome these shortcomings through association of Belarusian psychologists in the systematically working republican branch of the Society of Psychologists of the USSR.

The Republican Council of the Belarusian branch of the Society of Psychologists of the USSR was elected consisting of 15 people. Chairman of the Presidium – Candidate of Pedagogical Sciences, Associate Professor of BSU E.P.Heresy.

For over three decades, the society worked quite actively. Professors Kovalgin, Benediktov and Kolominsky were elected chairmen of the society after Associate Professor Heresy. In those years, the society initiated the publication the first psychology textbook in Belarus ed. A.A. Zarudnaya, collections of scientific articles by Belarusian psychologists; psychological and pedagogical knowledge was promoted; Universities of psychological knowledge for parents were created in a number of secondary schools in Minsk and the republic; psychologists systematically gave lectures to the pedagogical community.

In a word, the society coordinated the scientific and educational work of Belarusian psychologists. Unfortunately, in 1993 the society of Belarusian psychologists ceased to exist.

Early 20s 20th century is considered the silver age of psychology in our country.

06/04/1936 - Resolution of the Central Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) “On pedagogical perversions in the system of People’s Commissars of Education”.

Under these conditions, the social order for psychology was reduced to a minimum. Repressions against major scientists begin. However, in the period 30–50s. psychological science continues to develop, following the internal logic of development (Bozhovich, Leontyev, Makarenko).

At the end of the 80s. Departments and departments of psychology began to appear in Moscow, Kyiv, Minsk and other cities. 1978 – Kolominsky Department.

Since the late 80s. The development of both theoretical and practical psychology begins.

02.11.1988 - a decree of the Minister of Education was issued “On the training of practical psychologists for educational institutions at the Gorky Moscow State Pedagogical Institute.

03/26/1993 – Decree “On the training of psychology personnel at BSU and MSPI”, which introduced higher basic psychological education.

In 1999, the BSPU hosted a conference “Psychology and Children: Reflection on the Protection of the Rights of the Child.” The Ambassador of Italy was present and spoke. Psychologists from Poland, Ukraine, and Russia made reports). Our psychologists were in Germany, England, and the USA).