-
Likbez (Russian: ликбе́з,
Russian pronunciation: [lʲɪɡˈbʲɛs]; a
portmanteau of ликвида́ция безгра́мотности,
likvidatsiya bezgramotnosti, [lʲɪkvʲɪˈdatsɨjə...
-
December 1919,
signed by its
chairman Vladimir Lenin, the new
policy of
likbez (Russian: ликвидация безграмотности, romanized: likvidatsiya bezgramotnosti...
- sections, in
addition to the main ones
related to
general education, e.g.,
Likbez, a
section for
liquidation of illiteracy, "Profobr", a
section for professional...
- po****rization of
abbreviations was a way to
simplify m****-education in 1920s (see
Likbez). The word
kolkhoz (kollektívnoye khozyáystvo,
collective farm) is another...
-
actively educating the people,
opening the
schools and
libraries as of the
Likbez policy were open and maintained, the
Commune was
later expanded in 1923...
- clubs. The
Soviet government pursued a
policy of
eliminating illiteracy (
Likbez).
After industrialization, m****ive
urbanization began. In the
field of national...
- public-relations
campaigns for
various state agencies and
causes (note for
example Likbez). Many
American companies with PR
departments spread the
practice to Europe...
- This went on par with the
Soviet policy of
liquidation of
illiteracy (
likbez).
Economically the
republic remained largely self-centred, and most of the...
- as well as
posters that
reached the
illiterate older generations. The
Likbez (eradication of illiteracy)
campaign was
started on
December 26, 1919, when...
- to
encourage education and
fight illiteracy, as
required by the
Soviet likbez policy.
During this consultation, the
linguist and
philologist Manuk Abeghyan...