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				Russian education 
				system was originally inherited from the Soviet Union without 
				any significant changes. In the Soviet Union, education of all 
				levels was free for anybody who could pass entrance exams; 
				students were provided with small scholarships and free housing. 
				It has produced nearly 100 % literacy. In the Soviet Union 
				institutions were funded entirely from the federal and regional 
				budgets. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, institutions 
				found themselves unable to provide adequate teachers' salaries, 
				students9 scholarships, and to maintain their facilities. Many 
				state institutions started to open commercial positions. The 
				number of those positions has been growing steadily since then. 
				Many private higher education institutions have emerged, too. In 
				2004, 35 % of all first-year students were paying for their own 
				education in state institutions and 20 % were enrolled in 
				private universities. 
				
				Education in 
				Russia may be arranged into three major groups: secondary 
				education, higher education, and postgraduate education. 
				Secondary education in Russia usually takes eleven years to 
				complete. After graduation from the 9th grade, which is 
				compulsory, a pupil obtains a Certificate of Incomplete 
				Secondary Education. After that a pupil has can either continue 
				education for two more years at the secondary school, or to go 
				to a Community College. 
				
				The latter 
				variant usually takes three to four years to complete and 
				provides a pupil with qualification sufficient for most 
				blue-collar jobs. 
				
				After obtaining a 
				Certificate of Complete Secondary Education a student can enter 
				a University or a Community College. Nowadays, the country has 
				685 governmental higher education institutions and 619 
				nongovernmental higher education establishments (1,162 of which 
				are state-accredited). In 2003—2004, the total number of 
				students of higher education institutions was 5,947,500. 
				
				There are three 
				different degrees that are conferred by Russian universities: 
				Bachelor's Degree (4 years), Specialist's Degree (5—6 years), 
				and Master's Degree (6 years). Bachelor's degrees were 
				introduced relatively recently and are not offered by many 
				six-year institutions. After obtaining a Specialist's or 
				Master's Degree, a student may pursue postgraduate education. 
				The first level of postgraduate education is aspirantura that 
				usually results in the Candidate of Sciences Degree, roughly 
				equivalent to the Ph. D. in the United States. The second stage 
				would result in the Doctor's Degree. A Candidate of Sciences 
				Degree may be accompanied by honourary degree of assistant 
				professor and a Doctor's Degree may be accompanied by honourary 
				degree of professor. 
				
				  
				
				  
				
				  
				
				Translate the 
				following sentences into English. 
				1. Образовательная система России была унаследована от 
				Советского Союза. Определенное время образование было бесплатным 
				для любого, кто проходил вступительные экзамены, студенты 
				обеспечивались небольшими стипендиями и бесплатным жильем. 
				2. В Советском Союзе вузы финансировались полностью из 
				федерального и регионального бюджетов, в постсоветской России 
				многие институты не смогли обеспечивать достойные зарплаты 
				преподавателям и стипендии студентам и стали предлагать 
				(открывать) платные места. 
				3. Появилось много частных вузов, которые были аккредитованы 
				государством, в них учится около 20 % студентов. 
				4. Среднее образование в России обязательно до 9 класса 
				включительно, после чего ученик получает сертификат о неполном 
				среднем образовании. 
				5. Университеты России присваивают следующие степени: степень 
				бакалавра, степень кандидата и степень магистра. 
				6. Выпускники могут продолжить образование после окончания вуза, 
				в результате которого они могут получить степень кандидата наук 
				или доктора наук. 
				7. Степени кандидата наук и доктора наук могут сопровождаться 
				почетными званиями, соответственно, доцента и профессора. 
  
				
				1. Russia's 
				educational system was originally inherited from the Soviet 
				Union. For some time education was free for anyone who passed 
				entrance exams, students were provided with small scholarships 
				and free housing. 
				2. In the Soviet Union institutions were funded entirely from 
				the federal and regional budgets, in post-soviet Russia many 
				institutions were unable to provide adequate teachers' salaries 
				and students' scholarships and started to offer (to open) 
				commercial positions. 
				3. Many private institutions have emerged and are 
				state-accredited, and about 20 per cent of students are enrolled 
				in them. 
				4. Secondary education in Russia is compulsory up to the 9th 
				grade inclusive, after that a pupil obtains a Certificate of 
				Incomplete Secondary Education. 
				5. The degrees conferred by Russian universities are as follows: 
				Bachelor's Degree, Specialist's Degree and Master's Degree. 
				6. Graduates may pursue postgraduate education which may result 
				in the Candidate of Sciences Degree or the Doctor's Degree. 
				7. The Candidate's of Sciences Degree and the Doctor's Degree 
				may be accompanied by the honourary degrees of assistant 
				professor and professor correspondingly. 
				
				  
				
				  
				
				  
				
				Из пособия "ЕГЭ. Английский язык. 
				Устные темы" Занина Е.Л. (2010, 272с.) - Part 
				 two. 
				Additional topics.  
				  
				
				  
				
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