Drawing on the analysis of discursive shifts in the constructions of teachers’ roles during the twentieth century in the Russian Federation, this paper argues that pedagogy becomes redefined based on the political elites’ vision for the society’s future. During the Soviet era, teachers were expected to play a key role in social transformation. In order to transform the world, they were expected to deploy humanistic pedagogy to help all students realise their potential. During the post-Soviet era, this vision was abandoned. As teachers were expected to fulfil the function of social control, they were called to adopt technocratic pedagogy that comprised principles of psychologisation, individualisation, pathologisation, and depoliticisation. Psychologisation of teachers’ roles and pathologisation of diversity became deployed to “adapt students to the world” by addressing problems within students rather than in the society. The significance of this paper lies in demonstrating connections between shifting discourses of teachers’ roles, pedagogy, and pursuit of social transformation or conservative social change.
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