Paul Goble
Staunton, Feb. 18 – In 2018, Vladimir Putin pledged to do away with the unpopular practice of having a significant share of pupils in Russian schools study in second shifts by 2025. But in fact, the share doing so over that period has risen from 13 percent to 15.8 percent, with much higher figures in some federal subjects, the To Be Precise portal says.
That means that as of today, 2.54 million young Russians are inschool beginning in the afternoon and ending in the evening. In a few cases, there are schools which operate not just on the basis of two shifts but rather on the basis of three, although that practice was largely eliminated by 2021 (tochno.st/materials/kazdyi-sedmoi-skolnik-ucitsia-vo-vtoruiu-smenu).
Parents have long been upset when their children have had to go to school not during their working hours but long after them, and polls showed that Russians were overwhelmingly pleased by Putin’s commitment to end this arrangement. That he hasn’t kept his promise undoubtedly is corroding support for the Kremlin leader.
In a few federal subjects, there has been real progress. In Ingushetia, for example, the share of pupils in second shift schedules has fallen from 42 percent in 2016 to 14 percent in 2025; in Chechnya, from 43 percent to 24 percent; and in Adygeya, from 25 percent to 16 percent.
But in 59 of the federal subjects, the situation has “either not changed or gotten worse” since Putin made his promise. In Tyva, for example, almost half of all students are attending via a second shift; and in Tyumen Oblast, the share doing so has risen from 18 percent in 2016 to 33 percent last year.
These varying trends reflect both demography – where birthrates are higher, it has been harder for the authorities to end the practice of second shifts – and economics – regions and republics that are poorer have been unable to build schools, prevent the closure of others or even pay teachers in a timely fashion (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2026/02/18/shkoly-net-i-ne-budet).
In particular, Putin’s optimization campaign intended to save money on education and social costs to have money for war has led to the closure of 861 schools since the start of his expanded war in Ukraine (nemoskva.net/2026/02/18/v-rossii-zakryli-bolee-860-selskih-shkol-s-2022-goda-prichiny-i-regiony-lidery/).
And as regional governments have had to tighten their belts given budgetary stringencies which are the result of Moscow’s unfunded mandates, officials in ten regions have delayed paying their teachers in a timely fashion, leading many to quit and forcing others to two shift work (ru.themoscowtimes.com/2026/02/19/uchitelyam-v-10-regionah-nachali-zaderzhivat-zarplati-iz-za-problem-byudzheta-a187646).