I was a regular pioneer for a while during the mid 90s, about a year or two after the Knowledge book replaced the Live Forever book as the primary Bible study manual. Around that time the Society began to spew a bunch of B.S. about the end being so near (hadn't heard that one before) and how there were waiting lists for Bible studies in many former Soviet countries. Therefore, there was a need to finish Bible studies within 6 months and we were to cover one chapter of the book per study session. If the Bible student didn't make any progress in 6 months, then we were to drop the study and move on to other, more worthy students. The stated goal was to prepare students for baptism in 6 months.
This arrangement was met with hushed, but firm resistance in my area. The Bible students were mostly uneducated folks who, in many cases, could barely read. Burning through 20+ paragraphs in an hour and having the student understand the material was simply impossible. Plus, a great source of hours for many of the pioneers were studies they'd been conducting for years. It was a steady source of time and dropping them would mean they would have to spend time in other, less comfortable, field service activities. After a while, after I was dropped from the pioneer roll, this arrangement went the way of the Dodo bird. Now, as I understand it, the Society is back to the late 80s arrangement of studying two books with a student. Apparently, the end isn't as near as it was in the mid 90s when 6 month studies were a must.
This got me thinking, what was the purpose of the 6 month study push? Was it simply a way of driving up enthusiasm and excitement in the congregations (the end is really near this time!), did the powers that be really think that the collapse of the Soviet Union meant Jehovah was mercifully giving these people a final opportunity to learn "the truth" before he simply destroyed them all in Armageddon, or a little bit of both?