Abstract

This empirical study investigates secondary science teachers’ perspectives on science education reform in Taiwan and reflects how these teachers have been negotiating constructivist and learner-centered pedagogical approaches in contemporary science education. It also explores the challenges that teachers encounter while shifting their pedagogical focus from traditional approaches to teaching science to an active engagement in students’ learning. Multiple sources of qualitative data were obtained, including individual interviews with science teachers and teachers’ reflective journals about Confucianism in relation to their educational philosophies. Thematic analysis and constant comparative method were used to analyze the data. The findings revealed that Confucian traditions play a significant role in shaping educational practices in Taiwan and profoundly influence teachers’ epistemological beliefs and their actual classroom practice. Indeed, science teachers’ perspectives on Confucian learning traditions played a key role in supporting or obstructing their pedagogical commitments to inquiry-based and learner-centered approaches. This study draws on the literature concerning teachers’ professional struggles and identity construction during educational reform. Specifically, we explore the ways in which teachers respond to educational changes and negotiate their professional identities. We employed various theories of identity construction to understand teachers’ struggles and challenges while wrestling with competing traditional and reform-based pedagogical approaches. Attending to these struggles and the ways in which they inform the development of a teacher’s professional identity is vital for sustaining current and future educational reform in Taiwan as well as in other Eastern cultures. These findings have important implications for teachers’ professional development programs in East Asian cultures.

Highlights

  • This study is situated against the backdrop of the science education reform movement that was initiated by the Taiwanese government in the 1990s

  • Our analysis shows that about half of the participants thought that the reform policy emphasizes a rigorous preparation of Taiwanese students for the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA)

  • Our findings suggest that some teachers were deeply committed to traditional science teaching approaches and resisted the science education reform

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Summary

Understanding the study context

The present article is a part of a larger research project that explored Taiwanese policymakers’ and science teachers’ perspectives on the challenges involved in implementing the science curriculum reform in Taiwanese schools (Huang 2014). During the first phase of this research, none of the teacher participants talked about the educational reform in relation to Confucian learning traditions. In order to explore teachers’ perspectives on Confucian learning traditions vis-a-vis the reform, the teacher participants were invited to participate in follow-up interviews and journal writing. Since the profound influence of Confucian learning traditions in Chinese society is vital to our inquiry, we begin the following section by describing the features of Confucian philosophy that have been instrumental in shaping the cultural and educational values in Taiwanese society. We discuss the theoretical frameworks that informed this study

The Confucian legacy in Taiwanese society
Identity theories and teacher identity
Identity crises and identity development
Contextualizing the study
Tainan Taichung Hsinchu Taipei city
Data analysis
Commitment to traditional approaches
Traditional teaching is efficient and effective
Yi Bao
Xiao Ren Chang
Findings
Final thoughts
Full Text
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