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    Portraits of College Student Types Using Generative AI for Learning: An Empirical Study Based on a Survey of Undergraduates from 20 Universities Nationwide
    Liping Ma, Xiangrui Zheng, Xuehan Zhou
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2026, 44 (1): 65-79.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2026.01.006
    Abstract2211)   HTML38)    PDF(pc) (904KB)(2549)       Save

    As generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) becomes increasingly integrated into college students’ academic activities, some scholars and education administrators have expressed concerns about students’ blind reliance on GenAI and the potential weakening of higher-order thinking skills. Based on a survey of 12,678 undergraduates from 20 universities across China and empirical analysis, this study finds that most students exhibit a critical attitude when engaging in higher-order thinking tasks such as critical and creative activities with GenAI, and believe that GenAI-assisted learning positively contributes to their higher-order cognitive development. Furthermore, a latent profile analysis reveals four distinct types of GenAI-assisted learning users, reflecting the interaction between students' level of technology acceptance and their self-regulated learning abilities: (1) Cautious Experiencers (42%): low acceptance, high critical use; (2) Labor Substituters (24%): low acceptance, low critical use; (3) Balanced Explorers (21.2%): high acceptance, low critical use; (4) Deep Users (12.8%): high acceptance, high critical use. Based on these findings, the paper underscores the necessity for universities to guide undergraduates in the appropriate use of GenAI tools and proposes effective strategies such as targeted educational interventions and the cultivation of AI literacy. These measures aim to help students transition toward the ideal profile of "high acceptance – high critical use."

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    How Principals’ Authentic Leadership Impacts Teachers’ Participation in School Decision Making: A Moderated Chain Mediation Model
    Chuanyou Bao, Xiaoyu Wang
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2026, 44 (1): 105-117.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2026.01.009
    Abstract1509)   HTML12)    PDF(pc) (782KB)(1530)       Save

    Based on self-determination theory and career construction theory, this study systematically examines the impact of principals' authentic leadership on teachers' participation in school decision-making and its underlying mechanism. The results indicate that principals' authentic leadership significantly and positively predicts teachers' participation in school decision-making; basic psychological need satisfaction and job crafting each play a partial mediating role between principals' authentic leadership and teachers' participation in school decision-making, while the chain mediating effect of "basic psychological need satisfaction-job crafting" is also verified in this relationship. Additionally, teachers' career adaptability positively moderates the association between principals' authentic leadership and teachers' participation in school decision-making—specifically, the higher teachers' career adaptability, the stronger the positive impact of principals' authentic leadership on teachers' participation in school decision-making. Therefore, to promote teachers' participation in school decision-making and enhance school governance effectiveness, it is necessary to: improve principals' authentic leadership through the spirit of educators and foster a culture of respect and democracy; innovate teacher incentive mechanisms to stimulate their intrinsic motivation for participation; and emphasize the cultivation of teachers' career adaptability to enhance their capacity for effective participation.

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    A Revolution of Learning in the Era of Generative Artificial Intelligence:Generative Self-Regulated Learning
    Baichang Zhong, Xiaohong Lin
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2026, 44 (1): 44-55.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2026.01.004
    Abstract1497)   HTML28)    PDF(pc) (1395KB)(2500)       Save

    As generative artificial intelligence (GAI) becomes increasingly embedded in educational practice, the inherent limitations of traditional self-regulated learning theory are becoming more pronounced: ontologically, it neglects the mediating role of the body; epistemologically, it adheres to a linear regulation paradigm; and in practice, it faces the challenge of fragmented technological support—making it difficult to effectively address learners’ complex developmental needs in learning to learn. With its generativity, human-computer interactivity, higher-order capabilities, and autonomy, GAI transcends the dualistic cognitive structure of subject and object. It co-constructs a triadic system of “subject-mediator (technology)-object” with the learner, thereby reshaping the meaning of “learning to learn” toward a model characterized by human-machine collaboration and directly addressing “Jobs question”. In this context, generative self-regulated learning (GSRL) emerges. Guided by dialectical constructivism and Vygotsky’s cognitive development theory at the macro level, and supported by micro-theoretical frameworks of human-technology relationship theory, embodied cognition theory, and dialogic theory, GSRL constructs a triple-loop pathway—“pure thinking-embodied experience-deep cognition”. This pathway not only redefines the logical framework of SRL but also enriches the contemporary connotation of “learning to learn”, signifying a genuine revolution of learning. At the same time, GSRL may pose risks such as loss of reflexivity, alienation of practice, deconstruction of subjectivity, and disruption of intersubjective communication. Therefore, a dialectical balance must be maintained between the instrumental rationality of technology and the value rationality of education, ensuring that education remains centered on human development and contributes to the construction of a Chinese educational knowledge system with both contemporary relevance and indigenous significance.

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    Current Situation, Problems and Suggestions for the Implementation of Curriculum Standards of Information Science and Technology in Compulsory Education: Based on a Nationwide Large-Scale Survey
    Zhengfu Li, Xiaofan Lin, Qian Feng, Suchen Li, Shucheng Luo, Feng Li, Xiongying Wei, Zhang Xiong
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2026, 44 (1): 80-93.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2026.01.007
    Abstract1470)   HTML18)    PDF(pc) (925KB)(371)       Save

    The implementation of curriculum standards is the process of transforming educational blueprints into reality, and the quality of its implementation largely determines the effectiveness of curriculum education. In response to the lack of research on the perspective of a nationwide implementation of the “Compulsory Education Information Technology Curriculum Standards (2022 Edition)”, this study conducted extensive research on information technology teachers nationwide using a scale survey method. The survey results reflect that most teachers have confidence in the reform of information technology curriculum standards, actively participate in curriculum standard learning, curriculum resource development and construction, and innovative teaching methods, and generally possess the basic competence of information technology curriculum teaching; At the same time, there are problems such as teachers' professional mismatch, insufficient understanding of curriculum standards, difficulty in supporting high-quality implementation of curriculum standards with existing curriculum resources, and inadequate appropriateness of teaching methods. Based on the actual situation of information technology curriculum construction, corresponding measures can be taken systematically from the aspects of optimizing teacher allocation, improving educational and teaching capabilities, innovating teaching methods, constructing digital and intelligent resource supply, and strengthening basic research to comprehensively promote the high-quality implementation of information technology curriculum standards.

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    Digital and Intelligent Technology Reshaping the Future of Education: Theory and Practice of “Building Digital Communities” in the New Education Initiative
    Yongxin Zhu
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2026, 44 (1): 1-21.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2026.01.001
    Abstract1383)   HTML21)    PDF(pc) (923KB)(401)       Save

    “Building Digital Communities” is one of the ten major actions of the New Education Initiative. This paper aims to systematically review over two decades of theoretical exploration and practical experience in the “Building Digital Communities” action of the New Education Initiative, elucidating its essence, value, principles, and methodologies. With the core concept of living a happy and complete educational life, this paper deeply integrates technologies including Internet, big data, and generative AI, to plan new pathways for action upgrades in the digital-intelligent era and explore more possibilities for technology-empowered education. This paper calls for the joint construction of digital-intelligent communities and the co-creation of a new educational ecosystem, contributing the wisdom and strength of New Education to the construction of a socialist modernization strong country in education.

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    Between Classroom and Playground: The Physical Experience and Moral Situation of Sports Students
    Hanwen Zhang, Xuxin An
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (7): 86-95.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.07.007
    Abstract1304)   HTML17)    PDF(pc) (808KB)(2586)       Save

    This study, employing qualitative research methods, provides an in-depth description of the physical experiences and moral situations of physical education students graduating from regular high schools as they transition between the classroom and the playground. It presents and analyzes the interactions between their individual and structural dynamics, as well as the cultural production processes involved. The research reveals that these students develop a complex emotional structure characterized by both “glory and stigma” within the educational system. After undergoing comprehensive and meticulous physical discipline, their suppressed bodily experiences lead to resistance against the school, thereby plunging them into a low moral predicament.From the classroom to the playground, high school athletes begin to regain their subjectivity amidst the enjoyment of their bodies and the opening of new meaning spaces. In their training lives, they form a group culture characterized by “loyalty” and “respect for hierarchy” within the atmosphere of a “closely connected and mutually dependent” community and shared memories of “blood and breath”. With the coach's backing, they develop an anti-school cultural confidence or illusion. Upon returning to the classroom, they actively create cultural distinctions and elevate their moral status through bodily management exemplified by “swagger”, yet this effort inevitably falters under the traditional educational value order.Thus, the act of “creative” meaning production paradoxically places individuals in a situation of stigmatization through showing off. The new cultural context in universities has given birth to a new cultural world. When knowledge education is no longer the sole criterion for excellence, and when physical culture is once again respected, the sports student group may achieve true meaning production and cultural creation.

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    How Do University Innovation Resources Drive the Development of Students’ Critical Thinking:A Mediating Analysis Based on Learning Approaches
    Yangjie Huang, Ying Xu, Lingli Weng
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (7): 43-58.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.07.004
    Abstract1178)   HTML30)    PDF(pc) (881KB)(4419)       Save

    Critical thinking, as the core objective of cultivating innovative talents in higher education, is profoundly influenced by university innovation resources. However, the mechanisms through which these resources drive critical thinking remain unclear. Based on the Person-Environment Fit Theory and integrating the Input-Process-Output (IPO) model, this study constructs a theoretical framework elucidating the mechanisms linking university innovation resources, learning approaches, and critical thinking development. Using Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling (PLS-SEM) to analyze data from 51,063 university students in China, the findings reveal that university innovation resource investment significantly promotes students' critical thinking development. challenge-based learning and interactive learning serve as significant mediators in this relationship, with the mediating effect of interactive learning being stronger than that of challenge-based learning. Accordingly, four practical recommendations are proposed: comprehensively optimizing the allocation of innovation resources to facilitate the coordinated development of courses and facilities; building a professional development system for teachers to enhance critical thinking teaching capabilities; optimizing the combination of learning approaches to leverage the synergistic mediating effects; and innovating critical thinking assessment by establishing a multidimensional process evaluation system. The research findings provide critical empirical support and policy references for innovation education in universities and the development of students' critical thinking.

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    Resistance and Reconstruction: The “Second Narrative Turn” in Educational Narrative Inquiry in the Artificial Intelligence Era
    Qing Wang
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2026, 44 (1): 56-64.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2026.01.005
    Abstract1165)   HTML12)    PDF(pc) (623KB)(190)       Save

    The rapid development of artificial intelligence is triggering a paradigmatic crisis in educational research. Through a critical inheritance of the “narrative turn” in the 1980s educational research, this study proposes the theory of the “second turn” in narrative inquiry for the AI era, constructing a new paradigm of “resisting data alienation” and “reconstructing humanistic narratives.” Centered on technological critique, the “second turn” achieves methodological breakthroughs via threefold paradigmatic innovation. Ontologically, it reveals how AI deconstructs and reconstructs educational experience, shifting narrative ontology from “human-centered experience” to a hybrid intentional existence of “human-technology-experience.” Epistemologically, guided by Feenberg’s secondary instrumentalization, it integrates techno-hermeneutics with Actor-Network Theory (ANT), redefining narrative production as a dynamic negotiation network between humans and technologies. Axiologically, it establishes a dynamic ethical review mechanism by embedding algorithm transparency audits and participatory negotiation procedures into research workflows, safeguarding the emancipatory potential of educational narratives. The practical pathways include transparent human-AI collaborative narrative collection, critically symbiotic human-machine decoding, technology-mediated narrative recreation, and dynamically negotiated ethical evaluation. Ultimately, the “second turn” fulfills dual missions: reconstructing narrative existential depth by resisting data alienation and building narrative resilience, while revolutionizing educational research’s humanistic character through constructing a techno-critical narrative community.

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    Community of Industry and Education: Towards the Institutionalized Construction of Relations Between School and Enterprise
    Guoqing Xu
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (11): 1-12.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.11.001
    Abstract1082)   HTML34)    PDF(pc) (622KB)(1260)       Save

    The “Outline of the Plan for Building a Strong Education Country (2024-2035)” requires “shaping a new form of multi party participation in education and integration of industry and education”. Establishing a community is the main strategy for promoting the integration of industry and education in vocational education, with the aim of institutionalizing cooperation between school and enterprise, and providing institutional guarantees for the construction of a structured practical learning system. This is an inherent logical requirement for the further development of cooperation between school and enterprise in China. The institutionalization of cooperation between school and enterprise is the process of mutual integration of school and enterprise. To promote the integration, it is necessary to stimulate the enthusiasm of enterprises to participate in cooperation between school and enterprise, and more importantly, to build an external driving mechanism. The community of industry and education is an external driving mechanism for the institutionalization of relations of school and enterprise. It is a social organization that operates in a tangible manner. The operational strategies include the government fully stimulating the enthusiasm of enterprises to participate in cooperation between school and enterprise, community management institutions actively promoting the institutionalization of cooperation between school and enterprise, vocational schools actively promoting the development of functions of training in enterprise, and enterprises actively promoting the internalization of training processes. Building a structured practical learning system requires the development of a progressive skills training system, as well as strengthening the construction of vocational qualification and enterprise master certification.

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    Why is It Difficult for Rural Students to Attend Key Universities:The Cultural Reproduction Mechanism of Rural Students and Its Breakthrough
    Yanyan Du, Yining Xu
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (7): 73-85.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.07.006
    Abstract1064)   HTML22)    PDF(pc) (742KB)(3813)       Save

    During the early socialization process, rural students complete the reproduction of underclass culture by internalizing the perspectives of the lower class on the social world and the traits conveyed by “significant others” such as their parents. Influenced by the transmission of cultural capital and the lack of economic capital, natural knowledge is internalized into their individual mental schemas, resulting in a relatively narrow scope of knowledge. The rural linguistic expression and family education culture shape rural students into adopting a “restricted linguistic code.” When peers engage in “transgressive” behaviors, rural students are prone to reproducing subcultures for the sake of “social face.” Due to the influence of paternalism and the lack of capital in rural society, rural students lack a clear understanding of their roles, experience imbalances in interpersonal relationships, and develop lower social adaptability. When parents hold low educational expectations, rural students may doubt their academic competitiveness, leading to diminished future aspirations. To foster “success from humble origins,” it is essential to reshape the rural knowledge field, establish mechanisms for cross-class social interactions, encourage rural students to exercise their agency, and actively integrate into school education to disrupt the reproduction mechanism of underclass culture.

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    The “Chinese Class Headteacher” as a Method: A Possible Paradigm for Autonomous Knowledge Production in Basic Pedagogy within the Context of Modernization
    Xuehong Qi, Fangfang Ren
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2026, 44 (1): 22-33.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2026.01.002
    Abstract1017)   HTML10)    PDF(pc) (773KB)(352)       Save

    In the current field of Chinese humanities and social sciences, there is a paradigm shift from viewing indigenous analytical units as “objects” or “ends” to using them as “methods”. This shift aims to identify analytical units sensitive to capturing Chinese experiences, thereby constructing an autonomous knowledge system that fosters subjectivity and global dialogue. The “Chinese class headteacher” is such a unit, deeply embedded in Chinese basic education in China amid the successive transformations of Chinese path to education modernization. Its development reflects issues like the paradox of division of labor, individual-collective tensions, management myths, and discourse gaps.As a self-revolution in class headteacher research, it requires researchers to reconstruct an overall perspective on “the Chinese class headteacher”, inherit and develop the traditional Chinese academic research qualities and ethical responsibilities of seeking knowledge from facts. The specific practical approach lies in the two-way unfolding of “historicizing present experiences” and “localizing global perspectives”.

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    The Algorithmic Knowing Mode of “Knowing-without-Studying”: The “Way of Reading” of Students Majoring in Humanities and Social Sciences in Research Universities
    Xiaoying Lin, Xiaoyu Wang
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (10): 99-115.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.10.007
    Abstract1011)   HTML37)    PDF(pc) (958KB)(2799)       Save

    “Reading” is a routine academic activity for students majoring in humanities and social sciences in research universities, aiming at acquiring disciplinary knowledge and cultivating the habit of deep thinking. However, in practice, many students possess their own set of “clever reading methods” that can be described as “knowing-without-studying.” This research utilizing qualitative research tools such as interviews and participatory observation examines the reading behaviors of students in the humanities and social sciences at Peking University. It reveals that behind the students’ technicalized learning behaviors lies the demand for “performable abilities” from the audit culture, the demand for “transferable abilities” from the “accelerated society,” and the algorithmic thinking patterns fostered by the computer age. Long-term adoption of “clever reading methods” will prevent students from delving into the texture and interior of knowledge, making it difficult for them to form the crucial comprehension and judgment in the humanities and social sciences. In the process of technicalized learning, they become “tools” carrying a certain algorithm in the technological age. However, the effort saved by their technicalized learning is precisely the core value of humanities and social sciences education. This approach dissolves the educational value of enlightening the mind, which is one of the crises in talent cultivation in contemporary research universities.

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    Can Big Idea-based Teaching Enhance Students’ Competencies?A Design Experiment Based on the “Optimization” Unit in Elementary Mathematics
    Hui Liu, Xiaoying Cai, Yaxuan Xu, Xue Han, Dejiang Zhu, Peng Zhang
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (10): 44-63.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.10.004
    Abstract979)   HTML18)    PDF(pc) (1012KB)(4870)       Save

    Big idea-based teaching is an instructional paradigm that embodies the cultivation of competencies. The core of competencies is to solve real-world problems creatively, which better aligns with the mechanisms of high-road transfer. Guided by the methodology of the design experiment, the study took the “optimization” unit in elementary mathematics as an example. Firstly, the theoretical prototype of big idea-based teaching was refined through lesson study. A comparison was made between big idea-based teaching and conventional teaching from various dimensions of unit teaching, extracting elements and characteristics, and clarifying the model of big idea-based teaching, which was then exemplified. Subsequently, the effectiveness of the big idea-based teaching model was tested through comparative experimental research. The results of multiple regression analysis indicated that big idea-based teaching enhanced students' competencies, which was reflected in the enhancement of their ability for high-road transfer. Further analysis of students with varying levels of mathematical proficiency revealed that this instructional model could markedly improve the competencies of higher-achieving students in the short term and potentially benefit lower-achieving students over time.

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    From Consequence-oriented Utilitarian Education to Responsible Ethical Education with a Balance of Beliefs and Results
    Na Su, Xiaoying Han
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (9): 107-115.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.09.009
    Abstract947)   HTML10)    PDF(pc) (692KB)(235)       Save

    The current excessive utilitarian educational momentum has overly elevated the instrumental value of education, which adversely affects the healthy ecology of education. This utilitarian tendency is also reflected in moral education, which mainly adheres to anthroposocial centrism but without a “human being” in sight. The majority of the judgments of the moral cognition and behavioral results remain in the paper-and-pencil test, and the content of moral education lacks relevance and modernity. The tendency towards utilitarian education is often equated with the idea that education is too “Utilitarian” by all sectors of society, but there are differences and similarities with the theoretical roots of utilitarian education. Under the pressure of reality and the challenges of the times, in order to overcome the shortcomings of utilitarian education, which emphasizes too much on consequences, we need to clarify the theoretical roots of utilitarian education and find a new type of ethical principle to solve the problem of moral education, which makes it difficult to balance the goodness of beliefs and the goodness of results of behaviors. The study concludes that the ethic of responsibility, which takes into account the goodness of motivation and the goodness of results, is the ethical approach that we must follow at present, which can not only overcome the theoretical drawback of utilitarian education that emphasizes too much on consequences, but also extend the human society-centered ethical order to the natural world and future society, and guide the real life world and social practice. In order to solve the problem of utilitarian moral education and to move from utilitarian education, which overly pursues visible educational achievements, to responsibility ethics education, which takes into account both the goodness of beliefs and the goodness of results, it is necessary for all walks of life to make joint efforts to break the ethical constraints of anthropocentrism for sustainable education development, deepen the reform of evaluation, establish a human-centered educational philosophy, and to rectify the phenomenon of over-pursuing visible educational achievements. Meanwhile, it's important to pay attention to learners' existing experience and intrinsic motivation, and face up to the real needs of real life and educational practice.

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    “Rising Above the Gathering Storm”: How China’s Rise Shaped the U.S. STEM Education Strategies and Responses
    Li Deng, Xinyue Lin, Qiuying Miao
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (11): 62-73.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.11.006
    Abstract935)   HTML20)    PDF(pc) (865KB)(345)       Save

    In recent years, China’s rapid rise in the fields of economy, technology, military, education, and global influence has significantly impacted the United States’ STEM education strategy, triggering a heightened sense of crisis and strategic alertness. Based on an analysis of 31 national-level STEM education policy documents issued by the United States between 2001 and 2024, this study identifies five main factors related to China: economic and technological growth, military modernization, a quantitative advantage in STEM talent, leading performance in international assessments, and enhanced global influence. The United States regards China’s rapid development as a systemic challenge and has responded through multiple pathways, including increasing educational investment, optimising domestic talent development mechanisms, attracting international talent, and building a comprehensive STEM education ecosystem, in order to maintain national competitiveness and global leadership. The adjustment of the U.S. STEM education strategy is driven not only by the internal logic of educational reform but also profoundly shaped by international geopolitical competition. Attention should be paid to the political mobilisation purposes underlying the U.S. crisis narratives targeting China. These findings deepen the understanding of education policy adjustment mechanisms in the context of major-power strategic competition and provide theoretical support and policy insights for China in advancing its education powerhouse strategy, strengthening strategic composure, and enhancing international discourse capacity.

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    Digital Inclusion: A Research Report on Digital Teaching Support by East China Normal University
    Yanlei Li, Zemin Liu, Wenjing Zhou, Dan Zhu, Linhua Zhao
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (7): 108-126.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.07.009
    Abstract916)   HTML12)    PDF(pc) (1683KB)(1239)       Save

    To integrate rural education revitalization with digital education strategy and enhance the quality of rural education, the Department of Development Planning, Ministry of Education launched the “Digital Teaching Support to Empower Rural Education” project in 2022. Based on the concept of digital inclusion, East China Normal University organized a team of over 300 faculty members and students to provide one-year digital teaching support services for 10 primary schools in Xundian County, Yunnan Province. Through optimizing digital infrastructure, developing distinctive curriculum resources, and innovating teaching models, the project explored and established a new digital teaching support model featuring government guidance, university assistance, and social participation. This study systematically evaluated the project’s effectiveness in bridging regional digital educational divide and promoting digital inclusion through questionnaire surveys and in-depth interviews. The findings reveal that the digital teaching support project effectively strengthened the foundation for digital transformation of rural schools, enhanced rural teachers’ digital teaching capabilities, and cultivated students’ digital literacy, thus effectively narrowing the regional educational digital divide. Based on these findings, the study suggests that universities should play a demonstrative leading role in promoting digital teaching support as a regular practice in educational services for rural revitalization. Meanwhile, it is necessary to improve policy support and collaborative promotion mechanisms for digital teaching support at the national level. Overall, the digital teaching support project has constructed a new educational assistance model underpinned by infrastructure support, capability enhancement empowerment, and digital resource sharing. This exploration not only provides important implications for advancing China’s educational digital transformation but also contributes Chinese solutions to the global innovation in digital inclusion practices in education.

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    The Impact of Cognitive Challenge and Gaokao Difficulty:A Theoretical Analysis for Selection and Development of Well-Rounded Talents
    Shixin Fang, Yi Lu, Yusen Sheng
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (9): 54-68.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.09.005
    Abstract910)   HTML24)    PDF(pc) (803KB)(680)       Save

    This paper aims to explore the relationship between the difficulty setting of the Gaokao (China’s National College Entrance Examination), ability evaluation, and the quality of national talent selection, in order to enhance the effectiveness of talent cultivation through the Gaokao. Exam difficulty is typically understood as the probability of score deduction, influenced by high cognitive challenges and other factors. Theoretically distinguishing between these factors is crucial for aligning exam evaluation with core competency goals. Based on domestic and international literature and policy documents, this study develops an analytical framework for Gaokao science exam difficulty that emphasizes cognitive challenges. This framework includes aspects such as high-order cognitive challenges, reading duration, language comprehension obstacles, number of knowledge points, computational difficulty, and the function of contextual questions. Using this framework, about 400 physics questions from the Beijing, Shanghai, and National B versions of the Gaokao were quantitatively analyzed and compared. The study attempts to evaluate the types of abilities the Gaokao actually assesses and the extent to which it aligns with China's talent cultivation goals. Findings indicate that in current Gaokao physics questions, computational difficulty and question comprehension pressure are the primary factors affecting score deduction probability, with insufficient assessment of high-order cognitive abilities and limited depth and breadth of knowledge points. The correlation with core competency goals is overestimated. Finally, the paper proposes an ideal model for evaluating the difficulty of Gaokao science questions and discusses the relationship between different types of score deduction probabilities and exam pressure, aiming to improve exam difficulty setting while considering social acceptability.

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    The Spatial Turn and Exploring the History of Educational Space:The Temple of Confucius and School Space in the Song Dynasty as an Example
    Haiyuan Dou
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (11): 107-116.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.11.010
    Abstract875)   HTML12)    PDF(pc) (1011KB)(590)       Save

    The history of educational space is a new field of research in the history of education. Space has gone through three transformations of material space, spiritual space and social space, which eventually led to the triadic space theory integrating materiality, spirituality and sociality, triggering the spatial turn in the field of humanities and social sciences. Influenced by this, the exploration of space in the history of education has also developed from focusing on material space to focusing on the interaction between space and human beings, highlighting the rich connotation of educational space. Taking the temple school space of the Song Dynasty as an example, drawing on the analytical framework of ternary space, the temple school space of the Song Dynasty is divided into the physical space consisting of buildings and artefacts, the symbolic space consisting of architectural nomenclature, sacrificial figures and stone tablets, and the activity space consisting of rituals and learning activities. The triadic space intersects and complements each other, together revealing the basic pattern and nurturing role of the temple school space in the Song Dynasty.

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    Dialogue with President Li Jun of the CSE: From Narrating China’s Educational Stories to Practicing an Autonomous Knowledge System
    Zhou Jing, Jun Li
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2026, 44 (1): 34-43.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2026.01.003
    Abstract870)   HTML5)    PDF(pc) (694KB)(103)       Save

    Amid intensifying global competition for academic discourse power, Chinese education scholars face a strategic imperative: communicating China’s educational narratives and innovating indigenous knowledge production paradigms to transcend “dependent knowledge creation.” Jing Zhou from Fujian Normal University and Jun Li, President of the Chinese Education Association, engaged in a dialogue focusing on educational narrative dissemination, the nexus between narrative and knowledge production, and pathways for emerging interdisciplinary development, reaching profound consensus. Jun Li emphasized that authentically communicating China’s educational stories requires respecting narrative diversity among stakeholders and adhering to the principle of “listening before speaking” alongside the JTB (truth, belief, justification) framework. His practice in constructing an autonomous knowledge system follows the pathway of “educational narrative→knowledge production→disciplinary development.” He proposed institutionalizing disciplines, cultivating international academic influence, and fostering cross-cultural scholarly communities to transform China’s educational experience into a discipline with both local distinctiveness and global relevance, thereby contributing to an independent pedagogical knowledge system.

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    A Study of the Mechanisms Influencing the Development of Teachers’ Curriculum Leadership in the Context of Digital Transformation
    Manqi Qu, Baomin Li, Lingling Gong
    Journal of East China Normal University(Educationa    2025, 43 (7): 96-107.   DOI: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2025.07.008
    Abstract870)   HTML29)    PDF(pc) (676KB)(5092)       Save

    Under the dual background of new curriculum reform and digital transformation of education, the development of primary and secondary school teachers' curriculum leadership is an urgent need to help deepen the implementation of high-quality curriculum reform in the new era, and the influence mechanism of teachers' curriculum leadership development is an important issue worthy of study. Based on the literature and empirical research, this study constructs the hypothesis of the influence path of teacher curriculum leadership in the context of digital transformation, aims to explore the relationship between the nine elements from the three dimensions of the internal structure of teacher curriculum leadership, teachers’ personal traits and the school organizational environment, and uses structural equation modeling to analyze and validate the constructed influence path model and hypotheses, and proposes strategies for the development of teacher curriculum leadership accordingly. The results of the study show that within curriculum leadership in the context of digital transformation, both curriculum leadership cognition and curriculum leadership identity have a significant and positive influence on curriculum leadership practice. In terms of personal attributes, both digital literacy and technology acceptance have a significant and positive influence on curriculum leadership cognition and curriculum leadership identity, respectively. In terms of the organizational environment, curriculum leadership identity, as a complete mediator of the technological environment's influence on curriculum leadership practice, organizational culture had a significant and positive effect on course leader perceptions and course leader identity, respectively. Based on the findings, strategies and suggestions for the development of teachers’ curriculum leadership in the digital era are proposed at three levels: the internal structure of teachers’ curriculum leadership, teachers' personal attributes, and the organizational environment of the school.

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