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Teachers’ emotions and professional identity in curriculum reform: A Chinese perspective

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Abstract

In educational research, emotion has attracted substantial attention since the mid-1990s. While there are many studies of teacher emotion in educational change in the West, there is a remarkable dearth of such studies in China. This qualitative study attempts to address this issue by examining teachers’ emotional experiences in the national curriculum reform of senior secondary education in China. Results indicate that teachers revealed complex emotional responses to the reform. These emotions were related to teachers’ perceptions about the use of new textbooks, teaching approaches, and, more importantly, the uncertain changes in college entrance examinations. Three types of teachers with different emotions and professional identities are identified in the reform (i.e., the losing heart accommodators, the drifting followers, and the cynical performers). These findings highlight the Chinese perspective on teacher emotion and provide some implications for the management of curriculum reform and teacher emotion in the Chinese context.

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Notes

  1. Pseudonyms were used in the three vignettes.

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Correspondence to John Chi-Kin Lee.

Appendix

Appendix

  Losing control on classroom teaching, racing against time in implementation, being disappointed and gradually losing enthusiasm

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Lee, J.CK., Yin, HB. Teachers’ emotions and professional identity in curriculum reform: A Chinese perspective. J Educ Change 12, 25–46 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10833-010-9149-3

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