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US-China Education Review

B
Volume 3, Number 3, March 2013 (Serial Number 22)

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Publication Information: US-China Education Review B (Earlier title: Journal of US-China Education Review, ISSN 1548-6613) is published monthly in hard copy (ISSN 2161-6248) by David Publishing Company located at 9460 Telstar Ave Suite 5, EL Monte, CA 91731, USA. Aims and Scope: US-China Education Review B, a monthly professional academic journal, covers all sorts of education-theory researches on Higher Education, Higher Educational Management, Educational Psychology, Teacher Education, Curriculum and Teaching, Educational Technology, Educational Economics and Management, Educational Theory and Principle, Educational Policy and Administration, Educational Sociology, Educational Methodology, Comparative Education, Vocational and Technical Education, Special Education, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Education, Science Education, Lifelong Learning, Adult Education, Distance Education, Preschool Education, Primary Education, Secondary Education, Art Education, Rural Education, Environmental Education, Health Education, History of Education, Education and Culture, Education Law, Educational Evaluation and Assessment, Physical Education, Educational Consulting, Educational Training, Moral Education, Family Education, as well as other issues. Editorial Board Members: Professor Alexandro Escudero Professor Ghazi M. Ghaith Professor Gner Tural Professor Michael Eskay

Professor Cameron Scott White Professor Gil-Garcia, Ana Professor Lihshing Leigh Wang Professor Peter Hills

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US-China Education Review


B
Volume 3, Number 3, March 2013 (Serial Number 22)

Contents
Teacher Education
A Potential Approach to Support Pre-service Teachers Professional Learning: The Video Analysis of the Authentic Classroom Wang Xiong An Investigation of How Lecturers Teaching Strategies Promote Productive Classroom Interaction Helena Hing Wa Sit 149

162

Educational Policy and Administration


Science Education and the Challenges Facing Its Integration Into the 21st Century School System in a Globalized World: A Case of Igbo Nation Ezeudu F. O., Nkokelonye C. U., Ezeudu S. A. New Method of the Earth Mineral Resources Study at Ilia State University, Georgia Avtandil Okrostsvaridze Home-School Collaboration in Sweden and China Margaretha Kristoffersson, Limin Gu, Yan Zhang 188 183 172

Educational Psychology
Finnish Sauna Behaviors, Dirty or Decent Riitta Parvia 202

US-China Education Review B, ISSN 2161-6248 March 2013, Vol. 3, No. 3, 149-161

D
Classroom
Wang Xiong

DA VID

PUBLISHING

A Potential Approach to Support Pre-service Teachers Professional Learning: The Video Analysis of the Authentic

Shanghai Normal University, Shanghai, China

This article focused on a deeper analysis of pre-service teachers observations of video lessons based on the authentic classrooms across three stages in eight sessions in order to reveal their changes in the abilities to understand pedagogical content knowledge and the effects of specific observation frameworks introduced in the observation sessions. With those aims, we developed the coding schemas at the content and the method level to analyze the pre-service teachers observation reports and reflections. It was found that the video lesson analysis based on the authentic classroom teaching has a great potential to support pre-service teachers professional learning with the appropriate guidance. Keywords: pre-service teacher, professional learning, video lesson

The Significance of the Research


It has been recommended that pre-service teachers should be offered more authentic experiences to prepare them to handle the complexity and challenges of the school context (Darling-Hammond, 1997; Goodlad, 1990; Huling, 1998; National Commission on Excellence in Education, 1983) with the two following assumptions: (1) exposure to examples of teaching creates learning opportunities for pre-service teachers; and (2) through authentic experiences pre-service teachers meld theory into practice (Santagata, Zannoni, & Stigler, 2007). Nevertheless, the previous program for the pre-service teachers professional development was mainly operated to impart the theories on the mathematics education and the experiences abstracted from the teaching practice in Shanghai Normal University. The pre-service teachers have such few opportunities to come into contact with the authentic classroom teaching that they believe that: (1) The theories on the mathematics education are so far away from the teaching practices that they are not useful to serve the future teaching practices of pre-service teachers when they will have been in-service in one or two years; and (2) The experiences abstracted from teaching practices stay only in the master teachers minds but far beyond mine (Huang, 2012). The apparent chasm (Bencze, Hewitt, & Pedretti, 2001) between what often happens in
The outcome of this paper is a part of the achievements of the project The Development and Application of a Method to Research Classroom Based on Discourse Analysis (B12031) funded by Shanghai Municipal Education Commission, and the project The Development and Application of a Method to Research Mathematics Classroom Based on Discourse Analysis (No. SK201209) funded (2012-2013) by Shanghai Normal University. Wang Xiong, Ph.D., associate professor, Mathematics and Science College, Shanghai Normal University.

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university-based teacher education and teaching in schoolsa theory-practice gaphas caused the instructors to shift much of their instructing efforts out of academia and into the usage of case (Koc, Peker, & Osmanoglu, 2009) to provide opportunities for pre-service teachers to apply their theoretical and practical knowledge to classroom contexts (Lundeberg, Levin, & Harrington, 1999). Given the shift challenge, this research has built the pathway to getting the pre-service teachers involved in both observation and analysis of two video lessons for the purposes of facilitating their professional learning. The use of video in teacher preparation programs has progressed from being a means to expose pre-service teachers to specific behaviors to be imitated to a tool for the development of teachers professional judgment. While the video-based teacher learning projects offer promising results, many questions still remain open. On the one hand, many would agree that, unless one has a clear goal in mind, classroom observations can easily turn into messy and unstructured notes. Although most programs provide pre-service teachers with some kind of guidance, the focus varies widely. What counts as effective guidance is still one open question (Santagata et al., 2007). On the other hand, researches that document the knowledge growth and the conceptual changes of pre-service teachers in the learning process are lacking. This paper aims to address the two gaps by analyzing the pre-service teachers learning process in the video lessons analysis activities.

Methods
Videotaped Lessons Two seven-grade mathematics videotaped lessons were chosen to be the case video lessons in this research. The two lessons videotaped by the research team were an experienced teachers authentic classroom teachings in Shanghai Tianlin Middle School, China. Its assumption was to provide an authentic classroom teaching situation for students to analyze the learning activities in the lessons, even without the field observation. The teaching contents of the two lessons were both about the proof strategies in geometric problems. And the two lessons were similarly structured with the aim of learning activities arrangement for pre-service teachers professional learning in the research. The first video lesson would be taken as a learning practical platform on which students were able to obtain the basic skills and knowledge about how to observe and analyze a lesson; while the second one would be done as the field of the acquired skills and knowledge application. Thus, the similar construction of the second lesson to the first one was potential to stimulate students to apply the obtained skills and knowledge within the second lesson situation. Session Organization The whole sessions were grouped into three stages with eight sessions and each session was 80 minutes. Only Chinese was used in the sessions. Stage oneBrainstorming observation and analysis. The first session: Encouraging students to observe the first video lesson which was projected on a big screen. Seventy-six participants who were pre-service teachers majoring in mathematics education of Shanghai Normal University were divided into 19 groups to facilitate the sharing of participants ideas in the observation and the analysis of video lessons. Each member within every group was assigned the specific observation task by the group leader or initiatively took the task. For instance, some members took notes of the lesson sequence, and others focused on the case teachers discourse, and so on. Then, every group uploaded its observations and reflections on the first lesson to the online forum at http://qun.qq.com/air/#141854935 which was built up for the group discussion in the research.

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After the first session, the instructor (the corresponding author) reviewed the reports of every group submitted at the online forum. The results demonstrated that: (1) Participants mainly analyzed the lesson according to their perceptions rather than reliable data collected from the lesson; and (2) Participants were not able to logically express their opinions in their report of lesson observation and analysis. Stage twoThe application of the selected analysis framework. The second session: Offering the pre-service teachers the guidance to the observation of the video lesson. Taking the review results into account, the instructor recommended Hiebert, Carpenter, Fennema, Fuson, Wearne, and Murrays (1997) critical dimensions of mathematics classroom as the classroom observation framework and instructed how to logically express the analysis results. Meanwhile, the instructor presented the excellent groups reports and her own analysis report of the lesson observation. The third session: Encouraging the pre-service teachers to re-observe the first video lesson. The procedure of the observation activity was the same as that of the first session. Its aim was to improve pre-service teachers abilities to observe a lesson and express their viewpoints by application of the classroom observation framework. The fourth session: Reviewing every groups report downloaded from the online forum and presenting the review results. The fifth session: Encouraging pre-service teachers to observe the second video lesson. The procedure of observation was the same as that of the first and the third sessions. This kind of design was conducive to pre-service teachers transformation of their obtained knowledge from the previous sessions to this round observation task. Moreover, the members in each group did not change. Under this situation, it is possible to observe the each members knowledge increase and conceptual changes during the professional learning process through the video lesson observation and analysis. The sixth session: Online discussion. Each group uploaded its report at the online forum. As a facilitator, the instructor encouraged the pre-service teachers to look into the other groups reports and give the feedback on them. The seventh session: Reviewing the group reports on the second video lesson. Stage threeThe refinement of analysis method. The eighth session: Encouraging the pre-service teachers to reflect the whole learning process. A questionnaire was used to exam the pre-service teachers capacities of refining the analysis method on the classroom teaching and their gains and experiences. The questionnaire included the following questions: (1) Explaining how to analyze a mathematical classroom teaching based on your previous learning activities; and (2) Summarizing the knowledge and experiences which you acquired from the previous learning activities. Data Sources The data consisted of the videotaped group discussion, the groups reports, the instructors feedback, and the questionnaires. Videotaping the group discussion was mainly intended to snatch the whole scene of the group discussion. The group reports were downloaded from the online forum and amounted to 44. The instructors feedback contained her own observation report, the reviews of the groups reports, and the instructions in the sessions. The questionnaire was implemented as an exam, and therefore, every participants answer sheet was marked. In addition, participants did not post any substantial comments on the groups reports at the online forum, so we only catch a glance at the data from online forum discussion. Data Analysis The content analysis techniques were utilized (Neuendorf, 2002) to explore the participants knowledge growth and conceptual changes and the effects of analysis frameworks provided for them. In order to capture the pre-service teachers viewpoints and thoughts in the video lesson analysis, the coding schemes based on the

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five-dimensional framework of classroom (Hiebert, Carpenter, Fennema, Fuson, Wearne, & Murray, 1997) were developed at the content and the method level: (1) mathematical task, teachers roles, classroom culture, tools, and accessibility in Table 1; and (2) statement, portion, formalization, and elaboration (including innovation) in Table 2 with the low and the high quality of coders in each dimension. Table 1 The Codes at the Content Level
Codes Mathematical task Teachers roles Classroom culture Tools Accessibility Core features Mathematics problems; Connect with where students are; Leave behind something of mathematical value Select tasks with goals in mind; Share essential information; Establish classroom culture Ideas and methods are valued; Students are encouraged to share their ideas or methods; Mistakes are learning sites for everyone; Correctness resides in mathematical argument Meaning for tools must be constructed by each user; Used with purpose to solve problems; Used for recording, communicating, and thinking Tasks are accessible to all students; Every student is heard and contributes

Table 2 The Codes at the Method Level


Codes Statement Portion Formalization Elaboration Descriptions Score interval The context is expressed without framework and the five-dimensional Low quality: 6064 framework is not applied High quality: 6569 Low quality: 7074 Parts of the five dimensions in the framework are mentioned or discussed High quality: 7579 The five-dimensional framework is applied by rote, but all the five Low quality: 8084 dimensions are mentioned or discussed High quality: 8589 The five-dimensional framework or other reasonable framework is taken as Low quality: 9094 the analysis tool High quality: 95100

Particularly, the participants answer sheets on the Question 1 at stage three were assigned a score by the following procedures: (1) confirming a score interval by looking at the quality in each dimension at the method level (see Table 2). Comments that did not include the certain instances of the video lessons to support the general ideas summarized from the lessons were coded as low quality. Comments that included the certain instances of the video lessons to support the general ideas summarized from the lessons were coded as high quality; and (2) specifying a score within the score interval by looking at the emerging viewpoint amount. The more viewpoints were mentioned or discussed, the higher score were marked within a score interval. Coding Reliability We followed three procedures to ensure coding reliability: Firstly, two coders (the corresponding authors postgraduate students) individually coded the data. Then, we examined the code-matching rate. Initially, we found the matching rate was 67%; Secondly, in order to increase the matching rate, the corresponding author coordinated the disagreements negotiation in a three-way conference by going over every coded message until the coding match rate reached 85%; and Finally, the two coders coded the entire data set maintaining the 85% match rate.

Results
In this section, we provided the results of two types of analysis at the content and the method level. The results were organized into the following three dimensions.

APPROACH TO SUPPORT PRE-SERVICE TEACHERS PROFESSIONAL LEARNING Dimension One: The Shift From Superficial Features to Pedagogical Content Knowledge

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At stage one, the pre-service teachers were encouraged to observe and analyze the first video lesson in their own way in the first session. When they first observed the first video lesson, the pre-service teachers tended to pay a lot of attention to the superficial features in the lesson. Firstly, during the observation process, they kept a watchful eye on the laughable scenarios. For instance, they could not help laughing when they saw a chubby student sitting beside the student who was answering questions, and they also talked about that the case of teachers necktie was slanting; Secondly, in the first group reports, some groups attached importance to the description of the superficial circumstances. For example, of 19 group reports, three focuses on the description of what was going on in the lesson without substantial comments; Another three highlight on the discussion of the characteristics of the case teacher, such as the appropriate dress style, nonstandard mandarin, and the friendly face emotion; Thirdly, in the first group reports, many groups mainly stayed at the superficial perceptions on the five dimensions of the framework. For example, of 19 group reports, two mention the mathematical task in one very short sentence, such as The examples are typical, five mentioned the case teachers roles in one phrase, such as Making the connection between new and previous knowledge and explaining the proof process step by step, two mentioned the classroom culture in one phrase, such as The active interaction between the teacher and students, three mentioned the tools in one phrase, such as The usage of the mini blackboard, and one mentioned the accessibility in two clauses, such as The instruction is vivid and accessible, which is easy for most students to access. Consequently, even those groups mentioned the two, or three, or even four dimensions of the five-dimensional framework, they adopted the very general way to discuss those without the reasoning process from the instances of the lesson. At stage two, firstly, the pre-service teachers were encouraged to re-analyze the first video lesson, and then to analyze the second video lesson with the instructors guidance based on the review of the groups reports and the introduced analysis framework. Under the guidance of the instructor, and finally, the pre-service teachers were able to focus on the analysis of the lesson tasks, the way of the case teacher helping students construct reasoning in the proof, and the students thinking in the interaction between teacher and students, and the tools application, and so on. The specific description was as follows: Firstly, building on their first observation and assimilating the five-dimensional framework, all the groups were able to organize their viewpoints into five dimensions in their second observation of the first lesson. However, the viewpoints were still expressed in very general way, such as Teacher roles: instructing with the targets, stimulating students initiative thinking by pointing out the key points, mobilizing the students interests by question and interaction in the classroom. It was hard to link such viewpoints with the specific scenarios from the lesson. Therefore, it was also difficult to examine how the viewpoints were generalized from the evidences collected from the lesson; Secondly, taking the above situation into account, the instructor presented her own analysis report of the first lesson and explained how to generalize and express the viewpoints based on the specific scenarios from the lesson under the five-dimensional framework. For instance, the core feature of the examples selected in the lesson in the dimension of mathematical task was the emerging variation theory. It could be illustrated by the gradual changes in the structure, the background, the covered knowledge points, the questioning type (open-closed), and the question numbers of the examples. Then, with the features, it is reasonable to understand its significance through the students performance in the examples of learning process. Therefore, the

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viewpoint-variation in the example and its expression-substantial comparison data were written in very coherent way. With the coherent expression way, it was potential to facilitate the pre-service teachers to not only improve their viewpoints expression, but also acquire the deep understanding of the knowledge of mathematical task. The instructors analysis report was available at the online forum; Later on, the pre-service teachers were encouraged to observe and analyze the second video lesson taking the instructors analysis report as a reference. Among 19 groups submitting reports, it was found that 16 groups were able to express their viewpoints in very coherent way in each dimension of the five-dimensional framework. For example, CG (Clover-Four Group) generalized the following six viewpoints in the dimension of teachers roles: (1) helping students go over the previous knowledge; (2) instructing how to prove the two lines perpendicular; (3) guiding students thinking to grasp the concept of the analytical method; (4) helping students to find out the logical starting point of a proof; (5) paying close attention to the students feeling; and (6) summarizing the proof method. Not only were the viewpoints generated well and truly, but also they were illustrated by the specific scenarios from the lesson. For instance, the third viewpoint was illustrated by the learning process of example one which was demonstrated by the photograph of blackboard-writing in the lesson and described by text referring to the black-writing photograph (see Figure 1). In addition, two groups did not complete their reports in very serious way. They simply mentioned some facts from the lesson in their reports without analysis of thinking inclusion. And one group did not submit the report.

Figure 1. The report segment of CG.

Overall, from stage one to stage two, the pre-service teachers were able to observe and analyze the lessons from the focus on the superficial features to an understanding of pedagogical content knowledge with the five-dimensional framework. Dimension Two: The Shift From Illogical Statement to Structured Analysis It was found that the reports of classroom observation at stage one mainly demonstrated illogical feature in the viewpoints expression. Only one of the 19 group reports had sub-titles in the statement of observation. Three of them stated their viewpoints in only one paragraph containing multi-dimensional viewpoints at

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random, such as the report of the ZG (Zhuo Group) (see Figure 2). In the report, we can see that the viewpoints were disorganized based on the emerging codes pattern-mathematical task, teachers roles, classroom culture, teachers roles, teachers roles, mathematical task, accessibility, and teachers roles, in one paragraph. Four groups paragraphed their statements based on group members comments, and five paragraphed their statements based on the following two dimensions: merits and demerits, such as the report of the LG (Life Group) (see Figure 3). In the report, the viewpoints were organized into merits and demerits paragraph. Each paragraph generally mentioned multi-dimensional viewpoints. For example, the merits paragraph contained the following messages: detailed explanation (teachers roles), multi-consideration of students situation (teachers roles), proper organization and linkage of classroom activities (teachers roles), interaction with students (classroom culture), and going over the previous knowledge to deepen students memory at early stage of the lesson (teachers roles).

Figure 2. The report and coding of the ZG.

Figure 3. The report of the LG.

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At stage two, when the groups re-observed and re-analyzed the first lesson, it was found that 16 of 17 groups used the five-dimensional analysis framework to organize their reports (Note: Two groups did not submit their reports). However, seven groups thereof directly adopted the table and its features of the five-dimensional analysis framework to state their comments, such as the report of Lu Group (see Figure 4). It was not difficult to find out that the group tended to fill out the features of each dimension in the table by the general facts abstracted from the lesson. Therefore, to a great extent, such usage of the analysis framework as filling out the table limited pre-service teachers thinking in the analysis of the lesson. The other nine groups were able to elaborate their viewpoints and link them to the specific instances collected from the lesson under the five-dimensions of the analysis framework.

Figure 4. The report of the Lu Group.

More importantly, when the groups observed and analyzed the second video lesson under the instructors guidance, 16 of 19 groups substantially improved the capacities of generalizing and expressing their viewpoints when they used the five-dimensional framework as the analysis tool. For example, in the report of AG (see Figure 5), each dimension led a paragraph and each paragraph discussed one topic that related to the dimension of the analysis framework. Therefore, the analysis framework facilitated the groups to clear up their viewpoints that came out during the lesson observation and analysis. Meanwhile, the analysis framework was able to stimulate the groups to deepen their concepts on the dimensions. For example, as for the dimension of tools, the groups not only discussed the obvious material objects, such as mini blackboard, ruler, and compasses, but also recognized the role of the soft tools. For example, CG considered the role of underscoring the keywords by colored chalk in helping the students understand the problems structures. And the EG (E Group) insightfully recognized the role of the flow charts used in the explanation of problem-solving process in helping the students construct a clear train of thought. Overall, from stage one to stage two, the pre-service teachers were able to demonstrate their viewpoints from illogical statement to structured analysis based on the five-dimensional framework.

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Figure 5. The report of the AG (Ao G.roup).

Dimension Three: The Shift From the Skilled Video Analysis to the Valued Beliefs on Mathematics Teaching At stage three, based on the two previous learning stages, the participants were asked to reflect the whole process of the video analysis activity with the intention to refine the method of analyzing a classroom teaching in the form of exam. Therefore, the collected answering sheets showed the participants independent thinking results. Thus, to some extent, it is possible to examine the individual involvement in the previous learning activities through the statements in the answering sheet. On one hand, it was found that 84.2% participants had set the mind upon applying the five-dimensional framework (including the other created proper frameworks) to analyze a lesson, even 15.8% participants thereof could not completely apply it (see Figure 6). This meant they were capable to refine the analysis method of the classroom teaching from the video lesson analysis process. For example, Miss Xu offered the answer in the following way (see Figure 7): Level oneIf we want to analyze a classroom teaching, we should firstly understand the teaching content and its key pointsThe dimension of mathematical task was taken as a tool to observe a classroom teaching; Level twoFor example, when I observed the first video lesson, it was found that the teaching content-analytical method and synthesized method were clearly wrote down on the blackboardThe facts were selected from previous observation activities to support the dimension; and Level threeIt was very useful to stimulate students to realize the lesson focusThe application of the two methods in the proof problems, which definitely would mobilize their thinkingThe comments based on the facts that were able to indicate the significances of the dimension as a tool to observe a lesson. With such statement pattern, she discussed the other four dimensions of the five-dimensional framework. It was reasonable to confirm that pre-service teacher Xu was able to apply the five-dimensional framework in the methodological perspective and refine the analysis method from the previous activities as the commentsthe clear analysis framework and the exact cases in pointoffered from the instructor at the top of the sheet and her own summarizations in the front of her answeringfrom

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disorganization to proper organized and multi-dimensional framework in the analysis (see Figure 7).

Percentage of People Number

40 30 20 10 0

34.2

34.2

15.8

15.8

90-100

80-90 70-80 Score Interval


Figure 6. The reflection scores.

60-70

Figure 7. The report of the pre-service teacher Xu.

The reflection not only facilitated pre-service teachers to refine the method of observing and analysing a lesson, but also deepened their views on the lesson plan, the students cognition, the interaction between teacher and students, and even the career as a mathematics teacher. For example, as for the lesson plan, Mr. Jin believed that a teacher should consider the selected examples in variation theory at the lesson plan stage and Miss Yang stated that a teacher should fully prepare himself for a lesson before it started in terms of the teaching content, the predicable students difficulties, and the full mind state. As for the students cognition, Mr. Sun suggested that teaching was to help students find out the solution when they confronted a new problem, not only impart to them the new concept or problem-solving skill. And Miss Li further indicated that a teacher should pay close attention to not only the students cognitive situation but psychological health as well. For example, if a student could not answer a question, the teacher should encourage the student to further his/her thinking by offering some prompts, which was able to build the students confidence. Likewise, Mr. Ye mentioned that an active interaction between teacher and students would exalt students learning interests. More importantly, as for the teachers career, 98% pre-service teachers in their reflections stated that being a

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mathematics teacher was not easy and should pay close attention to a lot of things, because even a very tiny detail could greatly influence students thinking, sentiment, and psychology. Moreover, they were going to do their best to promote their professional levels.

Conclusions
We contend that the video lesson analysis based on the authentic classroom teaching has a great potential to support pre-service teachers professional learning with the five-dimensional framework. Firstly, learning how to analyze a classroom teaching: Knowing how to analyze a classroom teaching was not only indicated from the reports of the pre-service teachers, but also reflected from their concepts on the classroom teaching. For example, in the reflection, Miss Qian stated that:
I, who never paid attention to how teacher instruct and how he or she select examples, began to critically and analytically look at a mathematical classroom teaching. This was a big change for me.

Liu said:
Firstly, what I have learned was four Ws: how-how to analyze; what-what would be analyzed; where-where would start from; and why-why we can analyze like this; and Secondly, before as a good teacher, knowing how to observe a lesson was crucial to matter in terms of a higher start point we could stand.

Cheng summarized such detailed facts as:


Initiatively, I thought observing a classroom teaching was nothing but to talk about personal ideas. However, from the instructors review of our group report, we found there were so many mistakes made even in a very short context, such as inappropriate title, the disorder context arrangement, the missing citation, and so on. More importantly, the alacritous analysis framework as a useful too was learned to apply during the review process. The impressed scenario was the instructor classified our reports of applying the analysis framework to observe the lessons into such categories as appropriate application, ill-application, and abused application and explained every report in terms of the role of the analysis framework.

And he further summarized that:


Overall, from the review process, I knew what was appropriate and what should be improved.

Secondly, understanding the pedagogical knowledge: Through the video lesson analysis process, the pre-service teachers were able to understand the pedagogical knowledge in the lesson context. For example, in the reflection, Mr. Yan realized that:
Qualification of being a teacher firstly helps students understand the taught content in their acceptable ways as the case teachers have done in the lessons. The case teacher could figure out the difficulties and misunderstandings of students confronting to the new knowledge and stimulate students thinking to overcome them from the students perspective.

In addition, Mr. Yan made it clear that:


Teaching was not a person matter, but a communication between teacher and students that tender not only students to concentrate on the learning activities, but also teacher to know well students participation and understanding.

While Miss Gan mentioned that:


What made me deeply impressed were the examples selected in the lessons. There were only three examples in a

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lesson, but it took the case teacher a lot of time, energies, and thinking to arrange them in terms of their construction, knowledge covering, the question style, and so on.

Mr. Nan draw a conclusion that:


Such analysis activities make us realize that providing a good classroom teaching needs to embody a lot of such characteristics as favorable thinking, active students participation, powerful personalities, and strong articulation, which we should pursue in our current learning, or even long-life learning.

Thirdly, making the connection between theory and practice: In addition to the positive reaction to the application of the five-dimensional framework, the pre-service teachers were able to examine the specific scenarios from the theories that they have learned before the sessions. For example, in the reflection, Miss Yang said:
I knew better about Freudenthals thought of mathematics education and Polyas conception on problem-solving. Before I did not understand their significances very well. However, through these analysis activities, I could understand them in the lesson situation. For instance, I understood the function that the case teacher did not adopt the direct instruction but piloted students to solving the problems by themselves was to provide students more creation space in terms of Freudenthals re-creation thought.

Miss Dai added that:


The active learning in Polyas conception on problem-solving was performed by such facts as students independently thinking and discussion with classmates in the lessons. Teaching was not a matter of imparting.

Mr. Chen summarized that:


The theories in the practices were easy to understand and apply them, but we owned such few chances that we always understand them from textbooks. However, this time, our instructor provided us with such chances by encouraging and guiding us to analyze the video lessons.

Fourthly, valuing the beliefs of being a teacher: The pre-service teachers not only realized the challenges but also orientate the process of being a successful mathematics teacher. For example, Mr. Jin noted that:
In the analysis activities, I really experienced that a classroom teaching needs to go through so many complexities. Meanwhile, I realized my insufficient knowledge and unsophisticated thinking to be a qualified teacher. So, these analysis activities directed our way to be a qualified teacher.

Miss Xu offered a detailed experience that:


Before I only knew teaching was to completely impart teachers knowledge to students. However, now I realized it was not so simple. Teaching was a process. While teacher played a crucial role in the process. Such matters as instructing methods, students participation, and students performances, and so on, were the key indicators of valuing the classroom teaching effects. For per-service teachers, learning from the analysis of experienced teachers authentic lessons was essential to deeply understand the meaning of being a teacher.

Nevertheless, the online forum did not substantially stimulate students group discussion. After submitted the group reports, the whole group did not give any substantial feedback to other groups reports. Therefore, we still find it necessary to explore how to more effectively implement the video case analysis in pre-service teachers professional learning than before in the future researches.

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References
Bencze, L., Hewitt, J., & Pedretti, E. (2001). Multi-media case methods in pre-service science education: Enabling an apprenticeship for praxis. Research in Science Education, 31, 191-209. Darling-Hammond, L. (1997). Doing what matters most: Investing in quality teaching. New York: National Commission on Teaching & Americas Future. Goodlad, J. I. (1990). Teachers for our nations schools. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Hiebert, J., Carpenter, T. P., Fennema, E., Fuson, K. C., Wearne, D., & Murray, H. (1997). Making sense: Teaching and learning mathematics with understanding. Portsmouth, N. H.: Heinemann. Huang, H. (2012). The cultivation of pre-serive teachersA case from the major of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics (teacher-training) in Shanghai Normal University (Unpublished masters thesis, Shanghai Normal University). Huling, L. (1998). Early field experiences in teacher education. Washington, D. C.: ERIC Clearinghouse on Teaching and Teacher Education. Koc, Y., Peker, D., & Osmanoglu, A. (2009). Supporting teacher professional development through online video case study discussions: An assemblage of pre-service and in-service teachers and the case teacher. Teaching and Teacher Education, 25(8), 1158-1168. Lundeberg, M. A., Levin, B. B., & Harrington, H. L. (1999). Who learns what from cases and how? The research base for teaching and learning with cases. Mahwah, N. J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. National Commission on Excellence in Education. (1983). A Nation at risk: The imperative for education reform. Washington, D. C.: U.S. Department of Education. Neuendorf, K. A. (2002). The content analysis guidebook. Thousand Oaks, C. A.: Sage Publications. Santagata, R., Zannoni, C., & Stigler, W. J. (2007). The role of lesson analysis in pre-service teacher education: An empirical investigation of teacher learning from a virtual video-based field experience. Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 10(2), 123-140.

US-China Education Review B, ISSN 2161-6248 March 2013, Vol. 3, No. 3, 162-171

DA VID

PUBLISHING

An Investigation of How Lecturers Teaching Strategies Promote Productive Classroom Interaction


Helena Hing Wa Sit
Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia

Both the Mainland and Hong Kong have witnessed the trend of educational internationalisation since the handover. The recruitment of non-local students is regarded as an important strategy to internalise universities in Hong Kong. Within Hong Kongs western-style educational setting, an increasing number of Mainland students attracted by the English-medium education and widely adopted western-oriented pedagogy have become the majority non-local students. Studies explored the adjustment experiences of Mainland students to study in Hong Kong and found evidence that the adjustment of the host group was as difficult as the sojourning group did in classroom interaction. Nevertheless, limited research examines the role of teachers in promoting interaction between diverse learners from pedagogical perspective. Effective teaching strategies can enhance positive classroom interaction. There is substantial literature within disciplines, such as healthcare, economics, and teacher education, but there is little investigation of effective strategies in English that studies as a discipline, particularly, in the new context of the HKSAR (Hong Kong Special Administrative Region), PRC (Peoples Republic of China). This paper attempted to investigate how lecturers teaching strategies promoted productive interaction through surveys in the discipline of English. The results should have implications for other worldwide institutions other than Hong Kong involved in enhancing quality teaching and learning in higher education. Keywords: higher education, teaching strategies, cross-cultural teaching and learning, English studies

Context of the Study


Having had British colonial regime for over a century, Hong Kong as a special administrative region was reunited with the PRC (Peoples Republic of China) in 1997. Due to the closer relationship between Hong Kong and Mainland China, a set of strategic collaborative programs across all fronts including education as one of the main public services have been broadened and deepened. In particular, the UGC (University Grants Committee) (2011), a local funding body that sponsors the Hong Kong public-funded institutions and offers expert advice to the government on higher education has set up the goal of attracting and retaining high quality of non-local students to study and live in Hong Kong to further internationalize its higher education sector. In terms of the student resources of Hong Kongs higher education, a significant change has also occurred. Hong Kong attempts to do whatever the government could to link with the Mainland including education. In the late 1990s, only several hundred talented Mainland Chinese undergraduates on scholarship were brought into Hong Kongs universities to study (Shive, 2005). From then on, more Mainland students were recruited by many local graduate programs. So far the non-local student quota for publicly-funded programs has been raised

Helena Hing Wa Sit, lecturer, Ph.D., Learning and Teaching Centre, Macquarie University.

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from 10% to 20%. Currently, the Mainland Chinese students have become the majority of non-local students in Hong Kong higher education (UGC, 2011). Other non-local students are from South-Asian countries (e.g., Indonesia, Japan, and Malaysia), European countries (e.g., UK, Italy, and Spain), North America, and Australia. In the academic year of 2010/2011, 8,713 full-time Mainland Chinese (out of 10,074 non-local students) accounted for approximately 90% of the total student population. As a result, how to enhance quality teaching and learning has drawn academics attention when facing students diversity and cultural inclusivity. To implement the project in a manageable way, this study only focused on the Mainland students as the largest non-local student source. Previous cross-cultural teaching and learning studies conducted in Hong Kong can be generally classified as two main research streams. The one is concerned with Hong Kong Chinese background students. For example, Watkins and Biggs (2001) examined the Hong Kong students learning approaches and challenged the paradox of Chinese surface learning; Kember (2001) learned the process of teaching and learning as a factor in Hong Kong students adjusting to study in higher education. The other focuses more with newly arrived Mainland Chinese background students. For instance, recent research studied Mainland Chinese students acculturation experiences (Zeng, 2006) and their shifts in English learning strategy use in the host university in Hong Kong (Gao, 2007). Only a few studies have drawn attention on both groups of students. As a result, another new research stream is become available. Examples can be seen from the research that compared learning approach use between Hong Kong and Mainland construction engineering students in Hong Kong and Mainland China (Leung, Li, Fang, X. H. Lu, & M. Lu, 2006), but it did not discuss these samples learning situations in the same context of Hong Kong. When the adjustment experiences of a group of Mainland undergraduate students from the first cohort to study in a university of Hong Kong in 1999, Lam (2006) unexpectedly found evidence that the adjustment of the host group was as difficult as the adjustment of the sojourning group due to their different social, cultural, and educational experiences. However, the study did not examine the role of a teacher in promoting positive interaction between diverse learners from pedagogical point of view. This study reported an investigation of the lecturers preferences for teaching strategies at universities in Hong Kong and how these strategies promoted productive classroom interaction. To date, there is a small body of research which deals with teaching strategies for advanced learners of English in Hong Kongs universities although methods of teaching English have been repeatedly discussed in language education in Hong Kong. This study focused on teaching strategies that promoted interactions between Mainland Chinese students and local Hong Kong students at the senior level of learning disciplines in English.

Research Methods
The taxonomy of teaching strategies proposed by Killen (1998) was used as the framework design for the study. In general, the seven commonly used teaching strategies in western contexts: DI (direct instruction), CD (classroom discussion), SGW (small group work), CL (cooperative learning), PS (problem-solving), SR (student research), and PA (performance activities) are described to effectively facilitate students to learn and to interact. A study conducted by Sit (2012) has identified that their existence and frequency of use in the discipline of English in Hong Kongs universities. Following this trend, this study aimed to find evidence on the effectiveness of these strategies for enhancing classroom interaction within the learning environment of Hong Kong.

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To gain an understanding of lecturers attitudes towards teaching diverse advanced English students, a survey as quantitative data collection procedure was designed to identify teachers preferences for strategies and examining the effectiveness of these strategies for promoting classroom interaction. Survey research can help the researcher to generalize a numeric description of a specific sample, characteristics, attitudes, perceptions, or opinions on a particular issue to the wider population. There is an economy of the design and the rapid turnaround in data collection (Creswell, 2009, p. 146) and the ability to tap the subjective feelings of the public (Fowler, 2002, p. 2). This study was conducted in the English departments, the HKU (University of Hong Kong) and HKIEd (Hong Kong Institute of Education). HKU is a leading comprehensive university while HKIEd is an inclusive educational institution focusing on teacher training and development. Both the two universities have an increasing number of local and Mainland students applying for first-year-first-degree places (EDBThe Education Bureau, 2007). Two sets of data will allow a comparative analysis. Table 1 HKU Participants Surveyed
No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Gender Female Female Male Male Male Male Female Female Female Female Female Level of course Year 2 and 3 Year 2 and 3 Year 2 Year 2 and 3 Year 2 and 3 Year 1 and 2 Year 1 Year 2 Year 1 Year 1 Year 1 Years of teaching More than 10 years 13 years More than 10 years More than 10 years More than 10 years 46 years 46 years 13 years 13 years 46 years 46 years Role in the course Lecturing Coordinating and lecturing Lecturing Coordinating and lecturing Lecturing Lecturing and tutoring Lecturing and tutoring Lecturing Lecturing Lecturing Lecturing and tutoring English native speaker No Yes Yes No No No No No Yes No Yes

Table 2 HKIEd Teachers Surveyed


No. 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Gender Male Male Male Male Male Male Female Female Female Female Female Level of course Year 2 Year 1 Year 2 and 3 Year 1 Year 1 Year 1 Year 1 Year 2 Year 2 and 3 Year 1 and 2 Year 2 Years of teaching More than 10 years 13 years More than 10 years More than 10 years 46 years 13 years 13 years 46 years More than 10 years More than 10 years More than 10 years Role in the course Lecturing and tutoring Lecturing and tutoring Coordinating, lecturing, and tutoring Lecturing and tutoring Coordinating, lecturing, and tutoring Lecturing and tutoring Coordinating, lecturing, and tutoring Lecturing and tutoring Lecturing Lecturing and tutoring Coordinating, lecturing, and tutoring English native speaker No Yes Yes No No No Yes No No Yes No

The participants were teachers who were teaching an undergraduate course in the English Departments of HKU and HKIEd. Of the total 36 academics sampled, 22 (11 at HKU and 11 at HKIEd) completed the questionnaires posted to them and the response rate was 61%. The researcher was aware of the limitation of

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survey for a small number of subjects. Since the data collected in a small sample size, any results must be accepted with a caution. Tables 1 and 2 summarize background information of the subjects. Tables 1 and 2 show that each institution consisted of 36% of the subjects speaking English as their mother-tongue. They were from English-speaking or European countries while the remainders were from Hong Kong or Mainland China. Ten (out of 22) academics were experienced lecturers, because they had already gained more than 10 years of lecturing and tutoring experience. The rest were either novice teachers or short-term contract teaching fellows.

Study Results
All the participants responded to the questionnaire that was designed to scrutinize the seven teaching strategies identified by Killen (1998), so that teachers preferences for these strategies could be revealed. With a purpose to check students interaction from the eyes of lecturers, the other section of the survey was concerned with classroom interaction and teaching strategies that promoted communication between these two groups of students. The data were processed by SPSS (Statistical Program for Social Sciences) software to generate means and SD (standard deviations). T-tests were conducted to look for differences in response between the institutions. With regard to gender, educational backgrounds, and teaching experience, the quantitative statistical results could not provide much significant or valuable evidence because of the limited number of subjects. Preferences to Use Teaching Strategies This section of questionnaire was designed to investigate the teaching strategies preferred by the teachers. Table 1 summarizes the responses from the participants in terms of their preferences for each teaching strategy. The question includes statements in relation to seven individual strategies and requires participants to give their opinions by indicating their agreement or disagreement on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (Strongly disagree) to 5 (Strongly agree). These items and relevant indicators are listed below:
(1) DII prefer direct instruction because it is very effective for teaching fundamental concepts or knowledge of the subject. It allows me to convey a large amount of information in a relatively short time; (2) CDI prefer classroom discussion because it can involve students in learning actively, motivate them to express ideas, and help enhance their social communication means, such as listening, speaking politely, and respecting others views; (3) SGWI prefer small group work because it can help students exchange ideas from diverse perspectives, deepen their understanding of course content, improve their communication skills, and increase their active participation in learning; (4) CLI prefer cooperative learning because it can encourage students to achieve a desired task cooperatively. It not only helps students to share responsibilities for their own learning, but it also enhances the learning of other group members; (5) PSI prefer problem-solving because it helps develop students critical thinking skills, resourcefulness, independence, and self-confidence and their ability to apply knowledge to some real-world situations; (6) SRI prefer student research because it can enable students to develop a deep understanding of the subject and develop their organizational and time-management skills; (7) PAI prefer performance activity because it can engage students in learning activities and provide them with opportunities to develop their communication skills.

The above items and statements were used as indicators of preference and reasons for preference. The use of a 5-point Likert scale resulted in statistically comparable results (see Table 3).

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Table 3 Preferences to Use Teaching Strategies at HKU and HKIEd


Preferences for teaching strategies DI CD SGW CL PS SR PA Mean 3.81 4.27 3.63 3.82 4.18 4.27 3.45 HKU (n = 11) SD 0.75 0.47 0.92 0.75 0.60 0.65 0.69 Mean 3.54 4.18 4.27 4.18 3.55 3.27 3.82 HKIEd (n = 11) SD 1.04 0.87 0.47 0.60 1.04 1.27 0.75 T-test (Sig.) ns ns ns ns ns t = 2.32* ns

Notes. * p < 0.05; ns = non-significant.

On the HKU site, preferences for SR (4.27) and CD (4.27) were rated as the highest. Preference for PS (4.18) was also high but PA (3.45) was the lowest. On the HKIEd site, the results showed that SGW (4.27), CD (4.18), and CL (4.18) were highly rated, but SR (3.27) gained the lowest rate. The t-values of preferences for most teaching strategies except for SR were more than 0.05. No major differences were found between the two institutions. However, preference for SR was estimated as t = 2.32, p < 0.05. This showed that there was a significant gap between the two research sites. The HKU group was more enthusiastic on SR than the HKIEd group. Classroom InteractionHow Classes Are Conducted A question surveyed the participants responses on classroom interaction. They needed to consider how they conducted their classes to promote interaction between Mainland and Hong Kong students and rate the items on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (Strongly disagree) to 5 (Strongly agree). Five items are listed as:
(1) LecturingLecturing is used as a major means of communication with students in my classroom; (2) Students with different cultural backgrounds working togetherStudents with different cultural backgrounds are encouraged to work together to generate ideas or opinions; (3) Mainland and Hong Kong students participate in classBoth Mainland students and Hong Kong students participate in class activities by raising questions and expressing their ideas; (4) Mainland and Hong Kong students cooperate in classMainland students and Hong Kong students interact and cooperate well in most collaborative classroom activities; (5) Mainland and Hong Kong students have troubles in interactionWhen Mainland students and Hong Kong students meet each other in class, they communicate less than when they are with other Mainland or Hong Kong students.

Table 4 shows the overall picture of students interaction. Table 4 Classroom Interaction Between Mainland and Hong Kong Students
Classroom interaction between Mainland and Hong Kong students Lecturing Students with different cultural backgrounds working together Mainland and Hong Kong students participate in class Mainland and Hong Kong students cooperate in class Mainland and Hong Kong students have troubles in interaction Notes. * p < 0.05; ns = non-significant. HKU (n = 11) Mean 3.18 3.73 2.91 3.64 2.90 SD 1.17 0.65 1.38 0.67 0.74 HKIEd (n = 11) Mean SD 3.27 1.01 3.82 1.08 3.81 0.75 3.09 0.83 3.73 0.90 T-test (Sig.) ns ns ns ns t = -2.31*

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The numbers displayed in the table indicated that there was no striking difference between the HKU and HKIEd groups with respect to the first four items. The first item about encouraging Mainland and Hong Kong student to work together by the HKU group (3.73) and the HKIEd group (3.82) was the strongest response. There was an obvious gap between HKU (2.90) and HKIEd (3.73) in terms of the last item indicating Mainland and Hong Kong students had troubles in interaction. The t-value (t = -2.31, p < 0.05) provided sufficient evidence that the HKIEd group of teachers found more problems in relation to the interaction between Mainland and Hong Kong students than the HKU group did. The rate of agreement on cooperation between Mainland and Hong Kong students in class at HKIEd (3.09) was also statistically lower than that of HKU (3.64). However, not many written responses were added to the open space of the question. Only one teacher at HKIEd expanded the reason pertaining to the problems with Mainland and Hong Kong students interaction. It was reflected that this might depend on the student composition of the two groups of students because one teacher reported that if there were fewer Mainland students in class, they would mix more with the local students. Classroom Interaction-Effective Strategies to Promote Interaction The participants answered a question which required them to report what teaching strategies should be effective for promoting productive classroom interaction. Again, their responses varied on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (Strongly disagree) to 5 (Strongly agree). Table 5 shows their ratings. Table 5 Effective Strategies to Promote Interaction
Effective teaching strategies DI CD SGW CL PS SR PA HKU (n = 11) Mean 3.45 4.36 3.73 3.73 3.91 3.64 4.00 SD 1.29 0.50 0.65 0.65 0.54 0.67 0.63 Mean 3.00 4.18 4.27 4.09 3.91 3.91 3.82 HKIEd (n = 11) SD 1.26 0.40 0.47 0.83 0.54 0.70 0.98 T-test (Sig.) ns ns t = -2.27* ns ns ns ns

Notes. * p < 0.05; ns = non-significant.

In general, the participants at HKU and HKIEd found that teaching strategies including CD, SWG, CL, PS, SR, and PA were more effective than DI to promote classroom interaction. Particularly, CD (4.36), PA (4.00), and PS (3.91) got the first three high ranks at HKU. SWG (4.27), CD (4.18), and CL (4.09) ranked highly at HKIEd. Except for SGW (t = -2.27, p < 0.05), t-tests found no significant difference between the two institutions for other strategies. This gap showed that the HKIEd favored SGW than the HKU group. As to the reasons behind this gap, analysis would be made in the discussion section. Four lecturers from HKIEd wrote down their additional opinions about effective teaching strategies to enhance productive classroom interaction. Other helpful strategies, such as weekly feedback online and biographical sharing were recommended to give students an opportunity to ask questions, which is not always possible in or after class. These comments seemed to illustrate that teachers at HKIEd were more enthusiastic in considering more effective strategies beyond those seven checked in this study.

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Discussion
On the whole, all the participants were keen to use these seven strategies. The majority had greater preferences for student-centred teaching strategies including CD, SGW, CL, PS, SR, and PA. This tendency might derive from their educational backgrounds and qualifications. Most teachers in this current study were academics trained internationally and received their Ph.D. degrees in western countries where student-centred teaching practices are widely used and emphasised. Most teachers in this study may expect students to construct knowledge by themselves rather than rely on teachers transmissive knowledge. Therefore, students acquisition of independent study skills was more valued. Westwood (2008) claimed that student-centred teaching strategies are necessary to empower learners with great autonomy and to establish collaborative work with others. The statistics showed that whether the participants were English native speakers or not, they had been strongly influenced by the rationales of student-centred approaches. Teachers tended to expect students to learn through their firsthand experience. This was also consistent with Hong Kongs western style higher education sector that emphasizes on autonomous learning and independent thinking. As such, the frequencies of using student-centred strategies at the two institutions were higher than direct instruction which is more teacher-centred. In addition, the quantitative data indicated that the two groups of participants had different preferences for some specific student-centred teaching strategies. For example, the HKU group was keen on SR while the HKIEd group favoured SGW more. Context of teaching and learning might account for differences between the two sites. In the highly research-orientated environment of HKU, research capability and academic insights are particularly valued (School of English-HKU, 2009). The teachers at HKU tended to emphasize the scholarship of subject matter in English studies. The written response from the HKU group stated explicitly that analyzing data as a research activity was also used as an alternative strategy. By contrast, the teachers at HKIEd were inclined to pay more attention to the professional development of students since their main responsibility is preparing new teachers for the workforce. Teaching competence is a major concern in teacher training institutions because teachers are playing a role model for students. Most HKIEd teachers hold a teaching qualification in addition to an academic higher degree. They have been trained in how to use various teaching strategies effectively apart from a command of academic side of subject matter. Their written response could be a good reflection of this point. Providing class time for SGW may have provided students with opportunities to use this teaching strategy and to understand the value of the student-centred approach. As a result, the contexts of teaching and learning in the two research sites are different. The institutional culture and the composition of the teachers with various academic and teaching qualifications could be the contributing factors to the preference of using some specific teaching strategies. The other noteworthy point was related to classroom interaction, especially the communication between Mainland and Hong Kong students through the teachers eyes. The interaction difficulties raised by the HKIEd participants were bigger than the HKU teachers. To some extent, this could be linked with student minority status or majority status in class. Liu (2002) concluded that Mainland students with their minority status in American classrooms were inclined to keep silence as a means of self-protection or as a sign to express their agreement and harmony with the majority of local students. During classroom communication and interaction, it was natural for them to work as a subordinate group when interacting with the dominant social group usually enjoying more power over the minority groups. Similarly, student composition of Mainland and Hong Kong

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students at HKU and HKIEd might be a factor that affects their interaction. The confident Hong Kong students with higher self-esteem tended to place themselves in a more favourable position in terms of the power relations with Mainland students. Although HKU is one of the most prestigious comprehensive institutions, attracting the largest population of Mainland students (UGC, 2011), it had relatively less Mainland students studying in the Department of English. In the observed lessons for this study, only a few had some Mainland students. For example, 16 out of 117 students in a mass lecture were from the Mainland and accounted for 13% of the total class population. Major selection could be considered as a reason behind this. In accordance with the employment statistics in Hong Kong, more than 50% of Mainland university graduates worked in Hong Kong in 2009 and the financial services industry were their largest employer (EIC, 2010). It would be easier for most Mainland students to choose careers, such as business, medicine, information technology, and media in Hong Kong (Qiu & Lin, 2010). One of the HKU teachers also noticed that the degree of interaction between Mainland and Hong Kong students seemed to depend on the number of Mainland students among the host students. If there were fewer of them, they needed to mix more with local students. Due to their minority status, Mainland students tended to follow the mainstream in class activities. Furthermore, their presence often drew little attention from the majority, namely, large numbers of Hong Kong students. In this sense, conflicts between students might be invisible. By contrast, the Department of English at HKIEd recruited a large number of Mainland students. In the recent academic years, over 57% of the student intake in the department was Mainland undergraduates studying English language teacher education programs (Gao & Trent, 2009). The majority of the visited classes were predominantly Mainland Chinese (with Hong Kong students becoming minority) and some comprised half Mainland and half Hong Kong students. This kind of student body indicated that the English language teaching profession was also highly attractive to a great number of Mainland and Hong Kong students. Employment may direct such a choice. Both research sites may compete not only academically, but also in graduate employment. Teaching is a highly respectable profession in traditional Chinese culture and English language teaching is today considered a prestigious occupation. In 2005, teaching was rated as the third most desirable profession by Hong Kong local secondary school students among 20 careers (Lai et al., 2005). To most Mainland students who want to work in or migrate to Hong Kong, studying a four-year-language education program can be helpful, because the immigration policy requires them to spend at least seven years on permanent residency, with monthly starting salary no lower than HK$11,000 (EIC, 2010). Statistics show that HKIEd graduates excelled and achieved full employment at 100% in 2009, earning an average monthly salary of HK$18,014 (HKIEd, 2010). As a result, more and more Mainland and Hong Kong students tend to choose language education, because it can not only improve their English competence, but also help them to get a job easily. As such, both majority and minority should have an impact on students interaction. Mainland students had become a majority group in class. In other words, they could also exercise power over subordinate groups and form their own mainstream of learning and communication. Some lecturers from both research sites found that getting Mainland and Hong Kong students to interact was hard because seldom did they talk with each other until it was required. The two groups of students preferred to stick to their own groups. However, the more the two groups of students worked separately, the less Mainland and Hong Kong mixed groups would be

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formed and therefore less interaction would occur. Strategies should be made on how to improve interaction between diverse learners. As recommendations written by five lecturers, consciously mixing Hong Kong and Mainland students when assigning small group tasks or group projects should be helpful to positive interaction. Such mandatory mixed grouping could be done randomly in a non-face-threatening manner, e.g., assigning a number (of 1, 2, 310) to each student, and let all students with the same number get together in groups. Two lecturers suggested that an effort should be made to inspire the groups to realise that they shared a lot in common and they could learn many things from each other by positive interaction. In this sense, lecturers should not form any stereotypes nor show any prejudice towards either Mainland or Hong Kong students. Rather, they should try to avoid any judgemental remarks on cultures of the Mainland and Hong Kong. Consequently, it would be helpful for teachers to take a Confucian point of view: Harmony in diversity or unity with variation () to teach their culturally mixed classes.

Conclusions and Implications


In conclusion, several points could be drawn from the survey findings. First, two important facts revealed were lectures at HKU used more CD than those at HKIEd and the HKU group was more enthusiastic about SR than the HKIEd group. There was significant evidence for a conclusion that research-orientated HKU stressed on the importance of using student-centered teaching strategies while HKIEd, as a teaching training institution, emphasized on a variety of teaching strategies. This conclusion was further supported by the finding that the teachers surveyed at HKIEd were more inclined to use more sorts of teaching strategies than HKU. There was a significant gap between the two research sites. Regardless of the gap, the small-scale quantitative data also demonstrated a common feature of the two research sites: The majority of participants preferred teaching strategies that were more student-centred. Second, in terms of interaction, the HKIEd group found more problems in relation to the interaction between Mainland and Hong Kong students than the HKU group did. The rate of agreement on cooperation between Mainland and Hong Kong students in class at HKIEd was also statistically lower than that of HKU left a doubtful contributing factor: the student composition. In this study, analysis indicated that student numbers in each group would affect their interaction patterns. The number of students enrolment in the different institutions might be a cause of the difference. Not much conclusion could be made at this stage, but it did raise a good point for a future study. Although difficulties concerned with communication between Mainland and Hong Kong students were raised, several participants suggested using mixed group work to get students speak up. These strategies also need to be further investigated to see whether mixing students up would be incorporated in the classrooms and how effective it would be through other research methods, such as on-site classroom observation and in-depth follow-up interview. Lastly, the study was limited to a relatively small number of subjects, but the statistical evidence should provide a general picture of teachers perceptions and preferences for strategy use in their teaching. Overall, the survey should cover a wide range of teachers who were responsible for a variety of disciplines of English Studies though the study only involved two higher education institutions in Hong Kong. The results may have implications for other worldwide institutions other than Hong Kong involved in enhancing quality teaching and learning in higher education.

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References
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US-China Education Review B, ISSN 2161-6248 March 2013, Vol. 3, No. 3, 172-182

DA VID

PUBLISHING

Science Education and the Challenges Facing Its Integration Into the 21st Century School System in a Globalized World: A Case of Igbo Nation
Ezeudu F. O., Nkokelonye C. U., Ezeudu S. A.
University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Nigeria

This paper is a study of historical foundations of science education in Igboland, its nature and scope as well as the challenges facing its integration into the 21st century school system in a globalized world. The authors found that there were many scientific activities in Igbo culture, but many problems hinder their integration into the basic needs of modern society. For instance, imposing the needs of a globalized world of the 21st century on modernized African (Igbo) science is like imposing industrial chemistry on non-industrialized society. Implications of the findings were discussed in this paper. Keywords: science education, globalization, Igboland, Igbo culture, Igbo metaphysics, Igbo science, indigenous Igbo ideologies, western education in Igbo land

The Purpose of the Study


The purpose of this study is to identify scientific activities in pre-colonial Igbo society and show how these could be integrated into the school system. The paper also explored/examined the extent these indigenous science process skills can be harnessed to meet the challenges of globalization. Specifically, the study shall be investigating the following: (1) History of education in pre-colonial Igbo society in order to dig up the root of Igbo science process skills; (2) The advent of western education among the Igbos and establishment of schools; (3) The scientific process skills in Igbo culture; (4) Globalization and science education; (5) Issues, implications, and challenges of globalization in Igbo nation; (6) Summary; (7) Recommendations.

History of Education in Pre-colonial Igbo Society


Education in pre-colonial Igbo society was merely a process of enculturation through instructional agents.
Ezeudu F. O., Ph.D., Department of Science Education, University of Nigeria. Nkokelonye C. U., Ph.D., professor, Department of Education Foundation, University of Nigeria. Ezeudu S. A., Ph.D., professor, Department of Social Science Education, University of Nigeria.

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Indigenous people have culture. Colonial masters did not recognize this fact. It was believed that Africa, south of Sahara, and north of the River Limpopo (the heartland of Igbo nation), was one universal den of waste, misery, and desolation. They had no system of ethics and no principles of conduct (Otonti, 1964, p. 36). This Eurocentric version of history notwithstanding, there were systems of ethics and principles of conduct which formed the foundation of Igbo culture and civilization. Out of this matrix, Igbo traditional education developed its objectives which gave rise to indigenous Igbo ideologies, namely: (1) Communalism (Igbo socialism/extended family system); (2) Utilitarianism (functional education); (3) Conservatism (conservative socializing agencies/perennialism); (4) Pragmatism (role preparation/skill acquisition); (5) Totalitarianism (children learnt everything/i.e., holistic education). Communalism This is Igbo socialism/extended family system (Be your brothers keeper). To be your brothers keeper is a basic norm in Igbo society. Extended family system is the authentic Igbo socialism not Russian socialism or Chinese type. Igbo socialism is opposed to capitalism (Ejiofor, 2000, pp. 100-105). Some refer to Igbo socialism as proto-socialism or proto-type of communism. The purpose of capitalism is to create a happy society through exploitation, subjugation, and alienation. Capitalists attitude infiltrated into Igbo society through colonialism. Collective responsibility is a manifestation of Igbo socialism. Education is for the good of the community. Riches and wealth are acquired for the good of all. Collective responsibility as opposed to the rugged individualism of the Whiteman was Igbo tradition. Espirit de corps was cherished. No man was self-sufficient. No man was an island. Every blood relation is a brother or sister. The idea of nephew or niece, half-brother or half-sister is strange. The idea of grandmother or grandfather is basic in Igbo culture. This is Igbo socialism, which needless to say is distributive, not acquisitive (Ejiofor, 2000, pp. 100-107). Wealth is acquired to give help to less privileged relatives. It is strange to amass wealth in order to build personal political or economic empire. Nobody wanted wealth in order to hand it over to others or gain political power. A rich man acquired wealth in order to serve his brothers and sisters. The man who used his wealth to intimidate, dominate, or subdue his relatives is despised. Education for the good of the community produced public-spirited citizens of transparency and honesty. Utilitarianism Functional education or education for use not for ornamentation was upheld. There was no unemployment. Vocationalization gave Igbo education job orientation. Apprenticeship system was another term for Igbo education system. Conservatism This is education for promotion of cultural heritage. Eternal values were conserved. The family and elders of the land were conservative socializing agencies. These were Igbo perennialists who viewed the unwritten (hidden) curriculum as a package consisting of permanent studies which included spiritual values, human values, and material values. They saw knowledge as fixed and permanent. Induction into the society was by indoctrination. Desirable status quo was conserved. Ideological

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conformity was achieved. Pragmatism Role preparation through skill acquisition for successful adult life was a cultural universal in Igboland. Practical training for adult life was cherished. Children were trained for future roles. Boy-child trained as future father. Girl-child trained as future mother. Mother-craft was part of skill acquisition. Ability to perform productive tasks was valued more than producing a bookful blockhead with loads of learned lumber in his head (described as a spurious inheritance of pure intellectualism). Totalitarianism Children learnt everything. Some Igbos called it Pan-Sophism. Others felt it was Holisticism (Nebonta, 2009, pp. 43-50; Ochitti, 2007, pp. 59-61). It was education for all-round efficiencymoral, spiritual, physical, mental, economic, and political efficiency. No choice of subjects was allowed. However, elements of culture were not lacking, viz.: (1) Cultural universals: Core values (marriage, language, festivals, and ceremonies) were retained; (2) Cultural specialties: These were professions like carving and smithery. Religions groups, priests, and diviners specialize in fortune-telling. There were trading oligarchies. The Aros and Nri constitute the two hegemonies in Igbolandthe Aro trading oligarchy and Nri ritual hegemony. Nri dominance and hegemony was founded on the control of Igbo calendar, ritual and agricultural cycle. Nri is the centre of Igbo culture and the cultural metropolis of Igboland. All Igbo culture came from Nri and Aro hegemony was based on long-distance tradethe slaving oligarchy (18071927), bolstered up by a widely recognized Aro oracleChukwu-Ibini-Ukpabi, and strong alliance with warlike neighbours with martial tradition, viz., Abam Ohafia and Edda. With these warmongers, the Aro maintained commercial oligarchy and dominance in the economic life of the Igbo and their neighbours. The blow-up and military overthrow of Chukwu-Ibini-Ukpabi in the Aro expedition of 19011902 brought Aro hegemony to an end, even though the Aro struggled hard to retain their hegemony long after the famous Aro expedition (up to 1927); (3) Cultural alternatives: There were likes and dislikes, fashions and fads, choice of diet, and alternative ways of doing things. The above five ideologies were rooted in three Igbo philosophies of lifemetaphysics, epistemology, and axiology. Igbo Metaphysics Belief in life after death, Igbos are very religious. Ancestor worship is basic in Igbo cosmological education. All the three aspect of metaphysics form part of the cosmological education, namely: (1) Ontology: Belief in Supreme Being, God, the creator, or almighty god and pantheon of gods and goddesses or minor gods/deities. They believe in reincarnation, witches, and wizards; (2) Cosmology: Origin of the universe richly found in Igbo mythical charter was preserved in Nri corpus of myths. Origin of Igbo market days and certain food crops constitute Igbo cosmology and worldview; (3) Causality: Cause and effect relationship were amply elaborated. Nemesis, Karmic laws (retributive justice) was taught through oral literaturefolktales, myths, and legends. Epistemology Igbo oral tradition/oral literature was the main source of knowledge. Oral literature could be divided into

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(1) Mythsconcerned with superhuman elementsactivities of gods and goddesses in human affairs; (2) Legends: concerned with human elementsactivities of human heroescultural heroes and warlords; (3) Folktale/folklore: concerned with ballads, proverbs, riddles, and poems. Axiology This is taught by presenting Igbo ethics, aesthetics, and political philosophy. (1) Igbo ethics: Concerned with moral content of Igbo civilization. It is the Igbo moral philosophycode of conduct and social norms. Three types of norms in Igbo culture: (a) Folkwayssocial convention; (b) Morestaboos; (c) Lawlegal codes, rules, and regulations; (2) Aesthetics: Concerned with principles of beauty and ugliness. Lay emphasis on Igbo arts and crafts, rules of hygiene, use of cosmetics, cultural refinement, and general aesthetic awareness; (3) Political philosophydemocratic gerontocracy. The above is a basic outline on which Igbo pre-colonial education was made to revolve. It was on this outline that Igbo science was rooted. Igbo Science Science is knowledge obtained by observation and testing of facts. It is empirical or sensory information about the behaviour of natural and physical world-based on facts and figures which can be proved by experiment. Igbo cosmological experience is filled with scientific knowledge as can be seen in the inventory of Igbo science processes. The above was the state of the art before the introduction of western education in Igboland on July 26, 1857, by Samuel Adjai Crowther, Simon Jonas, and Christopher Taylor of the CMS (Church Missionary Society) Niger Mission.

The Advent of Western Education and Establishment of Schools


Igboland is found on both banks of the River Niger between Lokoja in the north and Bonny-Opobo in the Niger Delta. Majority of Igbo people are living towards the east of the great River in Anambra, Imo, Abia, Enugu, Ebonyi, and parts of Rivers State. These are the people of eastern Igboland. Igbos inhabiting the western bank of the River Niger is called western Igbos or Ika Igbos. Cross River Igbos are the Aros and their neighbours. Among the Igbos of southeast Nigeria, western education came along with the Niger Mission of 1857. Specifically, the Niger Mission was launched from three axis (Afigbo, 1981, p. 338): the River Niger Front, Bonny-Opobo axis, and the Cross River axis. The River Niger Front The Niger Mission dated back to July 26, 1857 when Dr. Baike, Bishop Adjai Crowther, and John Christopher Taylor arrived at the palace of Obi Akazua of Onitsha for courtesy call and formal introduction. Dr. Baike requested to open up a trading station. Bishop Adjai Crowther asked for a piece of land to establish a mission station. The king welcomed them and granted their request. The agreement was sealed the following day with gun salute. A piece of land few kilometers from Onitsha waterside known as slave market

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or slave beach was given to them to open up mission station. The CMS Niger Mission took off in earnest. The first primary school in Onitsha was opened on Monday November 15, 1858, with 14 girls between 10 to 16 years of age. All were naked. Taylor gave them clothes. Boys showed no interest at all. Both day and night schools were opened by Taylor in 1864 for young slaves who became the school pioneers. Day school had 50 pupils and night school had 70 pupils on roll. Boarding house was maintained with funds from overseas charitable organizations. The most popular was Coral Fund sponsored by Miss Barber Brighton of England (Ekechi, 1971, pp. 6-8, 17). The aim of the fund was to enable the infant mission to maintain boarders at three pounds per child per year. By 1864, attendance was 42 adults. In 1864, roll calls increased to 120fruit of six years labour. By 1867 after labouring for ten years, attendance jumped to 310. The Niger Mission was reinforced on December 5, 1885, when two Holy Ghost MissionariesFather Joseph Lutz and the newly-ordained Father Horne and brothers Hermas and JeanGotto arrived at Onitsha waterside (Slave Beach). They were the pioneer Catholic Missionary team that comes to Onitsha to be ready to work in Igboland on the eastern side of the Niger. Trade disputes and internecine rivalries had been in existence between French and British nationals operating on the Niger. This Anglo-French rivalry made it suspicious and unsafe for any French man to be found on British area of influence. It must be noted that on their way to the Lower Niger, they came across a kind-hearted protestant factory agent at Brass by name Charles Townsend who brought them in his own motor boat to Onitsha. The small boat was too small to take the four missionaries and their 70 pieces of luggage. For this reason, they hurriedly presented themselves to the King of Onitsha Obi Anazonwu and they went back to Brass to collect the two brothers and their luggage. On December 29, 1885, the four missionaries arrived safely at Onitsha. In January 1886, the Fathers met the King and requested for a piece of land near Nkisi stream. This land had already been given to Anglican Bishop Adjai Crowther. The King sent the missionaries to meet Bishop Adjai Crowther who willingly surrendered the land to them: I acquired this piece of land for Gods cause. Take it. This is the present site of Holy Trinity Cathedral Onitsha, about 20 hectares of land as they requested. This marked the climax of the Holy Ghost Missionary enterprise in the Lower Niger. With Holy Trinity as the centre and node of diffusion and influence planting of Catholic Church in Igboland started. By 1889, Obosi, Ossomari, Nsugbe, Umuoji, Atani, Odekpe, and Nkwelle had received pastoral visit. Chief Nwanne Onyekomeli Idigo of Aguleri invited the missionaries to visit him. The RCM (Roman Catholic Mission) favoured expansion before consolidation unlike the CMS which wanted consolidation before expansion. Bonny-Opodo and Cross River Axes On these two fronts, the missionaries ran into a belt of Izon (Ijo) and Efik-Ibibio peoples who presented barriers, opposition, and obstacles. They had to contend and conquer their souls before achieving the purpose of going into Igbo heartland. With passage of time, Igbo attitude to missionaries changed due to tragic clashes with political and military agents of imperialism. Peaceful penetration through these two coastal areas had to wait military action and conquest of the natives. After the Aro expedition of 1901/1902 which destroyed the Long Juju of Arochukwu, the government invited all mission on the Niger to move in and establish their churches in the conquered territories. There was conversion explosion. From Bonny-Opobo, CMS spread to Umuahia, Ndoku, and Owerri.

SCIENCE EDUCATION AND THE CHALLENGES FACING ITS INTEGRATION Table 1 Inventory of Igbo Science and Skills Involved in Their Application (Ngoka, n. d.)
1 Inventory of Igbo science processes Industrial chemistry: Fermentation of substances for brewing: Soap manufacture, dyes, and ointments MedicinePsychiatric treatment (voodoo: therapeutic practice using sympathetic magic and witchcraft). Clinical treatment using roots and herbs bark of trees: for bone-setting. Medical experts use healing properties of leaves, herbs, and bark of trees to cure diseases. Preventive medicine: Use of: (1) ClairvoyanceBi- location, predictive validity/predictive ability, ability to see the future, or communicate with the dead or people who are far away; (2) TelepathyCommunicating with one another without print or non-print media or any other normal method of mass communication; and (3) SorceryWitchcraft. PharmaceuticsManufacture of extracts, drugs, drug components, and preservation. EngineeringMetal work black smithing, iron smithing, brass work, and gold smithing. ConstructionBrick making, ceramics pottery, thatched roof making, and construction of silos. Wood workCarving and joinery (making of tools and implements with wood).

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Skills required in their application Identification of substances, sorting, classifying, mixing, testing, tasting, inhaling, and preserving. Medicine men and diviners select medicinal plants and animals based on resemblance with the sickness/disease (Parrinder, 1949, pp. 16-17). Vitilago or leucoderma or spotted skin is treated using a plant with spotted leaf. Sharp quill feather was used to treat spiritual problem. This Igbo practice is called sympathetic magic. Sympathetic magic works on scientific principle of like poles repel, unlike poles attract, and like produces like. Medical skills include proper identification of herbs, preparation of extracts, mixing, administering treatment, and packaging.

3 4 5 6

Agriculture and industry (crop cultivation).

Soil sciencePlanting of shallow feeders and deep feeders.

Seed germinationCondition for seed germination

10

Salt industryIt was found in Uburn, Okposi, and Abiriba. These areas had brine lakes.

Identification of medicinal plants, useful plants, processing, grinding, grating, and squeezing. Identification of metal type, cutting, melting, shaping, casting, and finishing. Identification of appropriate raw materials, excavating raw materials. Treatment of raw materials, measurement, mixing, laying, moulding, drying, roasting, and storage. Measuring, cutting shaping, identification filing, painting, and polishing. Sowing yam seed, yam seed should not be buried too deep or too shallow in the ridge to facilitate germination mechanism. Cassava stem should not be turned downwards while sowing, otherwise germination will be hampered (Ukeje, 1966, pp. 19-23). Bush burning: For successful bush burning, farmer picked up a leaf, raise it up to know wind direction. Leaf turns forward or backward; indicating wind direction; thereby showing how to set fire to the farm (Fafunwa, 1991, pp. 31-34). Identification of fertile soil suitable for cereals and tubers in scientific skill. Push cutlass deep into the soil. If the cutlass jammed a stone in the subsoil, it shows the soil is not good for deep feeders like yam. Only cereals which are shallow feeders can thrive in the soil. Two tests were usually conducted to predict viable and non-viable seeds (Ukeje, 1966, pp. 19-23). First test: Soaking methodSeeds were immersed in a trough of water. Seeds that sank to the bottom of the trough were viable. Seeds floating on the surface of the water were non-viable. Second methodThe experimental method. Seeds were planted in good soil. Early germination and growth showed viable seeds. Poor growth and etiology (pale colour) showed that the seeds were not viable (Fafunwa, 1991). Only women were allowed to fetch the brine in pots. The brine was evaporated using smouldering fire under low temperature in special pots called earthen jars. The jars were filled to the brim with solid salt. The grains were so large that a pinch or two could season a pot of soup (Afigbo, 1981, pp. 31-33).

Science process skills in Igbo culture. Rich inventory of Igbo science and the science skills involved in their application have been documented in this study. As shown in Table 1, Ogundijo (1970), an authority on indigenous education and Afigbo (1981) identified three basic economic activities in Igbolandagriculture, trade, and industry (Ogundijo, 1970, pp. 11-24; Afigbo, 1981, pp. 124-139). Out of these, the researchers

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distilled 10 economic activities and science process skills involved in their application as a platform to establish science process skills in Igbo culture (Afigbo, 1981, pp. 7-10).

Globalization and Science Education


Globalization: It refers to fast shrinkage of the world due to global system of mass communication, Internet technology, or digital revolution. The present challenge facing Igbo nation is how to relate Igbo scientific culture to life in a globalized world. Igbos in Nigeria have started to experience digital revolution. But the average Igbo youths lack basic mechanical orientation necessary for survival in an age of high information technology and technological culture. No one can afford to use yesterday tools to do todays business and hope to be in business tomorrow (Muogbo, Aiyesimi, & Okoli, 2006, pp. 22-26). Old order changeth must yield places to the new. God fulfills himself in many ways lest one good custom corrupts the world. As days roll by, new skills are acquired and dire need for up-skilling and de-skilling arises. It becomes necessary to teach new skills from generation to generation. Informal education (indigenous education) is no more adequate. Semi-formal education is obsolete. Formal and non-formal education now take the centre stage. The very defect, weaknesses, and short-coming in Igbo scientific culture is that right from July 26, 1857, when the CMS (Anglican) Niger Mission arrived at Onitsha Water side, the entire education offered to the Igbos by the agents of imperialism was geared towards aping the British classical tradition. The system was entirely divorced from the life and culture of the people. Education was the acquisition of inert knowledge. Such knowledge remained only in its ivory tower (Ukeje, 1966, pp. 78-82). Schools existed to impart knowledge with little reflection. Ukeje (1966) continued to lamentSchools taught children what to think not how to think. Children learnt to memorize but not to digest; and to adopt not to adapt. Children could solve problems with memorized formula but could not solve simpler ones without formula (p. 79). Considering Igbo inventiveness and creativity, intelligence and business acumen, the Igbo is an asset and a special gift to Nigeria. The Igbos possessed a stuff great civilization harnessed for their greatness. Biafran/Nigerian war of 1967-1970 brought conviction to all friends and detractors about technical ingenuity which produced a landmine called OGBUNIGWE (Igbo constructed rocket which is also a mass destroyer). This was a demonstration of dynamic explosive superhuman dynamite. This landmine was produced with empty tins of milk. Time and scope do not permit us to delve into another Biafran prodigy known as do it yourself oil refinery at Azia (a town in Igbo land), and of course Uli (a town in Igbo land) international airport which were killed with Biafra. Philip Emeagwali, an Igbo Computer prodigy, now the best computer scientist globally acknowledged is an Igbo from Ogbaru few kilometers from Onitsha. He schooled at Christ the King College Onitsha and he has made Igbo history a world history in computer science and technology. Igbo nation, a nation in the making, with wonderful possibilities for technological breakthrough and industrialization has many jungles to clear, impediments to remove, and challenges to address. With the present global changes in science and technology, Igbo education system must change to be in keeping with the ongoing digital revolution across the globe. Integration of Igbo scientific culture into a globalized world will begin with science in primary schools. The very need is inculcation of scientific attitude and science process skills in children quite early in life. Ignorance and superstition must be removed early in life and be replaced with scientific attitude and behaviour (Ukeje, 1966, p. 137). Primary school must infuse in children the habit of curiosity searching and testing. Top priority must be given to science. Science, according to experts at primary school level, is not teaching

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chemistry physics and biology. Rather it is making children become aware of daily occurrence around them. This implies making children begin to ask questions, such as: (1) Where do babies come from? (2) Why is mummys Tommy swollen? (3) What is inside your big belly, mummy? (4) How does water enter into this coconut? Science skills here are merely helping children appreciate natural phenomenon and the world around. The aim of primary science is to make the child be conscious of the world around him and create a sense of curiosity (Ukeje, 1966, pp. 135-136). Inquisitiveness and curiosity are among the innate propensities in man which can be exploited in developing scientific attitude to life. Children should be guided to find answers to their inquisitiveness and curiosity. School should develop in children early in life an idea of cause and effect relationship, attitude of searching, testing, analyzing, making inferences, and drawing conclusions (Ukeje, 1966, p. 135). Educators should not lose sight of the history of primary science. Poor sense of history among educators should not be encouraged. Elementary science education started in Nsukka, Igboland in 1963 (Fafunwa, 1991, p. 189). This scientific reawakening started with launching of Russian Sputnik in 1957. Science became the desire of all nations. America launched elementary science in its primary schools. With this Nigeria captured the zeal as championed by Nsukka, followed by Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council (Former NERC). Later, Ministry of Education stepped in. At this stage, emphasis was on local materials and improvisation. One would have thought that Igbo science and technology should take the pride of place. Years of brainwashing and colonial mis-education wrecked havoc on this expectation. However, the use of bamboo microscopes and bamboo cages became an innovative technique in modern science delivery. Early Igbo scientists remained silent over the revival of the numerous Igbo scientific culture. Oddly enough, they pursued new developments in science and mathematics led by American EDC (Educational Development Centre) in Newton, Massachusetts in 1962. The EDC organized series of workshops between 1962 and 1967 resulting in curriculum innovation culminating in the launching of Entebbe mathematics. Nigeria played a leading role in the popularization of new mathematics popularly known as modern mathematics. No Igbo scientist championed the cause of revamping Igbo science culture. Britain did not leave American innovation to go unchallenged. Nuffield mathematics was launched by United Kingdom and was marketed in Igbo secondary schools. Igbo science was neglected. There is need for a re-discovery of Igbo cultural heritage. Western education contributed immensely to the atrophisation of Igbo scientific culture. Igbo parents educated their children before the coming of the Whiteman. Indigenous education is not dying; instead it is growing and flourishing. A concerned academic historian was once quoted as asking the following questions: (1) How long shall western education and indigenous education work at cross purposes (working in isolation)? (2) What aspects of indigenous education can be integrated with western education? (3) What would have been the fate of Igbo science if western education had not been superimposed on it? (Ukeje, 1966, pp. 118-146). It is not only the primary science discussed above that can play a role in the work of integration of Igbo science into the globalized world of 21st century. All hands must be on deck. Secondary education and the scientific culture imparts must be involved. It must be concerned with issues of this day and computer age.

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Indigenous science will not be allowed to suffer atrophy. Secondary level of education should champion the reconstruction of indigenous scientific culture. It is not expected to be a conduit for transportation of neo-colonial education. The issue is not the neo-colonial curriculum of today. The important thing is the use to whatever knowledge acquired from whatever curriculum is put (Ukeje, 1966, pp. 118-146). Everyone knows that education is not an end in itself. It is a means to an end. The end in this context is the use one makes of acquired knowledge for scientific revolution. What is desired is that the knowledge gained should be put into use (transfer of learning). It is not knowledge for ornamentationwearing all that weight of learning lightly like a flower. It is believed that a course of study in ancient and medieval history or Graeco-Roman literature is not a waste as some ill-fated critics of European history would want us to believe. If the knowledge acquired from this foreign culture and tradition is used to address similar problems in our own education system then this goes down in history as progressive education: (1) How can the knowledge of Graeco-Roman literature and its scientific culture make Igbo indigenous science meaningful and relevant in a globalized world of digital revolution? (2) How can this knowledge give sense and direction, meaning, and realism to Igbo scientific culture vis-a-vis the challenges of globalization? Challenges of Globalization Many challenges can be envisaged: Research is needed to find out industrial possibilities of local scientific activities. For instance, the industrial production of garri and manufacture of diesel oil from palm oil is desirable in achieving global recognition (Ukeje, 1966, p. 23). Igbos have professional and supportive staff here and there but painfully lacks a core staff who can render selfless service without the dreaded double standard of ethics and morality. The actual need to take Igbo science across the globe is the development of people with high sense of patriotism able to serve prodei et patria (for God and Fatherland). Development of people with a sense of public obligation and willing to perform public service with humility, integrity, and honesty is a serious challenge. Many highly-talented Igbo youths in Diaspora are the bedrock of foreign economy; whereas their talents and expertise are badly needed at home. There is need for integration of traditional elements into new production techniquesbuilding on the old and reflecting global changes (harmonious blending of the old and the new). Teaching of machine habit and machine orientation (Ukeje, 1966) must be intensified. If Igbo science will be integrated into the present needs of globalized world. There is need for sufficient production of lime and artificial aids for increased food production and productivity in order to meet the challenges of globalized world. Moreover, to integrate Igbo science into the globalized world of the 21st century, science curriculum should be flexible. This will enable students to internalize scientific attitude of life. Science schools should give students basic concepts, abilities, and skills, they need for entering into the global system of mobile communication. A lot of barriers to ICT (information communication technology)-based interventions exist. The barriers constitute hindrances to technology integration. Digital divide problemdifferences in provision of Internet

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facilities to students and teachers are real. Limited funds for establishing Internet institutions are a serious setback. Cost of a typical multimedia personal computer is great. It is beyond the reach of average teacher in Nigeria. Poverty level is high. Connecting individuals to global village is expensive. Microwave telephony or other alternatives are also expensive for an income earner. Availability of electricity and telephone is a serious barrier to ICT-based intervention. Power supply in Nigeria is epileptic and very unreliable. Power is available one hour a week in lucky districts. Majority of the areas remain in total darkness or blackout for months. Generating capacity of 11 power stations in Nigeria is 6900 MW. The power stations include: Afam, Delta, Egbin, Gerugu, Ijora, Jebba, Kainji, Olorun sogo, Omotosho, Sapele, and Shiroro. Out of the expected 6,900 MW, a generating capacity of 3,500 MW is available. But South Africa with a population of 49 million people generates 42,000 MW of electricity. Nigeria with a population of 150 millions generates 3,500 MW. The National Planning Commission stated that Nigerias energy requirement as at December 2010 was 20,000 MW. It is clear that Nigeria cannot give the citizen adequate power supply in a foreseeable future. How can science and technology in Nigeria meet the challenges of a globalized world under the present power situation? (Dipo, 2011, pp. 1-4).

Implications
From the above analysis, it is clear that many teachers and learners cannot access information from Internet. Teleconferencing or computer conferencing which reduces travel risk and expenses by making teachers in distant place talk face to face ever television linkup is not available in Nigeria. This ICT approach cannot be used in Nigeria. World knowledge base doubles every two years at least. Advancement in ICT opened new trends and approaches in teaching and learning. No one can afford to use yesterdays tools to do todays business and hope to be in business tomorrow. Teachers all over the world are re-engineering their classroom operations to meet the challenges posed by ICT so as to remain relevant in the labor market (Muogbo, Aiyesimi, & Okoli, 2006, pp. 22-26). The era of teachers without ICT skills is gone. Knowledge without Internet is poor and unacceptable today. Everyone is adjusting to fit into the new information superhighway and be relevant in the global trend. Anybody not part of the global trend is left behind. Everyone has to adjust to a world that has become science and technology driven. ICT approach, therefore, has implication for human resource development and technological gap management.

Summary
This study focused on historical foundation of science education in Igbo society as well as the challenges facing its integration into a globalized world of digital revolution and Internet technology. ICT has revolutionized the way people think, live, teach, and work together. Traditional method of teaching and learning has given way to virtual classroom where ICT skills are used, so as to fit into globalized world of information superhighway. New technologies are introduced almost on daily basis. The challenge is how to catch up with these

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developments and keep up with the pace of development/globalization. World knowledge base doubles every two years. Changes in science teaching and learning process must follow to prepare students for information and technology based society. Another challenge is how to change teaching and learning process to give students skills that will help them operate in a dynamic information rich continuously changing environment. This calls for training and retraining as well as continuous human resource development and capacity building efforts.

Recommendations
Science teachers have to develop innovative approaches to ensure continuous re-tooling and re-engineering of science teaching and learning as well as capacity building of teachers so that they can operate at the cutting edge of science and technology. Traditional method of teaching and learning has to give way to e-learning platform where ICT skills and technologies are used. Functional Internet facilities must be installed, so that teachers and learners should be able to access information from other parts of the world. Internet must be cheap and accessible. Collaborative research has to be encouraged as recommended in the conference communiqu of science educators (Ijah, 2006, pp. 19-23). Individual research effort should be discouraged as this does not promote fast development. Nigeria must wake up from slumber of years and embark upon adequate power supply. There must be e-learning readiness in science institutions in Igboland. There is need to develop a flexible NQF (National Qualifications Framework) to address the issue of rapidly changing continuous demand for new skills (up-skilling and de-skilling).

References
Afigbo, A. E. (1981). Ropes of sand. Nsukka, Nigeria: University of Nigeria Press. Dipo, F. (2011). Joint action front (JAF). Nigeria: Lagos. Ejiofor, L. U. (2000). Nigeria: Preface to ideology. Abakaliki, Abonyi State, Nigeria: Willy Rose and Appleseed Publishing Company. Ekechi, F. K. (1972). Missionary enterprise and rivalry in Igboland 1857-1914. London: Frank Cass. Fafunwa, A. B. (1991). History of education in Nigeria. Ibadan, Nigeria: NPS Education Publisher. Ijah, U. J. J. (2006). Conference communiqu. In I. N. Muogbo, Y. Aiyesimi, & G. A. Okoli (Eds.), Book of readings (pp. 19-23). Minna, Nigeria: Federal University of Technology. Isichei, E. (1976). A history of the Igbo people. London and Basingstoke: Macmillan Press Ltd.. Muogbo, I. N., Aiyesimi, Y., & Okoli, G. A. (2006). Book of readings. Minna, Nigeria: Federal University of Technology. Nduka, O. (1964). Western education and the Nigerian cultural background. Ibadan, Nigeria: Oxford University Press. Nebonta. (2009). African traditional education: A study of Umuneke Udi of Enugu State. In C. U. Nkokelonye (Ed.), Pre-European education in Africa: A reflection of indigenous African ideology. Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2(1), 43-50. Ngoka, G. N. (n. d.). Igbo science and skills (Unpublished research notes, University of Nigeria, Nsukka). Ochitti, J. P. (1974). An introduction to indigenous education in east Africa. Bonn: German Adult Education Association (DVV). Ochitti, J. P. (2007). In C. U. Nkokelonye (Ed.), African indigenous education as practiced by Acholli of Uganda (Vol. 1, pp. 59-61). Nsukka, Nigeria: Great Express Publishers. Ogundijo, M. I. (1970). Indigenous education in Ejigbo district of Oshun division in pre colonial days and the coming of missionaries (pp. 11-24) (Unpublished Bachalor of Artss thesis, University of Ife, Nigeria). Parrinder, G. (1949). West African religion. London: Epworth Press. Ukeje, B. O. (1966). Education for social reconstruction. Ibadan and Basingstoke: Macmillan Publisher.

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New Method of the Earth Mineral Resources Study at Ilia State University, Georgia
Avtandil Okrostsvaridze
Ilia State University, Tbilisi, Georgia

At Ilia State University and in the Georgian Republic as whole, there is obvious disbalance among the number students of liberal arts, law, economic, and engineering profiles. The latter is chosen for considerably smaller number of students, whereas without the engineering profile personnel, it is impossible to lead the developing country from economic crisis end out to overcome increasing ecological problems. To solve the problem, we decide to propose geology and mineral resource studies in an interesting anglethe first-year students, who have not chosen their future profession yet, for the spring term of 2012. The lecture course is interdisciplinary with the title: Mineral Resources of the Earth Modern Civilization: Progress and Challenges. In the course of these lectures, the history of the Earth civilization, its geology, natural resource characteristic, and the history of their assimilation are synthesized. In this course, it is shown that natural resources and histories of civilizations are closely connected and how the amount of used natural resource assimilation with the humanity progress was increasing, causing significant deficit of natural resources together with ecological problems. The innovation provoked great interest in students and they are mastering this course with enthusiasm, arranging, interesting, presentations, etc.. After completing this course, many of the students who intended to choose philosophy, psychology, or biology, decided to acquire a profession of a geologist. Keywords: the Earth mineral resources, modern civilization, geology

Introduction
Due to the rapid pace of our planet recent industrialization and permanent increasing of population, the world modern civilization faces an apparent deficit of natural resources and global ecological problems as well. If we do not use them with optimal effectiveness and sparingly, according to prediction of the majority of scientists, the Earth crust will not satisfy modern worlds increasing demands for natural resource and energy in the nearest 2025 years (Barber, 2011). Though there also exists contradictory attitude, according to which deficit of mineral resources is not expected in the nearest future, as market demands and technical progress favours constant development of mining industry (Carter, 2011). In this critical moment of our civilization developments (Dong, 2012), the role and responsibility of geosciences is to watch, control, and give right direction to the mining and using of natural resources in order to avoid their global deficit and ecological crisis (disaster), as natural resources and healthy environment are

Acknowledgments: The author expresses the gratitude to the administration of the Ilia State University, which gave him a chance to deliver the reviewed course, as well as to his students for the enthusiasms which they show acquiring the course. Avtandil Okrostsvaridze, Ph.D., professor, Institute of Earth Sciences, Ilia State University.

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the precondition for the existence of our civilization and its sustainable development. Realization of this issue is impossible without preparing young personnel of geoscientists. Their training is impeded by less attention and meager financing of this science in the whole world. It is common knowledge that developed countries spend much more on the investigation of the other planets than the planet on which our civilization has formed and was developing. This circumstance naturally caused decrease of specialist inflow into geosciences, which has been revealed in mineral resource investigations, their wrong extraction and creation of ecological problems. The duty of lecturers is to involve as many students as possible to study the Earth sciences to improve this disbalance purpose, we offered the first-year students of the Ilia State University who have not yet chosen their future profession, classical geology from the other more interesting side. Namely, the course of lectures: Mineral Resources of the Earth Modern Civilization: Progress and Challenges, turned out to be obviously successful. In summer term of 2012, this course was chosen by 152 students out of 900 (among 17 subjects) and in autumn term of 2012, out of 2,000 students, 320 expressed their wish to complete this course. It should be mentioned that in the past years when in a similar situation, we offered students the classical form of study of geology and mineral recourses, only few of them chose it. Of course, not all of them will become a geologist and explorer of natural resources, but they will have certain knowledge of the history, structure of their planet and geological processes occurring in it, as well as its fragile ecological balance. That is guarantee that they will be more concerned for the Earth mineral resources, use them economically, and treat the environment with greater concern.

Ilia State University: The Way to European Education


Ilia State University (Retrieved from http://www.Iliauni.edu.ge) was founded in 2006 on the basis of several higher educational and research institutes. Its foundation was stipulated (conditioned) by the reform of the former Soviet educational and scientific system that became essential after restoration of independence of Georgia. The university was named in honour of the eminent Georgian thinker, educator, and statesman Ilia Chavchavadze, who founded spiritual, scientific, and political European orientation of modern Georgia. Introduction and implementation of these values are the basic vocation of the Ilia State University. To achieve his goal, the university strives into European higher educational area, and in this way, it is the absolute leader in Georgia. At present, Ilia State University is the union of students and professorsa multifunctional, educational, and scientific institution, which through a cooperation of students, professors, teachers, and researchers, created an integrated academic and professional space for education and research. According to the data of September 15, 2012, up to 10,000 students study at the Ilia State University and their education is supervised by 190 professors and 110 researchers. The personnel are mainly recruited by the leading young professionals of the former institutes of the Georgian Academy of Sciences who got or improved education at the universities in Europe and the USA. The university, having six research institutes, has close scientific links with the world leading scientific centers. Among them is the Institute of Earth Sciences with three departments: geological, geophysical, and geographical. All of them have got Bachelors, Masters, and Doctors (Ph.D.) programs. Besides, these departments are actively involved both in national and international projects and perform significant scientific researches.

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Besides, the researchers of this department deliver lectures for the university students, among them is above-mentioned course of the lectures: Mineral Resources of the Earth Modern Civilization: Progress and Challenges, which is delivered as an introductory subject for the first-year students.

The Course Object


Course objective to its complex and interdisciplinary structure is multilateral and aims to: (1) synthetically familiarize the students with the history of the Earth formation (creation) and development, conditions of mineral resource formation in this process of development, the histories of various civilizations, and natural resources used by these civilizations; and (2) show them that civilizations would not have developed without appropriate natural resources on Earth, the progress achieved by man as a result of using natural resources and significant challenges of our civilization. Sparing natural resources and their rational use is essential in order to maintain their reserves and do not disturb ecological balance of the environment.

Course Scope and Structure


The course comprises 48 hours in whole, therefore, there are 11 three-hour lectures, two three-hour presentations, two three-hour colloquiums, and one three-hour final evaluation. The first lecture is dedicated to the Earth formation, age, and its evolution in the solar system. The second lecture is dedicated to the basic structures of our planet: the Earth core, mantle, and lithosphere. In the third lecture, the Earth crust and recent geological processes are described. This lecture arises big interest in the students, modern geological theories are considered in it, such as plate global tectonics and convections of mantle plumes (Okrostsvaridze, 2011). It is revealed in these theories that the Earth crust in constant dynamics and in its formation the main role belongs to the processes taking place in mantle. In the fourth lecture, the Earth modern civilization desalination areas are reviewedcontinents and mechanisms of their formation and evolution. In addition, in this lecture the fact that the Earth crust is the unique body of solar system and just its occurrence enables the formation and development of our civilization is emphasized, as it regulates magnetic field and temperature of the Earth. At the same time, continental crust as compared with oceanic crust is located in the upper part of lithosphere due to its light composition, for this reason, it is spread above the sea level (Taylor & McLennan, 1985). In spite of such interesting issue this lecture attracted considerably less interest than the previous one, the students excepted the discussion about the Earths different civilizations with great enthusiasm (the fifth lecture), as well as the description of natural resources used by them and the reasons of their progress and degradation. In this lecture, it is shown that civilization histories and the use of natural recourses are closely interrelated and that in certain cases improper use of natural resources plays fatal role in the life of certain civilizations. The highest interest among the students was caused by the sixth lecture concerning the water, as essential and absolute, recourse of evolution, existence, and development of the Earth bio-system and civilization, the author led in this lecture with Antoine de Saint-Exuperys words: Water you have neither taste nor smell, therefore, people do not know your value. Standpoint of this great writer was shared by all students and almost all of them tried to represent topic of water at presentation. It should be mentioned that though they live in Georgia, the country which is rich in fresh water, all of them have realized fresh water problem of the world (Galloway, 2010). In the seventh lecture, one of the most significant recourse of our civilization-hydrocarbon (oil, gas, and coal) is reviewed, giving 85% of the energy of modern civilizations (Britt, 2009). The students showed big interest in

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this issue and they especially got interested in their genesis, being very complicated geological problem as well as their reserves, that is so vital for our civilization. In the eighth lecture, the worlds renewable, alternative, and nuclear energy resources are considered. Atomic capabilities of thorium caused a special interest in students, which is considered to be the basic power recourse of our civilization in the third millennium (Gosen, Gillerman, & Armbrustmacher, 2009). It is worth to be mentioned that its reserves in the Earth crust five times exceed uranium reserves, produces 200 times more energy than uranium, and whats more, it does not leave radioactive waste unlike uranium. In the ninth lecture, the Earth natural building resources and the history of their use are reviewed. The types and reserves of building resources existing in the Earth crust are characterized as well, and in the 10th lecture, metallic resources of our civilization are considered (Harald, 2010). Geological conditions of metal formation, interesting histories of starting their mining, peculiarities, and reserves are described. During the discussion, special interest in students was causes by gold genesis, ways of its mining and reserves. In the final 11th lecture, ecological problems caused by mineral resource extraction and development and the ways of solving this problem are reviewed.

Discussion
In this course, the Earth mineral resources and their development are reviewed in historical context and it is shown that various civilizations used more or less different mineral resources and the scopes of their development and technologies were diverse. No doubt, development of mineral resources offered the society the possibility of technological progress, but developed society used more mineral resources, and at the same time, it caused originating of technological innovations and this, on its part, required development of mineral resources. This brief discussion shows that there exists direct connection between society progress and mineral resource development, which eventually causes the deficit of the latter, and frequently environment pollution and ecological problems as well. Interference of man in natural systems was always and will be one of the basic concerns of the society and the sphere of investigation of geoscientists. Due to the rapid development of our civilization, the demand for mineral resources will be constantly increasing, especially it refers to energy resources and pure drinking water. These are the main challenges rising before the geoscientists in the 21st century. We must be prepared for these challenges and first of all bring up the high-skilled young geoscientists.

Conclusion
Thus, it can be concluded that at the university, the study of the Earth and its natural resources as introductory subject using interdisciplinary approach, based on the background of civilization history, is undoubtedly justified, as it much more interest and consequently big enthusiasm in students. In the Ilia State University, this course met our expectations and the science of geology has been chosen by more students than in the past years, that is the only way for the improving of the disbalance existing between geosciences and liberal arts, and in this critical moment of our civilization development, the role of geosciences is more increasing as it is necessary to plan and control correct extraction of natural resources and their use, in order to avoid their global deficit and ecological disbalance. As natural resources and healthy environment is precondition existence for our civilization and sustainable development.

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References
Barber, N. (2011). The future of the geosciences. Episodes, 34(2), 82-85. Britt, P. F. (2009). Hydrocarbon resources. Gordon Research Conference, January 11-16, 2009, Ventura Beach Marriot, Ventura, C. A.. Carter, W. A. (2011). Treadding lightly on shift ground: The direction and motivation of future geological research. Episodes, 34(2), 78-81. Dong, Z. (2012). Modern civilization, modern people, and modern diseases. Retrieved April 15, 2012, from http://www. theepochtimes.com/ Galloway, D. L. (2010). The complex future of hydrogeology. Hydrogeology Journal, 18(4), 807-810. Gosen, B. V., Gillerman, V. S., & Armbrustmacher, T. J. (2009). Thorium deposit of the United StatesEnergy resources for the future? (p. 21). U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1336. Harald, D. G. (2010). The chessboard classification scheme of mineral deposits: Mineralogy and geology from aluminum to zirconium. Earth-Science Reviews, 100(1-4), 1-420. Kesler, S. K., & Wilkinson, H. (2010). Global gold recourses for the next millennium: Society of economic geologists (Vol. 15, pp. 5-18). Special Publication. Okrostsvaridze, A. V. (2011). Mantle plume conception: A new geological paradigm? (p. 40). Tbilisi, Intellect. Taylor, S. R., & McLennan, S. M. (1985). The continental crust: Its evolution and composition (p. 312). London: Blackwell.

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D
Yan Zhang

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Home-School Collaboration in Sweden and China


Margaretha Kristoffersson, Limin Gu
Ume University, Ume, Sweden

Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China

This article is a working paper presenting a network building cooperative project between Ume University in Sweden and Zhejiang University in China. The project focuses on parents involvement and home-school collaboration in Sweden and China and has an ambition to entail a set of empirical objectives: (1) to map and compare the systems, policies, curricula, and resources dealing with home-school collaboration in Sweden and China at the national level; (2) to identify and analyze the similarities and differences in the definitions, foci, models, practices, and perspectives on home-school collaboration in the two countries at the local level; and (3) to identify and seek out good examples and models from both countries for communication and interaction among teachers, parents, and students. Following an introduction to the project design where a comparative case-study approach is presented, this article reviews policies and researches concerning home-school collaboration in Swedish and Chinese contexts. Cases from both countries are selected, described, and discussed. Relative issues for further study are suggested. Keywords: home-school collaboration, parental involvement, comparative case studies, Sweden, China

Introduction
Ever since compulsory schooling was introduced, ideas and opinions about collaboration between home and school have been examined from different political and societal interests with a number of objectives (OCED (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development), 2006). This field has been given increased emphasis in Sweden during recent decades. Changes in educational policies have provided and extended the opportunities and rights for parents to be involved in and have influence on education and school arrangements. It is argued that one of the fundamental conditions improving the quality of education should be home-school collaboration, which is based on the democratic values of the society. The Swedish National Agency stresses the importance of parents participation in decision-making concerning their children and school management, as well as their role as resource persons in school (Lpo. 94, 1994; Lgr. 11, 2011). In China, collaboration between home and school has been emphasized recently, and it is regarded as a difficult but an important task. Historically, there had been a long tradition based on the Confucian idea of respect for teachers, which used to be expressed in the absolute power of teachers not only over pupils, but also over parents. Today, however, this tradition has been influenced by the market-oriented economy and modern western culture. There is a growing tendency for parents and pupils democratic consciousness to be reinforced and collaboration between home and school to be promoted. For instance, some organizations, such as parents

The project is financed by STINT, the Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education. Margaretha Kristoffersson, Ph.D., senior lecturer, Department of Education, Ume University. Limin Gu, Ph.D., senior lecturer, Department of Education, Ume University. Yan Zhang, Ph.D., associated professor, City College, Zhejiang University.

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committees and parent schools have been set up in recent years. Internationally, previous researches have provided evidence of the positive correlations between parents active engagement in their childrens schooling and better outcomes and behavior of their children in school (Cooper, Robinson, & Patall, 2006; Epstein, 2001; Erikson, 2009; Hgdin, 2006; Ravn, 2005). They found that parental involvement has a positive effect on children who take more pleasure in school activities, and a more positive climate results in the classroom with a higher level of interest and approval of work done by the students. Better academic results are achieved when there are open channels between home and school. Although home-school partnership is the intended image from a political perspective, teachers in schools are uncertain of their roles, perhaps seeing a changed role as a threat to their professional status. At the same time, there has been official apprehension about the role of parents in school improvement. Parents are not a homogenous group, and their activities are influenced by their social, cultural, and economic circumstances that could be a challenge for home-school collaboration (David, 2003; Ravn, 2005). From this point of view, the democratic role of schooling could be undermined by the inclusion and exclusion of parents. Home-school collaboration is an important but complex issue that needs to be investigated and comprehended both broadly and in-depth by setting it into different contexts as well as from various perspectives. A cross-cultural comparative study in this field could contribute to identifying and analyzing the similarities and/or differences in policies and practices, and to discussing the possibilities, difficulties, and strategies for policy implementation and strategies concerning home-school collaboration at the local level, school level as well as individual level. Sweden and China have different traditions, social systems, and values that have had an impact on policy and school practices for home-school collaboration. Investigations and policy measures from these two different cultural contexts could offer valuable lessons and experiences to each other. It could establish indicators for appropriate home-school collaboration and a set of best practices for guidance for both countries.

The Home-School Collaboration Project


This network building cooperative project between Ume University in Sweden and Zhejiang University in China focuses on parents involvement and home-school collaboration in Sweden and China. The main aim of this project is to build up a research network between two universities to promote internationalization of higher education in both countries1. A number of researchers from each university are involved in the network research group. Objectives of the Project As related to the main aim, the project has also an ambition to entail a set of empirical objectives: (1) to map and compare the systems, policies, curricula, and resources dealing with home-school collaboration in Sweden and China at the national level; (2) to identify and analyze the similarities and differences in the definitions, foci, models, practices, and perspectives on home-school collaboration in the two countries at the local level; and (3) to identify and seek out good examples and models from both countries for communication and interaction among teachers, parents, and students. The project started in October 2010 and will continue until June 2013. This article describes how far the process has come right now and should be seen as a contribution to the future development of the project. In the following, we are going to present the preliminary
1

The project is financed by STINT, the Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education.

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findings with a focus on national policies on home-school collaboration in Sweden and China; research on home-school collaboration practice in both countries; and the cases from Sweden and China that are chosen for discussion. Design of the Project The project builds on a structure designed to select samples for a multiple comparative case study (Yin, 1993) where analyses and comparisons among the selected cases in Sweden and China are carried out. The structure, which is adapted from the model described in Agency for School Improvement (2008), comprises two dimensions. One is focusing on the individual students. It could be formal, such as an individual plan, or informal, such as a dialogue. The other is the collective, where the parents are in the focus. It could be formal, such as parent meetings and the local school board; or informal, such as parent support for childrens learning. Figure 1 shows the four quadrant structure of home-school collaboration for Swedish and Chinese school contexts, which was used to select cases for this project. The Swedish cases feature parents and the local school board as supports in childrens learning and schooling, which represents the collective formal respective collective informal quadrants; the Chinese cases provide examples of family education and parent representatives that could be positioned in the collective formal quadrant. The selected cases within the project will be presented in later section of this article.
Individual Individual plans Development conversation Documentation Action plans Dialog Treatment Attitude Invited climate Confidential relationships Informal Parent meetings Weekly/month letters IT (information technology)-based information Parental committee Local school board Excursions/parent dinners/caf meetings Study circles with parents Parents as support in childrens learning Parent representatives

Formal

Collective Figure 1. Home-school collaboration (adapted from Agency for School Improvement, 2008, authors translation). Two dimensions of home-school collaboration used for selecting cases.

National Policies on Home-School Collaboration in Sweden and China


Policies in Sweden The current national curriculum for compulsory education in Sweden has been in effect since 1994 (Lpo. 94, 1994). A new curriculum for the compulsory school, the pre-school class, and the leisure-time center was issued in 2011 (Lgr. 11, 2011). Both curricula provide a statement of educational fundamental values, basic objectives, and guidelines. According to the curricula, the school has two missions: one is to promote learning by stimulating the individual to acquire knowledge; the other in partnership with the home, is to promote the

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development of students into responsible persons and members of society. In a deeper sense, education and upbringing, hand in hand, seek to transfer values, traditions, language, and knowledge from one generation to the next. In line with government regulations, the school has a responsibility for students knowledge and social development that require real functioned collaboration between school and home, a need that is clearly stated in national curriculum documents (Lpo. 94, 1994; Lgr. 11, 2011). School activity shall be developed in correspondence with the goals that have been set out in the law and the curriculum. School principals have a clear responsibility in this respect. They are responsible to ensure that collaboration between home and school is well organized and developed and that parents receive information on the schools goals, working methods, and the range of choice that exists. Teachers are expected to work together with the parents and continuously provide them with information concerning the students school situation, well-being, and acquisition of knowledge. This daily pedagogical leadership and professional responsibility for teachers are necessary conditions for the quality development of the school. They call for a constant examination of learning goals, follow-up and evaluation of results, as well as testing and developing of new methods. This kind of work has to be carried out in active collaboration between staff and students and in close contact with the home and the local community. Twice a year, the school has an obligation to invite all parents and students to an individual development dialogue where they meet with teachers to discuss students academic progress, experiences of school life in general, and their own schooling in particular, as well as plan regarding how best to meet students individual study needs (Lpo. 94, 1994; Lgr. 11, 2011). The opportunities and scope for parents to influence education shall be real. Consequently, these opportunities are required both at the political level (state and municipality) and at the local school level (Ds, 2009:25). The national policy is supported by the school law which expresses students right to influence their school work. For parents, however, there is no clear statement in the school law. Instead, parents influence is limited to the obligation for the principal to inform and consult as stated in the school regulations. This means that the formal opportunity for parental influence is only to choose a school they prefera small freedom of choice that exists only in the lager municipalities that can offer this kind of alternatives. At present, a general legal provision about parents influence in education is provided in the new curriculum effective since 2011, which states that teachers have the responsibility to plan, implement, and evaluate education along with the students. The opportunity for students and parents to influence education and a forum for consultation shall be implemented at each preschool and school, although schools that are governed by a board with student and parent representatives are not obliged to also have a forum for consultation. The new school law requires that a school with a local school board shall have equal numbers of students and parents members on the board, which means a change from earlier when parents were the majority on the local school board (Ds, 2009:25; School Law, 2010:800). Policies in China Research on home-school collaboration in China started relatively recently. Under the influence of western countries, home education has become a hot issue of educational reform studies. Issued in 2001 by the State Council of the Peoples Republic of China, the Decision on the Reform and Development of Elementary Education clearly stipulates that school education should put morality education at a primary position in quality education, arming people with scientific theories, guiding them with lofty spirits, inspiring them with fine works, thus, setting up schools as an important position of civilization construction. Prominence is given to

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home education. School should build a stable connection with parents by family visit and strengthen instruction home education, helping parents to form the correct educational concepts for the purpose of creating an appropriate family environment for childrens growth. The 2004 statement Some Suggestions on Further Strengthening and Improving Minors Ideological and Moral Construction by the State Council of the Peoples Republic of China (2004), again, emphasizes the importance of collaboration between home education and school education by stressing that home education plays a specially important role in minors ideological and moral construction. Home education should integrate with school education and societal education. Womens federations at all levels, education administration departments, as well as primary and secondary schools should take the responsibility of instructing and promoting home education. They should collaborate with communities, establish parent schools, and spread knowledge about home education and successful experiences with it. Various kinds of home-education academic communities should be brought into full use. They should launch research aiming at the existing problems in home education and provide theoretical support and a decision basis in guiding the work of home education.

Research on Home-School Collaboration in Sweden


In recent decades, several researchers have become interested in investigating the status quo of home-school collaboration as practiced in the Swedish context, trying to understand this phenomenon from different actors perspectives, such as those of teachers, students, and parents. For instance, a study about teachers contacts with parents was conducted by Erikson (2009) who was interested in finding out what teachers actually think and do when they establish a confidential relationship with parents. A total of 1,336 teachers in Swedish compulsory schools participated in two surveys. The major result of the study was that teachers had positive attitudes towards home-school collaboration, though there were differences in how teachers experienced, understood, established, and developed the contact with the parents across teacher categories, such as Grades 13 teachers, Grades 46 teachers, and Grades 79 teachers. First, although all teachers took initiatives to contact parents, the ways they did so varied between the teachers in lower grades and those in higher grades. Teachers in lower grades contacted parents more often and spontaneously in face-to-face meetings, while teachers in higher grades preferred to use telephone or e-mail to contact parents. Second, teachers in Grades 79 experienced parental contact as more demanding or stressful than the teachers in Grades 16 did. Partly, this was because face-to-face contact might have contributed to a better understanding and relationship between teachers and parents. Another reason could be that the formal assessment and marking system applied in Grades 79 caused the teachers to experience much more pressure from parents. Third, regarding teachers expectations of parents responsibility for their childrens schooling, more teachers in Grades 79 than in other categories would like to see more active engagement of parents in their childrens schooling than it is the situation today. Briefly, it seems that teachers in lower grades have more positive experiences of parental contact than teachers in higher grades, and physical contact (face-to-face) is reported as being more effective than in other ways. However, Erikson (2009) argued that the different experiences among teachers in lower grades and higher grades could also be explained as a result of changed conditions in home-school collaboration, such as the development of autonomy of the children with respect to the relationship with their parents. The experiences of parents concerning home-school collaboration were examined by Andersson (2004),

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based on interviews with 40 parents of 1112 years old children. The research focused on parents experience of their childrens school situation and collaboration with teachers, and how the childs school situation influences their home situation. Her findings indicated that there were both positive and negative experiences among the parents. Usually, when things were going well with the child in school the parent was more positive. The positive experiences were related to well-established communication and contact with the teachers who were characterized by having time, being open and honest, and the parent felt respected. The negative aspects were often related to the situation when things were not going well with the child in school. These could be for example a delay in contact from the school regarding the childs social difficulties; and childs learning difficulties were ignored/neglected in school, etc.. It is also reported that the parents had limited influence, and the prestige and defensiveness of the teacher could be a factor as well. The study concluded that, for parents, to be informed in time, respected, and listened to by teachers were important conditions for their active participation and engagement in childrens schooling, as well as for an effective home-school collaboration. As Swedish society becomes more multicultural, the education system is facing extensive challenges. It is argued that school has not been able to cope with all aspects of equality. Most exposed are the students with a foreign background. Generally, their parents have lower educational level, lower income, and less opportunity of contact with the labor market than families with both parents born in Sweden. Segregation, decentralization, diversification, and individualization are pointed out as four possible factors that together may explain why Swedish students have a lower ranking in international comparisons now than during the early 1990s (Skolverket, 2009). Support from home has become more important for students potential to achieve good results, because the school has not been able to compensate for students social background and different conditions (Skolverket, 2009). With this background in mind, researchers observed that political decisions play an important role in influencing the equality and quality of education (Johansson, Paci, & Hovdenak, 2004; Johansson, 2007). In Johanssons (2007) study on parental involvement in Smi schools, the invisible existence of cultural-based school practice and curriculum texts, as well as the lack of contact among homes, schools, and community culture was obvious. She argued that this was an issue not only for Smi schools, but also for state schools because of the growth of a multicultural society in Sweden (Johansson, 2009). In the same direction, Bouakaz (2007) has studied how parents of Arabic ethnic background and the students teachers view parental involvement in school. The result revealed that these parents had limited knowledge of the Swedish school system but did show an interest and would like to draw closer to the school. Barriers, such as language, cultural, and religious factors were mentioned by the teachers. Efforts to involve parents, according to Bouakaz, are thus facing problems in terms of power, class, ethics, and institutional differences. Bouakaz (2007) remarked that not much of what children did at home or the values from their own culture had been considered to be of importance at school. The result of his study indicated that home culture and school culture were two different worlds that should both be considered when working with parental involvement.

Research on Home-School Collaboration in China


Research studies on the current situation and practices of home-school collaboration in China are numerous. They mainly focus on studying the specific forms of collaboration, such as establishing parent schools, parent reception days, parent-teacher associations, and regular home visit. In their paper Constructing Morality Education Overpasses, Yang, Feng, and Li (2001) proposed two ways to realize home-school

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collaboration: establishing parent schools and setting up parent committees. Researchers provide a more specific introduction to the practices of home-school collaboration. First, by establishing parent schools, schools could teach parents scientific education concepts and common skills in education regularly; Second, teachers should visit those students who have family problems to bring more harmony to their family relationships, uniting the forces of school education and home education; Third, schools should be open to parents regularly for them to better know their childrens performances in school and thus carry out more directed education; and Fourth, students and parents should learn together and help each other, aiming at constructing a family learning environment (Gao & Li, 2007; Li, S. Wang, & X. Wang, 2001; Pan, 2001; Shi, 2001; Zhang, 2001; Zhang & Wang, 2002). Chen and Li (2003) stated that school education and home education were indivisibly connected to each other and school-based management could effectively combine school education and home education. In another paper, Yan and Qian (2006) gave a specific description of how to carry out school-based management. The main focus was on carrying out a series of programs and activities to get parents involved in students learning and in school management. The home-school network mainly functioned by collecting and analyzing students home information and school information, studying the schools and the homes role in coordinating ideological and moral education, studying the effect of students self-education and interaction with partners in morality education, and probing paradigms and cases of family education.

Cases of Sweden
Homework In Sweden, homework is one area that has been emphasized in order to closely study parents involvement in their childrens schooling. Parents engagement and support are regarded as being crucial for their childrens academic outcomes and behavior in school. However, during the past several years, there has been increased discussion and reflection on the negative consequences attributed to homework in Swedish debates on education, where it is argued that homework has caused stress of students, tensions, and conflicts between students and their parents, and probably, extended the gaps among students performance because of their different family backgrounds in terms of class, gender, ethnicity, and school culture, etc. (Gu & Kristoffersson, 2010). There is an absence of reflection from teachers on whether and in what way the existing homework practice in Swedish schools improves childrens learning and embodies the desired social implications. The study also indicated that many teachers had high expectations of parent engagement and support in homework; but it also reported that it was difficult to realize in practice, due to parents limited knowledge, competence, and time, as well as other obstacles, such as lack of communication concerning homework between teachers and parents (Gu & Kristoffersson, 2012). Recently, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of private companies who provide homework assistance for families, and this could be a new research field for further investigation in terms of the inequality of education. Local School Board Local school boards of compulsory schools in Sweden are another area of concern for home-school collaboration and parental involvement. The government has endeavored to increase parental influence in schools by passing a resolution establishing a pilot scheme entitled Local School Boards with an Elected Parent Majority in Compulsory School and Compulsory Special Schools. The trial period started July 15, 1996

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and ran until June 30, 2001. This has been extended four times: 2003, 2007, 2008, and 2009. Since 2011, it has been up to each school to decide whether a school will to permanent a local school board or not. However, it was argued that implementing local school boards in Sweden and many other countries was problematic. This could be seen in terms of the generally weak interest in boards and in the top-down rather than bottom-up character of this state initiative. For instance, many parents reported that they had no spare time to serve on boards and that, furthermore, they had insufficient influence on the work of the boards (Kristoffersson, 2008). The implementation of a board with parental involvement was designed to have a positive effect on local democracy, but some studies have revealed many problems in relation to the boards (Kristoffersson, 2002; 2005; 2007). One problem related to communication between the parents on the boards and parents who were not members of the boards. Another problem was that the schools had contact parents in each group of students but their role lacked clarity. Likewise, students on the board had difficulty in taking part in the work of boards. Furthermore, communication between the board, the school, and the parents outside the board was complex. Another general issue was that different constituencies on the board were not, in many cases, satisfactory balanced. While neoliberal tendencies regarded parents as the most important constituency on a board, it was difficult to reconcile the interests of individual parents and the collective interest of all parents. Accordingly, there was a built-in complexity which allowed individual interests to predominate. While parents as board members could influence decisions, their responsibilities and rights on the board were not clearly specified. Parent representatives felt uncertain in their decision-making.

Cases of China
There are two levels of home-school collaboration in Hangzhou, China. Hangzhou is the capital city of Zhejiang Province, which is located in the south eastern China. It takes the leading role in home-school collaboration in the province. The collaboration system focuses on two initiatives: the Headquarter Campus of Hangzhou Educational Bureau Parent School, which was founded by the Hangzhou Educational Bureau, and a semi-official organization and the practice of schools in Hangzhou city, focusing on a junior high school in Grades 79. Headquarter Campus of Hangzhou Educational Bureau Parent School The Headquarter Campus of Hangzhou Educational Bureau Parent School is located in Hangzhou Xuejun Senior High School, which is one of the top three secondary schools in Hangzhou. Campus was set up on June 16, 2000, by the Hangzhou Educational Bureau as a special organization to take charge of the instruction of family-school education (Han, 2005). For 12 years now, the school has operated efficiently in this field of instruction and practice through the following six initiatives according to Han (2006). Three-level instruction network. To make the instruction of family-school education more scientific and standardized, and at the same time reflect the individuation of different districts and different schools, the school education system of Hangzhou built a three-level instruction network: the city headquarter campus, the district/county(city) branch campus, and the school instruction station. All levels have unified principle requirements as well as individual features. They work independently at their own levels and cooperate effectively at unified levels. Teachers group. The family education instruction teachers group consists of special staff from the Hangzhou Education Science Research Centre. These are experienced teachers who are keen on the research

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and practice of family education instruction for schools and excellent parents. The teachers group is in charge of the training of teachers for parent schools, consultation service to parents, and compilation of teaching and reading materials for parent schools. Dior family education instruction hotline 88825885. Setting up by the Hangzhou Education Science Research Centre Institute on June 16, 2004. The Dior family education instruction hotline 88825885 is another public welfare consultation hotline similar to the students mental health hotline 87025885. The hotline works from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. from Monday to Friday, with members of the family education instruction teachers group as being the consultants. Hot issues research team. To acquire timely knowledge of parents needs, the headquarter campus has a research team consisting of head teachers, teacher trainers, students, and professional scientific researchers to study hot issues and problems in family education and family education instruction. For example, it has conducted the studies: Research of the family education situation of excellent students, Family communication research, Research on parent resources for youths sexual health, and so on. Wise parents classes. To inform parents of their childrens development at different stages, the headquarter campus set up the wise parents classes and green apple classes, which have specific course series and are taught by special teachers. The wise parents classes mainly teach knowledge about psychology and pedagogy while the green apple classes teach mainly about sexual health in youth. Hangzhou family education Website. The Hangzhou Family Education Society launched the Hangzhou family education Website (Retrieved from http://www.cnjztd.com) on June 16, 2006. The Headquarter Campus of Hangzhou Educational Bureau Parent School hosts six features: Mrs. Hans mailbox, parents salon, hotline memoir, wise classes, video school, and Sifang forum. The parent schools work has received support from school teachers and expressions of trust from many parents. It was named the National Family Education Experiment and Research Base by Chinese Family Education Committee. Parents Spokesman System in Hangzhou Under the recent open-door model of running schools, a continuing research project has been on how to improve the quality and level of schools and create the best learning environment for students development with the help of parents. Based on this model, Hangzhou Zhaohui Middle School, together with the parents committee, was the first to put forward the parents spokesman system in March 2004. As we know, a spokesman is a person who speaks on behalf of a certain social class or group. So, a parents spokesman is someone who, on behalf of all the parents of a class, speaks directly with the school. Any parents in the group can reflect problems or put forward suggestions to the school through the parents spokesman without worrying that the school may think badly of them since the spokesman would strictly observe the discipline of confidentiality (Report of Hangzhou Zhaohui Middle School, 2010). Operating mode of the parents spokesman system. The school has tentatively developed an operating mode of the parents spokesman system, that is, at standard process involving the democratic election of the spokesmansincere talk between the school and the spokesman, teachers visit to the spokesmans home, attendance of the spokesman at classes, and democratic discussion about the spokesman. The objective of this process is to further improve the communication between the school and parents as well as improve the operation of school administration. The stages are as follows: (1) Democratic election of the spokesman. The school has made every September the democratic election

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of the spokesman month since 2005. At the very beginning of every school year, the school informs every parent that those who would like to volunteer to apply to the school to be the parents spokesman should make a candidate a speech, after which the official spokesman would be elected by a democratic vote of the parents; (2) Regular sincere talks between the school and the spokesman. During the sincere talks, school leaders introduce the spokesman to the emphasis of recent work and main activities of the school as well as listening to the spokesmans useful advice. Through these activities, the aim is to build a bridge of home-school collaboration and achieve consistency in home-school education; (3) Visit to the spokesmans home. At weekends and during their spare time, a core team of teachers led by head teacher visits the spokesmans home. They discuss with him/her about his/her childs performance at school, ask him/her about the childs performance and ideological situation at home; they also ask him/her advice for their teaching and instruct him/her how to conduct family education; (4) Attendance of the spokesman at classes. The spokesman has the right to know about school education. He/she can attend any class on any school day without informing the teacher in advance. He/she can also write his opinion in the attending class feedback form, thus, practicing this new form of parent-school interaction; (5) Democratic discussion about the spokesman. After the spokesman has performed his/her work for a period of time, the school and the other parents will hold a discussion about his/her work; the purpose of this is to oversee his/her work, letting him/her represent other parents, better perform his/her duty, and enhance communication between school and parents. Rights and obligations of the parents spokesman. After the spokesman for every class has been elected, they share certain rights and obligations: (1) Each spokesman should read out his/her obligations and the strict code of confidentiality at a school parents meeting. He/she should also provide his/her postal address and cell phone number to all parents; (2) When any parent has suggestions for the school or the teachers but does not want to speak to them directly, the parent and student may refer to the parents spokesman and he/she will speak directly to the school or the teachers; (3) The spokesman is responsible for collecting and providing information about educational resources from and to parents, as well as helping and supervising the standard running of the school; (4) There are many ways for the spokesman to reflect problems to the school, such as making phone calls, sending e-mails, filling in opinion and suggestion cards and putting them into the headmasters mailbox, or directly talking with the school or teachers. Education is not only the concern of schools and teachers, but also the concern of parents. Making full use of the parents spokesman resource could enable the integration of various activities of social power into school education. It could thus be a good way to improve the quality and level of running schools. The result is that parents become the administrators of schools and students feel that school is more like home. The parents spokesman system enables the spokesmen to involve themselves in the administration of schools on behalf of all the parents. It could be more powerful than the force of individual parents acting alone and enables the school administration to better realize student-orientation.

Conclusion and Discussion


Comparing the Swedish and Chinese cases selected in this project, there are some interesting and

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important aspects that are highlighted and need to be further studied. On policy level, both countries emphasize and demand parental involvement in education and home-school collaboration. The school law and the national curriculum are the important policy documents for Swedish education system which guarantee the democratic processes. Active parental participation in these processes is regulated and required by the policy documents in which the democratic values are stressed (Lpo. 94, 1994; Lgr. 11, 2011; School Law, 2010:800). In one sense, home-school collaboration is encouraged and implemented in two-way directions based on a sense of equality between home and school. The Chinese policies focus on the important role of school-home collaboration for the morality development of students. Home education and parent schools are encouraged that put schools and educators into a leading position in guiding parents to create an appropriate family environment for childrens growth (The State Council of the Peoples Republic of China, 2001; 2004). In both countries, despite the difficulties and obstacles in practice, the ideology regarding home-school collaboration is that parents should not be considered as a pedagogical problem but to be regarded as valuable resources for the school to be able to carry out its commission to bring up students to be democratic and moral citizens. In Swedish context, the majority of teachers and parents have a positive attitude toward polices and strategies of home-school collaboration. Previous researches indicate that there are many good examples and experiences that provide evidence for the importance and advantages of home-school collaboration. Information, respect, and understanding are crucial aspects for a well-functioning collaboration between home and school (Andersson, 2004; Erikson, 2009). However, research also indicates that in some cases the schools have not been able to cope with all aspects of the democratic process and the schools have not worked sufficiently with the issue of equality. Parental contact seems to decrease with age of the students (Andersson, 2004). Furthermore, not many of parents and students cultural values from home are considered to be important for school. Home and school cultures are increasingly different worlds. Segregation, decentralization, diversification, and individualization are pointed out as areas of concern. Parents, students, and teachers should work in a context of knowledge and cultural heritage and look upon diversity in education as a rich resource (Johansson, 2009). In a more critical sense, the case of implementation of local school boards with parents in the majority in Sweden has not met with any major success (Kristoffersson, 2008). Parents experience that they do not have as much influence as they assumed. There are decisions that are not implemented or followed up. The work of the school board is demanding of time, and parents find that they often do not have that time. In order to reach out to other parents across the whole school there must be good communication between board and parents outside the board. Since 2011, schools have been able to choose whether or not to have a local board, but it is obligatory that all schools have parent councils. More research looking into the process and consequences of the new policy and its implementation is needed. The parents spokesman system in China infuses new blood into school educational reform. This is an interesting actor in the school system which is not observable in Sweden. The spokesmen come from various fields, such as hospitals, banks, universities, etc.. They actively try to put forward suggestions for school education, thus becoming fresh activists of school education. Spokesmen have bridged the platform between parents and schools as well as teachers. As a system to communicate parents aspirations, the parents spokesman protects some of the personal information about the parents, thus, allaying parents fears that their opinions and suggestions might adversely influence their childrens education, while also encouraging more parents to put forward more issues to discuss with the school and the teachers, thus overall playing an effective

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promotional role in education. The system has eliminated the formalization disadvantages of parent committees and let the parents really become involved in school administration, thus, adding the wisdom of parents to the administration of the school. Finally, the parents spokesman system has also enlarged the teaching resources for school education. However, in Chinese context, previous research also reports that there are many common deficiencies in the personality development of students in primary and secondary schools such as frailty, lack of independence, and social responsibility. Disparity between school education goals and family training orientation is an important cause of this phenomenon (Gu & Zhu, 2004). Hopefully, home-school collaboration could not just promote the physical and mental health of students, but also need to help parents receive lifelong education and help educators to know students better. The development of collaboration between home and school toward the integration of home, school, and society, from parental involvement in school education to social involvement in school education and from the cultivation of cooperative consciousness to the establishment of a cooperative system will ultimately facilitate the birth of an education society. The issues surrounding the relationship between home and school are complex and not a neutral enterprise. Looking ahead, there are many questions remaining to be studied within this project. Among these, an important area for future study is the viewpoint of parents on the matter of parent councils in Sweden and the parents experiences of parental involvement initiatives in China. Students, teachers, and parents perspectives on homework in relation to parents involvement and home-school collaboration constitute another area demanding attention and study in both countries. More cases that present other areas in the four-quadrant structure of home-school collaboration (see Figure 1) could be necessary for further study. The model itself should also be reflected, adjusted, and developed under the changed social, cultural, technological, and educational conditions where new forms of home-school collaboration activities emerge, for example, the Web-based assessment system of Unikom in Swedish schools. Another central issue is the importance of listening to students own voices as co-creators of the social context where they live and act regarding the issue and activities of home-school relationship and collaboration. In discussions about home-school collaboration, even though children are critical actors in such activities, their own voices are often unheard. How to prepare students in teacher education programs to work with collaboration between home and school in their future careers is also an important theme to be investigated and discussed. The significance and prospect of the Swedish and Chinese case study for further comparison is learning from examples and each other. Given the tendency toward critical thinking and the current globalisation trends, it is crucial that more investigations and understanding of issues of home-school collaboration should be set into cross-cultural contexts. This project is hopefully to contribute knowledge in this field, as well as to promote the democratic process of education in both countries.

References
Agency for School Improvement. (2008). We leave the dearest we have to school about cooperation with parentsA relationship that challenges. Stockholm: Liber Distribution. Andersson, I. (2004). Listen to the parents. HLS Frlag. Bouakaz, L. (2007). Parental involvement in school: What hinders and what promotes parental involvement in an urban school. (Academic dissertation, Malm Hgskola, Malm). Chen, J., & Shi, J. (2005). Positive interaction of morality education: New way of minors moral construction. Journal of Shanghai Normal University (Philosophy & Social Sciences Edition), 3, 114-118.

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Chen, N., & Li, D. (2003). On the characteristics and meaning of school-based management. Journal of Educational Development, 8, 47-50. Cooper, H., Robinson, J. C., & Patall, E. A. (2006). Does homework improve academic achievement? A synthesis of research 1987-2004. Review of Educational Research, 76(1), 1-69. David, M. (2003). Minding the gaps between family, home and school: Pushy or pressurized mummies? In S. Castelli, M. Mendel, & B. Ravn (Eds.), School, family and community partnership in a world of differences and changes (pp. 75-88). University of Gdansk. Ds. (2009:25). The new school lawFor knowledge, freedom of choice and safety. Stockholm: Utbildnings Department. Epstein, J. (2001). School, family and community partnerships: Preparing educators and improving schools. Colorado: Westview Press. Erikson, L. (2009). Teachers contacts and collaboration with parents. rebro: rebro Universitet. Gao, R., & Li, Y. (2007). Exploring new ways of class management through parent-teacher association. Educational Science Research, 7, 28-30. Gu, L., & Kristoffersson, M. (2010). Home become schoolStudents perspectives on homework. In Locus (Vol. 4, pp. 52-67). Sweden: Stockholm Universitet. Gu, L., & Kristoffersson, M. (2012). Teachers perspective on homework in Swedish elementary school. Conference paper at NFPF/NERA Congress in Copenhagen, March 8-10, 2012. Gu, Y., & Zhu, W. (2004). Home-school cooperation: The future of community education. Journal of Qujing Normal College (Philosophy & Social Sciences Edition), 2, 96-99. Han, S. (2005). Report of Hangzhou Educational Bureau Parent School. Hangzhou: Hangzhou Educational Bureau Parent School Publishing. Han, S. (2006). Moments of sense of accomplishment100 parents wisdom stories (pp. 101-102). Central Party Literature Press. He, W., & Yang, X. (2008). From choice to voice: The reversion of parents role of educational right. The Modern Educational Journal, 2, 6-9. Hgdin, S. (2006). Home resources: Young peoples experience of parental support and involvement in their schooling. Pedagogisk Forskning, 11, 1-19. Jarl, M. (2004). A school in democracy? Parents, community and the dialog. Gteborg: Gteborgs Universitet (in Swedish). Johansson, G. (2007). Cultural diversities in education (Research Report. 2007: 05). Lule, Sweden: Lule University of Technology, Department of Education. Johansson, G. (2009). Parental involvement in the development of a culture based school curriculum. Intercultural Education, 20(4), 311-319. Johansson, G., Paci, C., & Hovdenak, S. (2004). Education (pp. 169-185). In AHDR, Arctic Human Development Report. Kristoffersson, M. (2002). Parents involvement in compulsory school: A study of nine local boards with parents in majority in compulsory school. Ume, Sweden: Ume University, Department of Education. Kristoffersson, M. (2005). Parental involvement: Parents new role in Swedish schools. In G. Weiner (Ed.), Social inclusion and exclusion, and social justice in education. Schriften der Pdagogischen Akademie des Bundes in Obersterreich, 29, 163-176. Kristoffersson, M. (2007). The paradox of parental influence in Danish schools: A Swedish perspective. In H. Phtiaka, & S. Symeonidou (Eds.), International Journal about Parents in Education, 1, 124-131. Retrieved March 21, 2013, from http://www.ernape.net/ejournal/index.php/IJPE Kristoffersson, M. (2008). Local boards with parents in majority in compulsory school (Academic dissertation, Ume University, Department of Education, Sweden). Li, J., Wang, S., & Wang, X. (2001). Experiment on childrens creativity development. Journal of Shandong University (Social Science Edition), 6, 28-50. Liu, H. W., & Sun, Y. Y. (2001). Enlightenment of Singaporean morality education to Chinese education. Education Science, 1, 60-62. Long, X. (2004). Boosting ideological and moral construction of nonages in Beijing. Front, 6, 5-7. Lpo. 94. (1994). Curriculum for the compulsory school, the pre-school class and the leisure-time centre. Stockholm: Utbildningsdepartementet.

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Lgr. 11. (2011). Curriculum for the compulsory school, the pre-school class and the leisure-time centre. Stockholm: Utbildningsdepartementet. OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development). (2006). Demand sensitive schooling? Evidence and issues, Schooling for tomorrow series. Paris: OECD. Pan, X. (2001). Application of system theory in primary and secondary school administration. Research of Elementary Education, 1, 19-21. Ravn, B. (2005). An ambiguous relationship: Challenges and controversies in the field of family-school-community partnership, questioning the discourse of partnership. In R. Martinez-Gonzles, M. Henar Prez-Herro, & B. Rodriguez Ruiz (Eds.), Family-school-community partnerships: Merging into social development (pp. 453-475). Oviedo: Grupo SM, Publica, Report of Hangzhou Zhaohui Middle School. School Law (2010:800). Stockholm: Utbildningsdepartementet. Shenzhen Pinggang High School Project Team. (2001). Studying campus cultural landscape design. Education Research, 10, 43-47. Shi, Y. (2001). Ensuring students healthy mentality and promoting quality education. Chinese Education, 17. Skolverket. (2009). The Swedish National Agency for Educations current assessment report 2009: Organized pre-schooling, school-age childcare, compulsory school and adult education (Report, 337). Stockholm: Skolverket. The State Council of the Peoples Republic of China. (2001). Decision on the reform and development of elementary education. Peoples Daily, 6, 15. The State Council of the Peoples Republic of China. (2004). Some suggestions on further strengthening and improving minors ideological and moral construction. Peoples Daily, 2, 26. Wang, H. (2004). Head teachers should maintain good cooperation with parents. Class Adviser, 3, 9-11. Yan, S., & Qian, Y. (2006). On constructing home-supporting system of youth ideological and moral construction in the process of building a harmonious society. Journal of the Party School of CPC Hangzhou, 4, 82-87. Yang, L., Feng, J., & Li, Z. (2001). Constructing morality education overpasses. Class Adviser, 4, 6-9. Yin, R. K. (1993). Applications of case study research (2nd ed.). In Applied social research methods series (Vol. 34). Thousand Oaks: Sage Publication. Zhang, G., & Wang, S. (2002). Exploring new ways of cultivating morality: Constructing Five For network and applying triplet evaluation. Educational Science Research, 2, 65. Zhang, J. (2001). Constructing an operating mechanism of school, home and society: Three integrations education network. Journal of Xiangtan Normal College (Philosophy & Social Sciences Edition), 1, 72-76. Zhang, S. (2008). Human development and cultivation under quality education. Review of The 20th Annual Conference of the Chinese Society of Education. Journal of Chinese Education, 17, 11-14. Zhang, Z. (2001). On the causes and adjustment of low effectiveness of school morality education. Educator, 5, 9-11.

US-China Education Review B, ISSN 2161-6248 March 2013, Vol. 3, No. 3, 202-211

D
Riitta Parvia
Lieksa, Finland

DA VID

PUBLISHING

Finnish Sauna Behaviors, Dirty or Decent

Behavior in the Finnish sauna is governed by certain implicit rules. When foreigners exhibit sauna behaviors which break the rules, the rules become explicit for the Finns. Behaviors, such as screaming and shouting, running in and out from the sauna, chasing each other, throwing water around, pouring beer on the hot stones of the sauna oven, or displaying sex behaviors are felt by the Finns like an offence against the decency of their sauna. How do the Finns behave themselves in the sauna? Keywords: sauna, old traditions, implicit rules, new inventions

There are but a very few descriptions of the social behavior in sauna. Sauna literature abounds of accounts of how to build a sauna, and what kinds of materials are used, what temperatures or humidity to prefer, how to wash, or what to drink after the bathing is done. The author will here try to describe some aspects of Finnish sauna behaviors from the Finns point of view. But first, with a glance into sauna itself, sauna is not Finnish invention, many peoples of this world have their heat baths, such as the Amerindian sweat log, the Turkish steam bath, or the Japanese hot tub, Mushi-Buro. However, the Finns have developed their sauna over the centuries to meet their needs at any time (Visanti, 1975; Laurila, 1981). The first timber buildings long ago were nothing but log cabins without chimneys. They were nothing else than smoke saunas where people lived (Hakamies, 1981) (see Figure 1). Later, the saunas were separated from the living quarters and they became independent buildings (see Figure 2). The first saunas were sweat logs, and only later has water been used for cleaning purposes. Basically, three types of Finnish saunas exist: smoke sauna, steam sauna, and dry sauna. A private sauna in the countryside is usually built of timber (Patoharju & Tolonen, 1981). The timber when heated radiates the heat evenly in the sauna room. The private sauna is ideally situated in a peaceful place, by a farm house, or by a lake or river (Visanti, 1975) (see Figures 36). Saunas are also built in city apartments (see Figure 7), not forgetting schools, hotels, and conference sites. The Finnish Parliament has its sauna. Old sauna buildings are found in remote places for hunters and fishermen to sleep overnight (Paulaharju, 1982). In these saunas, you usually find fuel, salt, and bread left there for an unknown wanderers survival. Sometimes, you may find only a heap of stones on the ground, surrounded by a frame, on which you can throw a canvas so as to create a simple sauna (see Figures 89). There is a sauna in Finland today for every third person.

Riitta Parvia, RDMP (registered dance movement psychotherapist), ADMP (association dance movement psychotherapy).

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Figure 1. Parvia: Old smoke sauna.

Figure 2. Parvia: Smoke cabin.

Figure 3. Parvia: Countryside saunas.

It is a common misconception that men and women bath together. Who bathes with whom depends on the situation? Traditionally, men bathe together after a heavy days work in the newly heated sauna. After they have left, women and children enter to enjoy the milder heat of the sauna. Couples and families with their children commonly bathe together.

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Figure 4. Parvia: A kota, shelter for heating water.

Figure 5. Parvia: Countryside saunas.

Figure 6. Parvia: Countryside saunas.

In addition to cleaning purposes, saunas have traditionally been connected with important social events, and with healing practices (Hakamies, 1983). A familys Christmas celebration, for example, usually begins by the family taking a sauna.

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In the authors family, certain sauna sentiments stay in the authors memory: A traditional healer and midwife sometimes came to treat the authors grandmother in the sauna. The event was surrounded by a certain mystery, and the children understood that there was no way to go even near the sauna when Manta from the mountain had taken hold on the sauna, and the authors grandmother within her care.

Figure 7. Parvia: The authors city sauna.

Figure 8. Parvia: Frames for camp saunas.

Figure 9. Parvia: Frames for camp saunas.

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When the author went to see, the authors grandmother introduced the authors fianc to her, she showed her acceptance of him by heating the sauna. While the sauna was getting heated she went into the wood and made a bath whisk. By giving the whisk to him, she invited him to the sauna. The heating of the sauna is a common way to welcome guests, but the authors grandmothers special mood, when she prepared the sauna made the author realize, but only years later, that it was a ritual to her. When the authors daughter was only two weeks old, the author took her into the sauna. She seemed to enjoy her little self in the warm and wet environment. Traditionally, only after the babys first sauna bath was he/she considered a social person within the family and society. It is another common misconception that children were born in saunas. Children were born in different places, but after the birth the mother went into the sauna to have a rest there. However, difficult births were administrated by the midwife in a sauna. The midwifes main functions were ritual. She consecrated the ritual space of the sauna by walking around the building three times. She bathed the newborn to make him/her a social person. She welcomed women visitors who came with their gifts, but she made sure no man entered the space. When the mother was ready to enter her normal family duties, the baby was presented for the father. By taking the baby into his lap, or knee, he acknowledged the child as his child. Perhaps, it is due to this tradition, the father taking the child on his knee, that the word for generation is called knee in Finnish. When passing a sauna building in the countryside, you may hear rhythmic beating from inside the sauna. What you hear is men beating themselves with bath whisks. The whisk is made of birch twigs, and occasionally of rowan or even juniper. When writing this, the world championship in sauna bathing was going on in Finland. Six men were competing with each other about who could endure the extreme heat and humidity of the sauna for the longest period of time. The temperature in the sauna was 110 degrees C and water was poured on the stones. As the heat rose higher, four of the men gave up, but two of the men stayed, a Russian 62-year-old man and a 40-year-old Finn. After six minutes, both men collapsed and were carried out of the sauna. The Russian died, the Finn survived, but 70% of his skin was burned off. Also his bronchus were burned. After four months in coma he woke up, but he is still in critical condition and his destiny remains unclear (Autio, 2010). The ideal sauna conditions, the desired temperature or humidity of the air, or the radiated heat of the sauna are not the same for everybody. But it seems generally beneficial to an individual to sweat and to raise his/her body temperature once or twice a week above the point where he/she must sweat adequately. The best sauna is the one which provides the desired conditions for bathing for the individual (Tuomola, 1969). If the sauna is situated by a lake, people like to swim in the lake after the sauna bath during the summer, and even during the winter when the lake is frozen. A hole is then cut in the ice (see Figure 10). Or they may just roll in the snow (see Figure 11). A man told that: If you see a naked woman outdoors you, indeed, look at her, but if she is coming from sauna you turn your eyes away. A new addition to sauna bathing is an outdoor bubble bath to be used during summer and winter (see Figure 12). The sauna is a place of renewal of body and spirit, a place of relaxation, recreation, and enjoyment (see Figures 1317). A traditional sauna has a little hatch on the wall (see Figure 18). If you ask a Finn about the hatch, he/she explains it in rational terms; it is for good ventilation that is to secure the circulation of fresh air in sauna. But this hatch is not only for fresh air to enter, it has a spiritual meaning as well. You may feel it when bathing in a sauna where the hatch is missing. The steam in the sauna is called lyly, the word meaning spirit originally (Visanti, 1975). The hatch has something to do with the spirit. The spirit of the sauna or the spirit of

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the human being has to be free to enter or to leave. This idea of the free spirit is something implicit in the culture, something you may feel but do not talk about.

Figure 10. Eronen: Ice bathing.

Figure 11. Parvia: Rolling in the snow.

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Figure 12. Parvia: Outdoor bubble bath.

Figure 13. Eronen: Imaginative saunas.

Figure 14. Eronen: Imaginative saunas.

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Figure 15. Eronen: Imaginative saunas.

Figure 16. Eronen: Imaginative saunas.

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Figure 17. Eronen: Imaginative saunas.

Figure 18. Parvia: A hatch.

Much of what is connected with sauna is deeply cultural for Finns. Behavior in the sauna follows certain rules. The knowledge about these rules is tacit knowledge, no special education is needed here, and a child learns how to behave accordingly by seeing how others behave. When a foreigner breaks these rules, they suddenly become explicit to the Finns. The rules concern who bathes with whom, and how people behave. No screaming or shouting in sauna, and no alcohol or glass bottles are brought into the sauna. There are more convenient places for sex than a hot sauna. What people talk about in the sauna is usually peaceful small talk. Women may talk about health concerns and other casual and familiar things. When the author asked him what men talk about in the sauna, a man laughingly said: We talk about women. A Finnish president was known for his successful political negotiations in the sauna. One may sum up by repeating that sauna is for the Finnish people a place for everyday activities, for cleaning, health, recreation, and enjoyment, and even for business or political negotiations. Even though saunas ritual practices and holiness seem forgotten, it is still a place which is used to highlight many important

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social events in life. It is as if special events call for ritual cleaning before they can take place. And, indeed, sauna bathing can be a ritual in itself.

References
Autio, S. (2010). Minuutti ennen kuolemaa (pp. 2-3). Helsinki: Ilta-Sanomat. Eronen, P. (2007). Photos. In The bathers. Helsinki: Maahenki OY. Hakamies, P. (1981). The origins of Finnish sauna (pp. 5-8). In Sauna (No. 1). Helsinki: Suomen Sauna-Seura r.y. Hakamies, P. (1983). Sauna and folkhealthcare (pp. 275-280). In Kansa parantaa. Helsinki: Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura r.y. Laurila, O. (1981). The medical past of sauna (pp. 14-17). In Sauna (No. 1). Helsinki: Suomen Sauna-Seura r.y. Parvia, R. (2010). Photos. Lieksa Museum and Muurame Sauna Museum. Patoharju, O., & Tolonen, J. (1981). Timber was what was chosen (pp. 9-12). In Sauna (No. 1). Helsinki: Suomen Sauna-Seura r.y. Paulaharju, S. (1982). Carelian sauna (pp. 27-33). Helsinki: Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura r.y. Tuomola, T. (1969). What is a genuine Finnish sauna? (pp. 1-12). Helsinki: Suomen Sauna-Seura r.y.. Visanti, I. (1975). Sauna book (pp. 9-11, 12, 30-32). Helsinki: Tammi.

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