英文摘要 |
Recently, mixed-age teaching in preschools has become common at home and abroad. In Taiwan, mixed-age teaching is considered an essential policy response tool for the education field to handle the insufficient student population and the challenge of forming separate classes. However, in addition to this necessary reason, whether the composition of mixed-age classes has a more positive promotion effect on young children’s learning and development and whether it is a suitable choice compared to a last resort must be further examined. Thus, this research topic requires further study. However, research on this issue in Taiwanese academic circles is limited. There are also inconsistent arguments in research in Western societies. Based on the above, the present study collected data from 664 surveys of young children and their parents in same-age and mixed-age classes throughout Taiwan by self-developed questionnaires and convenient sampling. We used narrative statistics and multiple regression to conduct various statistical models to analyze the real effects of mixed-age classes on the effectiveness of young children’s multidimensional learning and development. This study’s findings illustrate that mixed-age classes of “large, medium, and small” and “large and medium” classes of two types were more favorable than same-age classes regarding overall young child development. In contrast, “medium and small” mixed-age classes were relatively unfavorable. The findings of this study do not support the statement that older children do not learn well in mixed-age classes. However, compared to same-age classes, younger children learning in mixed-age classes displayed the advantage of multidimensional development. This suggests that the composition of mixed-age classes is not inappropriate for the development of older or younger children in Taiwan’s preschool field. |