| 英文摘要 |
While the enactment of the“Three Experimental Education Acts”has promoted diverse schooling models, it has also generated significant spillover effects that intensify competition for enrollment and resources among neighboring schools. Adopting a resilient governance perspec¬tive, this qualitative case study examines how a rural elementary school in eastern Taiwan, adjacent to a rapidly expanding experimental school, transitioned from a survival crisis to systemic adaptation. The findings reveal that spillover competition follows a traceable temporal trajectory, where quantitative shifts in enrollment and resourc¬es rapidly escalate into qualitative crises of confidence and morale, once causing the case school’s new student enrollment to drop to three. The study identifies a dynamic trajectory of resilience driven by three inter¬locking mechanisms: (1) Trust Repair, which stabilized the fragile sup¬port structure during the preparatory phase; (2) Quality Signal Recon¬struction, which materialized school value to counter information asym¬metry during the response phase; and (3) Resource Reallocation, which institutionalized sporadic support into a sustainable ecological network during the adaptation phase. These mechanisms operated sequentially to support a fragile yet discernible recovery. This study contributes by concretizing the formation of spillover effects and offering policy recommen¬dations for compensatory support and regional educational equilibrium. |