| 英文摘要 |
This study examined collaborative governance practices in rural education by exploring the operation of regional school collaboration in Hsinchu County, Taiwan. It further analyzed how regional collabora¬tion was implemented to support students’basic academic achievement through cross-school administrative collaboration, teacher professional development, and the long-term involvement of external experts. A quali¬tative research approach was adopted. Semi-structured in-depth inter¬views were conducted with eight key participants, including principals or administrators from both junior high and elementary schools across four regional collaboration areas. The interview data were transcribed ver¬batim and analyzed thematically, and cross-regional comparisons were used to examine variations in collaborative practices across different geo¬graphical and organizational contexts. The findings indicated that all col¬laboration areas identified the improvement of students’basic academic achievement as a shared goal and gradually developed a governance mod¬el characterized by shared academic responsibility across schools. The in-stitutionalization of administrative collaboration, sustained cross-school teacher professional interaction, and continuous expert accompaniment were found to be critical for sustaining and deepening regional collabora¬tion, while collaboration strategies varied according to local conditions, including geography, culture, and school size. This study contributed to the literature on rural education by highlighting regional-level gover¬nance as a viable approach to addressing the structural challenges faced by rural schools, and the findings also provided practical implications for local education authorities in designing and implementing regional school collaboration policies. |