Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 140
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4422-0616-8 • Hardback • October 2010 • $107.00 • (£82.00)
978-1-4422-0618-2 • eBook • October 2010 • $101.50 • (£78.00)
Roger C. Shouse has been an educator for 35 years. He spent a year as a visiting professor at Taiwan's National Pingtung University of Education and is currently an Associate Professor of Education in the Pennsylvania State University College of Education. Kuan-Pei Lin earned her B.Ed. in Educational Psychology & Counseling at the National Taiwan Normal University, her M.S. in Counseling and Counselor Education at Indiana University, and a Ph.D. in Educational Leadership at the Pennsylvania State University. She has been an assistant professor in the Graduate Institute of Educational Administration at the National Pingtung University of Education in Taiwan since 2005.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Acknowledgments
Chapter 3 Chapter 1: Introduction and Rationale
Chapter 4 Chapter 2: Western Concepts and Chinese Contrasts
Chapter 5 Chapter 3: Taiwan's Education System and its Recent Reforms
Chapter 6 Chapter 4: Voices of Taiwan School Principals
Chapter 7 Discussion and Implications
Chapter 8 Bibliography
Chapter 9 Index
From the preface: The story this book tells is compelling. It features abundant insights into two profoundly distinct cultures (Taiwan and the United States) that, at the same time, are moving in somewhat similar directions in the governance of their educational institutions.
— Dan Lortie, Professor Emeritus, University of Chicago
Principal Leadership in Taiwan Schools makes important contributions to existing scholarship on educational leadership. This is not simply a book about being a principal in American or Taiwanese schools; it is a book about educational leadership in the global sense.
— Paul T. Begley, Executive Director of UCEA Center for the Study of Leadership and Ethics, Nipissing University
From the preface:The story this book tells is compelling. It features abundant insights into two profoundly distinct cultures (Taiwan and the United States) that, at the same time, are moving in somewhat similar directions in the governance of their educational institutions.
— Dan Lortie, Professor Emeritus, University of Chicago