A Comparison of Chinese and European–American University Students’ Virtue and Mind Learning Beliefs and Academic Achievement in Global Cultural Exchange

The world’s two largest economies, the United States and China, have fundamentally different cultural beliefs about learning. Thus, when examining Chinese learners, Western researchers were confused by the contrasting phenomenon between seemingly poor learning approaches and high academic achievemen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2022-05, Vol.14 (10), p.5788
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Yanchi, Gao, Ruixiang, Lan, Xixin, Zhou, Xinyu, Huang, Shiqi, Wu, Danying, Li, Qiqi, Zhou, Yujun, Luo, Ning, Zuo, Huang, Mo, Lei
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container_end_page
container_issue 10
container_start_page 5788
container_title Sustainability
container_volume 14
creator Liu, Yanchi
Gao, Ruixiang
Lan, Xixin
Zhou, Xinyu
Huang, Shiqi
Wu, Danying
Li, Qiqi
Zhou, Yujun
Luo, Ning
Zuo, Huang
Mo, Lei
description The world’s two largest economies, the United States and China, have fundamentally different cultural beliefs about learning. Thus, when examining Chinese learners, Western researchers were confused by the contrasting phenomenon between seemingly poor learning approaches and high academic achievement, i.e., the Paradox of Chinese Learners. In addressing this paradox, Jin Li offered a theoretical framework of the Chinese virtue model versus the European–American mind model to comprehensively understand the differences in students’ learning beliefs and academic achievement between the two cultures. However, Li does not pay attention to global cultural exchange or directly link learning beliefs to academic achievement. Therefore, this paper presents two empirical studies addressing these research gaps. Study 1 adopted both qualitative and quantitative methods to investigate the learning beliefs of Chinese and European–American university students, and revealed that deepening cultural exchange narrowed the gap between the two models (Study 1a), but the impact of the virtue model on European–American students was weaker than that of the mind model on Chinese students (Study 1b). Study 2 further revealed that both models were beneficial for Chinese students’ academic achievement, whereas only the virtue model benefited European–American students. These findings have important implications for addressing the Paradox of Chinese Learners.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/su14105788
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Study 1 adopted both qualitative and quantitative methods to investigate the learning beliefs of Chinese and European–American university students, and revealed that deepening cultural exchange narrowed the gap between the two models (Study 1a), but the impact of the virtue model on European–American students was weaker than that of the mind model on Chinese students (Study 1b). Study 2 further revealed that both models were beneficial for Chinese students’ academic achievement, whereas only the virtue model benefited European–American students. 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subjects Academic achievement
Asian students
Cross cultural studies
Culture
Education
Globalization
Learning
Paradoxes
Parents & parenting
Students
Traditions
University students
title A Comparison of Chinese and European–American University Students’ Virtue and Mind Learning Beliefs and Academic Achievement in Global Cultural Exchange
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