Chengdu Primary and Secondary Schools under the Policy of “Double Reduction”
Abstract
China's “double reduction” education policy is a relatively new statewide movement.
There is still a gap in understanding of the policy, such as expectations and the empirical
research due to the early stages of policy implementation. This study identifies the cognitive
structure of the policy and uses the existing literature for implications that relate to the two
goals of “double reduction” – reduce workload both at school and external tutoring. In
addition, it identifies some of the concerns at the preliminary stage of implementation in
schools, using the content analysis of the Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of
China (2022) and interviews with relevant stakeholders. The findings identify education
ecology and student centralism as essential concepts in a double reduction for guiding
behavioural commitments for improving students' quality of life in the educational process.
Aside from document content analysis and in-depth interviews, the 306 valid survey return
provides statistical evidence that demonstrates four key predictors that influence student
workload reduction and off-campus workload reduction: exam pressure reduction, increased
homework accuracy, improved work content rationality, and decreased extracurricular
training. This study suggests a theoretical structure for future survey-based research and a
questionnaire design based on the research findings. The current literature clarifies the
findings, positions them, and offers theoretical and practical consequences.