Sustaining Chinese Language Curriculum Reform in Tanzania: A Documentary Analysis of Policy Alignment, Teacher Support, Localisation, and Institutional Coordination
by Frank Bahati Rwiza, Gloria Gilbert Mshana, Huang Fang, Jivitius Ching’oro Sabatho
Published: July 9, 2026 • DOI: 10.51244/IJRSI.2026.1306000332
Abstract
Chinese language education in Tanzania has moved from a small secondary-school initiative into a formal curriculum area extending from Standard III through ordinary and advanced secondary education to teacher education. This paper examines the documented conditions required to sustain that reform, focusing on policy alignment, teacher support, curriculum localisation and institutional coordination. A qualitative documentary analysis was conducted using 38 official and institutionally generated documents, including national policies and plans, general curricula, Chinese language syllabi, locally developed textbooks, cooperation and implementation records, examination formats and item-response reports. Peer-reviewed literature was used to interpret the documentary patterns. The Context, Input, Process and Product model guided coding and synthesis. The documents indicate that Tanzania has established a substantial policy and curriculum architecture for Chinese language education, including vertical curriculum expansion, local textbook production, teacher-education provisions and national assessment arrangements. They also reveal unresolved risks: the local teacher-preparation pathway is not yet fully operational, complete learner and teacher resource packages remain uneven, inter-agency coordination is episodic and assessment evidence is not demonstrably embedded in a routine curriculum-improvement cycle. Because the study analyses policy intentions and recorded arrangements rather than classroom enactment, its conclusions are framed cautiously. The paper proposes an indicative roadmap centred on local capacity, resource completion, coordinated monitoring and stronger use of assessment evidence. Long-term sustainability will depend on converting project-supported developments into routine, nationally owned curriculum-management processes.