Construction and Model Application of Evaluation System of Business English Civic Education Based on Traditional Culture
Data publikacji: 21 mar 2025
Otrzymano: 17 paź 2024
Przyjęty: 04 lut 2025
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/amns-2025-0693
Słowa kluczowe
© 2025 Menglin Deng et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Education is the key to the development of the country and the revitalization of the nation.In 2020, the Ministry of Education issued the Guideline for the Construction of Civics and Politics in Higher Education Programs, which requires the implementation of the fundamental task of establishing moral education, and the full implementation of Civics and Politics in the curriculum of all disciplines and majors in colleges and universities, with the focus on political identity, family and national sentiments, ethical cultivation, rule of law awareness, and cultural literacy [1-4]. In the same year, the Ministry of Education issued the Teaching Guidelines for Undergraduate Foreign Language and Literature Specialties in General Colleges and Universities, which clarified the specifications for cultivating talents with the trinity of quality, knowledge and ability of students majoring in Business English. In the context of curriculum ideology and politics is to organically combine value leadership with the teaching of language knowledge and the cultivation of language application ability, that is, to consciously pay attention to value leadership all the time in the process of knowledge teaching and ability cultivation, and to put value leadership in an important position [5-9]. Civic and political education should be realized through the “main channel” of classroom teaching. Comprehensive Business English, as the core course of Business English majors, is one of the “main battlefield” of Civic and Political Education [10-12]. Based on the necessity and feasibility of implementing the Civic and Political Education in the comprehensive Business English course, the teachers of the course group should actively change their teaching concepts, improve the Civic and Political ability of the course through various ways, highlight the goal of Civic and Political Education in the design of the course objectives, and innovate the teaching content and teaching methods [13-16]. At the same time, a reasonable evaluation system of business English ideological and political education based on traditional culture is established to realize the organic integration of the three objectives of value shaping, knowledge transmission and ability cultivation, with a view to cultivating business foreign language talents to meet the needs of the construction of socialism with Chinese characteristics in the new era [17-20].
Based on the CIPP evaluation model, the G1-CRITIC method and the fuzzy comprehensive evaluation method are used for the study. The evaluation indexes for the quality of the Civics and Politics course were selected, and the subjective and objective weights of each index were determined using the G1-CRITIC method. On this basis, the fuzzy comprehensive evaluation method was used to evaluate the business English and Civics education in G-School. At the same time, the obtained questionnaire data were subjected to validity and reliability tests, correlation analysis and regression analysis to prove the correlation between each dimension and the overall evaluation of Business English Civic and Political Education as well as the impact of individual differences on its overall evaluation level.
The CIPP evaluation model was proposed by American scholar Stufflebeam on the basis of the improvement of Taylor’s behavioral goal model, which shifts the focus of evaluation from students to the whole curriculum program, breaks through the mode of defining effectiveness only by explicit goals, and integrates the goals of comprehension, appreciation, and emotion that can not be fully transformed into behaviors into the evaluation model as well.The CIPP evaluation model consists of four main elements: background evaluation, input evaluation, process evaluation, and outcome evaluation. Background Evaluation, Input Evaluation, Process Evaluation and Outcome Evaluation, and the relationship between the elements is shown in Figure 1.

The CIPP evaluation model is a relationship between the elements
The inner circle of the CIPP evaluation model is the core value of the project: the middle circle is the focus of the evaluation, including objectives, plans, actions and results; the outer circle is the four dimensions of the evaluation, including background, inputs, processes and results, which correspond bi-directionally to the objectives, plans, actions and results of the middle circle. The core values of the inner circle determine the goals, plans, actions, and outcomes of the middle circle, while the middle circle and the outer circle influence each other. The CIPP evaluation model is an excellent tool for project evaluation, especially for projects that have been conducted for a long period of time and are expected to receive continuous improvement [21]. Before the implementation of the project, it is necessary to conduct a background evaluation to find out the needs, problems and opportunities of the project in the context of a specific teaching environment, and to determine the objectives; input evaluation corresponds to the project plan, and it is necessary to analyze the available strategies, plans and programs; process evaluation monitors, checks and gives feedback on specific behaviors in the implementation of the project, and to determine the reasonableness of the results of the evaluation of the achievement of the objectives and the effectiveness of the activities for a comprehensive evaluation, modification and refinement of the objectives. [22].
Through reviewing relevant literature and studying documents such as the Guiding Outline for the Construction of Civics and Politics in Higher Education Courses, the Overall Program for Deepening the Reform of Educational Evaluation in the New Era, and the Specialized English Course Standards for Higher Vocational Education (2021 Edition), this paper refined 32 descriptive indicators for the evaluation of Civics and Politics in Higher Vocational English Courses based on the CIPP Evaluation Model based on the analysis of some scholars’ quality evaluation models, as Table 1 Shown.
Ideological and political evaluation index system based on CIPP model
| Level 1 indicators | Level 2 indicators |
|---|---|
| Curriculum background | Course orientation |
| Course objectives | |
| Course investment | Human resources |
| Course resources | |
| Financial resources | |
| Curriculum implementation | Teaching preparation |
| Teaching process | |
| Learning process | |
| Course effect | Teaching effect |
| Course impact |
G1 method of subjective weight determination calculation steps:
Determine the relationship between the sequence of indicators to be evaluated With the help of experts in the identified security risk indicators in Judging the importance of neighboring indicators Assuming that the ratio of the importance of neighboring indicators is
In the formula Calculation of indicator weights By assigning the importance Then from the weights of Ak the weights of the indicators of the Calculation of weights of secondary indicators The calculation of the weights of the second-level indicators is the same as the above process of calculating the weights of the first-level indicators, which only requires the experts to assign values to each second-level indicator
CRITIC method objective weight determination calculation steps:
Construct evaluation index set Assuming that there are Dimensionless processing of the evaluation matrix Because the above indicator system involves different dimensions and subjects, the indicators in the unit, order of magnitude and other aspects of the existence of large differences, so the evaluation matrix of the indicators in the data of the dimensionless processing of the standardized matrix
In the formula, min Calculation of indicator variability CRITIC method indicator variability is expressed by the standard deviation, the larger the standard deviation indicates that the greater the difference in the value of the indicator, the more information is released.
Indicator conflict and information calculation The conflict of indicators is expressed by linear correlation coefficient, the larger the coefficient is, the smaller the conflict with other indicators is, the more the evaluation content is repeated with other indicators, and the weight of the indicator should be reduced appropriately, and the formula is as in (10):
The amount of information is denoted by Calculation of indicator weights After calculating the above formula, we can know the formula for calculating the weight
In this paper, we use the preference coefficient tool for linear weighting to determine the portfolio weights, then the portfolio weight
Formula
Fuzzy comprehensive evaluation method is a kind of evaluation method that uses the principle of fuzzy mathematics to synthesize the multi-level and multi-category factors affecting a certain thing, and uses some kind of arithmetic to get the evaluation results of the research object. In this process, it is necessary to determine the indicator set, comment set and weight set of the evaluation object, and assign scores to the comment set, and use the weight of each indicator and the score value of the comment set to establish a fuzzy judgment matrix [23]. The implementation of this method is simple, easy to grasp, not only through the final evaluation of the size of the score value in order to evaluate the object of sorting, but also the use of the principle of maximum affiliation to determine the level of the evaluation object.
Determination of indicator set Indicator set Determining the evaluation set The rating set, i.e. the set of evaluation results, is an uncertain range of values that contains all the evaluation results that the evaluation subject may make on the evaluation object. In this study, a five-point Richter scale was used to implement the questionnaire survey, so the evaluation set can be set to Construct a fuzzy judgment matrix The fuzzy judgment matrix exists in the single-factor evaluation, which is mainly to judge the membership degree of the second-level index to which the third-level index belongs through the comprehensive evaluation, and then the single-factor evaluation of the second-level indicators can be carried out, the fuzzy judgment matrix can be established to determine the membership degree of each first-level index, the single-factor evaluation is implemented layer by layer, and the corresponding fuzzy judgment matrix is established to evaluate the evaluation index Determine the weight set The weights of the indicators determined in the previous section can be directly used as the weight set Calculation of fuzzy evaluation score The final fuzzy evaluation score
In the process of fuzzy synthesis operation, different operators have different advantages. The small-big operator only considers the largest and mainly influential index factors in the affiliation degree; the multiplication-big operator also emphasizes the large operation; the small-bounded operator focuses on the superposition and consideration of the less influential factors; the multiplication-bounded operator takes all the indexes into account in a balanced way according to the weights and sizes, which ensures the reasonableness and logic of the calculation process. Therefore, the multiplicative-bounded operator is chosen for the calculation.
In order to further amend and improve the effectiveness and practicability of the evaluation index system of Business English Civic and Political Education, this study, in connection with the actual situation, selects a certain representative G school as an individual case to carry out the practical exploration of this evaluation index system, and selects the questionnaire survey to issue questionnaires to the professional teachers and students to get the results of the survey.
Table 2 shows the weight values of each constituent element in the evaluation system of Business English Civic and Political Education in colleges and universities. According to the size of the weight values and the combination of weight values, the relative importance of each constituent element can be seen, which also illustrates that some aspects of the current Business English Civic and Political Education still need to be strengthened from one side. In the following, the rationality of the weights of the elements at each level will be analyzed one by one according to the actual needs of the development of Business English, Civic and Political Education. Based on the four elements of the CIPP model, this study identifies four first-level indicators and ranks them in order of weighted value from the largest to the smallest as follows: course implementation (0.4354) > course input (0.2976) > course effect (0.1838) > course background (0.0832).
The weight of ideological and political education evaluation index
| Level 1 indicators | Final weight | Level 2 indicators | Final weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Curriculum background | 0.0832 | Course orientation | 0.3671 |
| Course objectives | 0.6329 | ||
| Course investment | 0.2976 | Human resources | 0.2482 |
| Course resources | 0.5741 | ||
| Financial resources | 0.1777 | ||
| Curriculum implementation | 0.4354 | Teaching preparation | 0.2286 |
| Teaching process | 0.3537 | ||
| Learning process | 0.4177 | ||
| Course effect | 0.1838 | Teaching effect | 0.8352 |
| Course impact | 0.1648 |
The reliability test of the questionnaire can measure the reliability of the questionnaire, and the higher the reliability of the questionnaire, the greater the consistency of the results obtained after several tests. In this study, Cronbach’s alpha coefficient was used as an index to measure the reliability of the questionnaire, and a larger Cronbach’s alpha coefficient indicates that the questionnaire has a higher level of reliability and trustworthiness. The Cronbach’s alpha coefficients of the four level one indicators were 0.842, 0.885, 0.852, and 0.879, respectively, obtained by using SPSS26.0 software to calculate the reliability of the four level one indicator subscales and the questionnaire as a whole as shown in Table 3. The questionnaire’s overall reliability is 0.891, which indicates that it has good internal consistency.
The coefficient of internal consistency of the questionnaire
| Cronbach’sα | Problem number | |
|---|---|---|
| Curriculum background | 0.842 | 8 |
| Course investment | 0.885 | 10 |
| Curriculum implementation | 0.852 | 9 |
| Course effect | 0.879 | 9 |
| The α number of the total questionnaire | 0.891 | 36 |
In this study, a questionnaire was designed according to the established evaluation index system of Business English Civic Education, based on traditional culture. The questionnaire consists of two aspects: the first is the basic information of the survey respondents, including their gender, age, specialty, and so on. The second is the main content of the questionnaire, and the scale is scored by Likert five-degree scale, which is rated from “not conforming at all” to “conforming completely”. The questionnaire was mainly distributed in the form of WeChat, QuestionStar and other online forms.
This questionnaire is mainly for the students of G school, a total of 450 questionnaires were distributed, 380 were recovered, with a recovery rate of 86.4%, by filtering and removing the invalid questionnaires, 314 valid questionnaires were finally obtained, with an effective rate of 69.78%. SPSS26.0 was used to process the questionnaire data as shown in Table 4. The results show that 49.04% of the men and 50.96% of the women participated in this survey, and there is not much difference between the proportions of men and women; the number of first-year students is the largest, accounting for 53.18% of the total; the students whose place of origin is towns and cities account for most of the students, accounting for 61.46% of the total; students of humanities and social sciences predominate, accounting for 55.1% of the total; and 42.99% of the students have had the experience of Civic and Political Education; The number of students who have participated in the Civic and Political Knowledge Contest is 59.24% of the total; most of the students have received Civic and Political Education courses, accounting for 81.85%.
Data recovery and collation
| Basic situation | Options | Frequency | Proportion(%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | 154 | 49.04 |
| Female | 160 | 50.96 | |
| Grade | Freshman year | 167 | 53.18 |
| Sophomore | 123 | 39.17 | |
| Junior | 24 | 7.64 | |
| Majors | Humanities and social sciences | 173 | 55.1 |
| Science and engineering | 141 | 44.90 | |
| Biotically | Countryside | 121 | 38.54 |
| Town | 193 | 61.46 | |
| Whether there is a reflection on education | Yes | 135 | 42.99 |
| No | 179 | 57.01 | |
| Whether to participate in the thinking of political knowledge competition | Yes | 186 | 59.24 |
| No | 128 | 40.76 | |
| Whether to accept the thoughts of the political education course | Yes | 257 | 81.85 |
| No | 57 | 18.15 |
Based on the above results, according to the principle of maximum affiliation, the evaluation level of traditional culture-based business English civic education is “average”, indicating that the traditional culture-based business English civic education in School G is average. At the same time, values were assigned to each evaluation level. In this evaluation, the scores were set at 90 or above as excellent, 80-89 as good, 70-79 as average, 60-69 as poor, and 60 or below as unqualified.
After calculating the evaluation score of Business English Civic and Political Education based on Traditional Culture is shown in Table 5. From the table, it can be found that the comprehensive score of Business English Civic and Political Education based on Traditional Culture is 72.0105, and the score range is between 70-79, which indicates that the overall effect of Business English Civic and Political Education based on Traditional Culture in School G is average, and there is still much room for improvement. The evaluation system consists of 4 primary indicators and 10 secondary indicators, and the analysis of the scores of the indicators can comprehensively show the problems that still exist in the traditional culture-based business English civic education.
Fuzzy comprehensive evaluation score
| In general | Level 1 indicators | Score | Level 2 indicators | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Business English thinking policy education(72.0105) | Course background | 67.4152 | Course orientation | 70.2451 |
| Course objectives | 73.3764 | |||
| Course input | 72.1756 | Human resources | 71.9522 | |
| Course resources | 72.5643 | |||
| Financial resources | 72.4829 | |||
| Curriculum implementation | 72.0845 | Teaching preparation | 72.4562 | |
| Teaching process | 71.7631 | |||
| Course effect | 72.6731 | Learning process | 70.2478 | |
| Teaching effect | 72.5634 | |||
| Course impact | 72.7211 |
Correlation is mainly used to study the closeness of the relationship between two or more random variables. If the level of significance is less than 0.01, there is a correlation between two variables. When the Pearson correlation coefficient is greater than 0.8, it means that there is a strong positive linear relationship between the variables; when the correlation coefficient is between 0.6-0.8, it means that there is a positive linear correlation between the variables; when the correlation coefficient is less than 0.3, it means that there is a weak linear relationship between the variables.
In this paper, Pearson’s simple correlation coefficient is used to study the correlation between the dimensions of course orientation, course objectives, human resources, course resources, financial resources, teaching preparation, teaching process, learning process, teaching effect and course impact, and the overall evaluation of the traditional culture-based business English civic education.
The correlation between each dimension and the overall evaluation of Business English Civics Education is shown in Table 6. From the table, it can be seen that the significance level between course orientation, course objectives, human resources, course resources, financial resources, teaching preparation, teaching process, learning process, teaching effect and course impact and the overall evaluation of business English Civic and Political Education based on traditional culture are all 0, which is less than 0.01, and the Pearson correlation coefficients are 0.652, 0.778, 0.672, respectively, 0.834, 0.698, 0.753, 0.865, 0.812, 0.731, 0.792, which are between 0.6 and 0.8, indicating that there is a certain linear correlation between the dimensions and the overall evaluation of traditional culture-based business English civic education. According to the strength of the correlation between each dimension and the overall evaluation of traditional culture-based Business English Civics Education, they are ranked in descending order: teaching process, course resources, learning process, course impact, course objectives, teaching preparation, teaching effectiveness, financial resources, human resources, and course orientation.
Overall evaluation of the correlation
| Dimension | Correlation coefficient | |
|---|---|---|
| Course orientation | Pearson correlation | 0.652** |
| Significance (double tail) | .000 | |
| Course objectives | Pearson correlation | 0.778** |
| Significance (double tail) | .000 | |
| Human resources | Pearson correlation | 0.672** |
| Significance (double tail) | .000 | |
| Course resources | Pearson correlation | 0.834** |
| Significance (double tail) | .000 | |
| Financial resources | Pearson correlation | 0.698** |
| Significance (double tail) | .000 | |
| Teaching preparation | Pearson correlation | 0.753** |
| Significance (double tail) | .000 | |
| Teaching process | Pearson correlation | 0.865** |
| Significance (double tail) | .000 | |
| Learning process | Pearson correlation | 0.812** |
| Significance (double tail) | .000 | |
| Teaching effect | Pearson correlation | 0.731** |
| Significance (double tail) | .000 | |
| Course impact | Pearson correlation | 0.792** |
| Significance (double tail) | .000 | |
The degree of fit of the multiple linear regression equation is tested by the adjusted coefficient of determination (
Model summaryk
| Model | R | R2 | Adjusted R2 | Standard error | significance | Durbin-Wat son(U) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | .645a | .442 | .441 | .221 | .000 | |
| 2 | .711b | .563 | .562 | .201 | .000 | |
| 3 | .784c | .573 | .571 | .189 | .000 | |
| 4 | .812d | .614 | .612 | .183 | .000 | |
| 5 | .701e | .645 | .643 | .178 | .000 | |
| 6 | .831f | .664 | .662 | .181 | .000 | |
| 7 | .676g | .671 | .669 | .181 | .000 | |
| 8 | .877h | .673 | .671 | .185 | .000 | |
| 9 | .731i | .678 | .675 | .180 | .000 | |
| 10 | .782j | .724 | .720 | .180 | .000 | 1.783 |
Predictor variable: (constant), course orientation
Predictor variable: (constant), course orientation, course objectives
Predictor variable: (constant), course orientation, course objectives, human resources
Predictor variable: (Constant), Curriculum Orientation, Curriculum Objectives, Human Resources, Curriculum Resources
Predictor variable: (Constant), Curriculum Orientation, Curriculum Objectives, Human Resources, Curriculum Resources, Financial Resources
Predictor Variable: (Constant), Curriculum Orientation, Curriculum Objectives, Human Resources, Curriculum Resources, Financial Resources, Instructional Readiness
Predictor variable: (constant), course orientation, course objectives, human resources, curricular resources, financial resources, instructional readiness, instructional process,
Predictor variable: (constant) course orientation, course objectives, human resources, curricular resources, financial resources, instructional readiness, instructional process, learning process
Predictor variable: (Constant) Curriculum orientation, curriculum objectives, human resources, curriculum resources, financial resources, instructional preparation, instructional process, learning process, instructional effectiveness
Predictor variables: (constant) course orientation, course objectives, human resources, course resources, financial resources, instructional preparation, instructional process, learning process, instructional effectiveness, curricular impacts
Dependent variable: business English ideological education based on traditional culture
Table 8 is a table of coefficients showing the constants in the regression relationship between each dimension and the overall evaluation of traditional culture-based Business English Civic Education, the regression coefficients. The P-value of the regression coefficients of course orientation, course objectives, human resources, course resources, financial resources, teaching preparation, teaching process, learning process, teaching effect, and course impact are all less than 0.05, which reaches the level of significance, indicating that they can significantly respond to the evaluation of Business English Civic and Political Education based on Traditional Culture. And the expansion factor (VIF) in each dimension is less than 5, indicating that there is no covariance among the 10 independent variables. There are 10 factors of course orientation, course objectives, human resources, course resources, financial resources, teaching preparation, teaching process, learning process, teaching effect, and course impact with β-values of 0.205, 0.228, 0.020, 0.199, 0.194, 0.140, 0.211, 0.101, 0.089, 0.157, and 0.061 with a constant of 3.132. from which the regression equation between the 10 dimensions and the overall evaluation of traditional culture-based business English civic education can be derived as:
Coefficient a
| Nonnormalized coefficient | Normalization factor | t | significance | Common linear statistics | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B | Standard error | β | Admissible | VIF | |||
| Constants | 3.132 | .011 | 156.131 | .000 | |||
| Course orientation | .081 | .023 | .205 | 4.138 | .000 | .328 | 2.619 |
| Course objectives | .120 | .020 | .228 | 3.889 | .000 | .263 | 2.910 |
| Human resources | .096 | .028 | .199 | 3.490 | .000 | .314 | 3.873 |
| Course resources | .047 | .017 | .194 | 4.259 | .000 | .402 | 2.662 |
| Financial resources | .076 | .023 | .140 | 3.373 | .000 | .246 | 3.082 |
| Teaching preparation | .093 | .020 | .211 | 3.296 | .000 | .337 | 2.490 |
| Teaching process | .086 | .022 | .101 | 2.852 | .000 | .257 | 3.805 |
| Learning process | .045 | .026 | .089 | 6.476 | .000 | .329 | 3.048 |
| Teaching effect | .029 | .017 | .157 | 2.589 | .000 | .242 | 3.184 |
| Course impact | .075 | .029 | .061 | 5.344 | .000 | .384 | 2.601 |
Dependent Variable: Business English Civic Education Based on Traditional Culture
Y=0.205×curriculum orientation+0.228×curriculum objectives+0.199×human resources+0.194× curriculum resources+0.140×financial resources+0.211×teaching preparation+0.101×teaching process+0.089×learning process+0.157×teaching effect+0.061×curriculum impact+3.132
The degree of influence of each dimension on the overall evaluation of traditional culture-based business English civic education, in descending order, is as follows: course objectives, teaching preparation, course orientation, human resources, course resources, teaching effectiveness, financial resources, teaching process, learning process, and course impact.
Figure 2 shows a normal probability plot of the standardized residuals, in which all the points are basically evenly distributed above and below the straight line, suggesting a linear distribution among the variables.

Standardized residual normal probability diagram
Gender and degree type are dichotomous variables, so this study tested the difference in the influence of individual factors on the overall evaluation of business English civic education based on traditional culture through an independent samples t-test. Age, major, and grade level were tested by One-Way ANOVA to test the hypothesis of the difference in the influence of individual factors on the overall evaluation of business English civic education based on traditional culture.
The results of the chi-square test (Levene’s test), t-test, and 95% confidence intervals are shown in Table 9. The results of Levene’s test for the dimension of course orientation were: F-value was 11.65, and the probability of significance was P=0.657>0.05.Therefore, there was no significant difference in the variance of course orientation between males and females. The result of Levene’s test for the dimension of course objectives is: F value is 14.45 and the probability of significance is P=0.173>0.05.Therefore, there is no significant difference in the variance of course objectives between males and females.
Independent sample inspection
| F | Significance | t | Freedom | significance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Course orientation | Homogeneity of variance has been assumed | 11.654 | .657 | 2.352 | 334 | .057 |
| Homogeneity of the variance was not assumed | 2.251 | 132.613 | .061 | |||
| Course objectives | Homogeneity of variance has been assumed | 14.451 | .173 | 3.372 | 334 | .001 |
| Homogeneity of the variance was not assumed | 3.674 | 141.43 | .005 | |||
| Human resources | Homogeneity of variance has been assumed | 3.673 | .356 | 1.853 | 334 | .053 |
| Homogeneity of the variance was not assumed | 1.654 | 149.217 | .047 | |||
| Course resources | Homogeneity of variance has been assumed | 2.782 | .000 | 1.872 | 334 | .001 |
| Homogeneity of the variance was not assumed | 1.543 | 152.632 | .011 | |||
| Financial resources | Homogeneity of variance has been assumed | .764 | .275 | 2.542 | 334 | .022 |
| Homogeneity of the variance was not assumed | 2.757 | 156.764 | .001 | |||
| Teaching preparation | Homogeneity of variance has been assumed | 2.452 | .000 | 3.537 | 334 | .065 |
| Homogeneity of the variance was not assumed | 3.784 | 164.935 | .002 | |||
| Teaching process | Homogeneity of variance has been assumed | 10.653 | .000 | 1.685 | 334 | .001 |
| Homogeneity of the variance was not assumed | 1.574 | 177.262 | .001 | |||
| Learning process | Homogeneity of variance has been assumed | 8.543 | .000 | 3.545 | 334 | .031 |
| Homogeneity of the variance was not assumed | 3.672 | 185.434 | .001 | |||
| Teaching effect | Homogeneity of variance has been assumed | 4.21 | .000 | 1.856 | 334 | .021 |
| Homogeneity of the variance was not assumed | 1.426 | 191.653 | .001 | |||
| Course impact | Homogeneity of variance has been assumed | 9.753 | .000 | 2.673 | 334 | .023 |
| Homogeneity of the variance was not assumed | 2.572 | 198.542 | .003 |
The result of Levene’s test for teaching effectiveness dimension is: F value is 4.21 and probability of significance P=0.000<0.05.Therefore, there is a significant difference in the variance of teaching effectiveness between males and females. The result of independent samples t-test showed T=1.426 with significance P=0.001<0.05, so there is a significant difference in the mean value of quality gap of teaching effectiveness dimension by gender.
The ANOVA analysis of different regions is shown in Table 10. The table shows that the p-value of each dimension is less than 0.05 for different places of origin on all 10 dimensions, which means that there is a significant difference between students from different places of origin in terms of course orientation, course objectives, human resources, course resources, financial resources, preparation for teaching, teaching and learning process, learning process, teaching and learning effectiveness, and course impact.
ANOVA analysis in different regions
| Sum of squares | df | Mean square | F | Significance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Course orientation | Intergroup | 11.452 | 3 | 3.213 | 9.452 | .000 |
| Within group | 123.452 | 351 | .343 | |||
| Total | 134.904 | 352 | ||||
| Course objectives | Intergroup | 12.671 | 3 | 3.784 | 6.432 | .000 |
| Within group | 131.734 | 351 | .454 | |||
| Total | 144.405 | 352 | ||||
| Human resources | Intergroup | 7.573 | 3 | 2.367 | 5.351 | .000 |
| Within group | 138.656 | 351 | .411 | |||
| Total | 146.229 | 352 | ||||
| Course resources | Intergroup | 12.442 | 3 | 3.452 | 4.212 | .000 |
| Within group | 143.631 | 351 | .357 | |||
| Total | 156.073 | 352 | ||||
| Financial resources | Intergroup | 17.422 | 3 | 3.651 | 4.231 | .000 |
| Within group | 156.375 | 351 | .355 | |||
| Total | 173.797 | 352 | ||||
| Teaching preparation | Intergroup | 10.572 | 3 | 3.641 | 6.322 | .000 |
| Within group | 167.542 | 351 | .552 | |||
| Total | 178.114 | 352 | ||||
| Teaching process | Intergroup | 12.754 | 3 | 4.431 | 7.355 | .000 |
| Within group | 174.338 | 351 | .414 | |||
| Total | 187.092 | 352 | ||||
| Learning process | Intergroup | 10.653 | 3 | 5.232 | 5.543 | .000 |
| Within group | 182.663 | 351 | .562 | |||
| Total | 193.316 | 352 | ||||
| Teaching effect | Intergroup | 12.775 | 3 | 3.521 | 6.241 | .000 |
| Within group | 198.435 | 351 | .435 | |||
| Total | 211.21 | 352 | ||||
| Course impact | Intergroup | 10.741 | 3 | 4.262 | 8.532 | .000 |
| Within group | 213.56 | 351 | .351 | |||
| Total | 224.301 | 352 |
Based on the theory of the CIPP evaluation model, this paper collects relevant research data to determine the evaluation system of Business English Civic and Political Education based on traditional culture. The subjective and objective weights of the indicators were calculated using the G1-CRITIC method, the reliability and validity of the indicators were tested with the help of SPSS26.0, and the traditional culture-based Business English Civic and Political Education in G school was practically applied to obtain objective evaluation results. Finally, through empirical analysis, the correlation and regression relationship between the dimensions of Business English Civic Education based on Traditional Culture and the overall evaluation were analyzed. Based on the evaluation of traditional culture-based Business English and Civics Education in School G, the following conclusions were obtained:
The overall level of traditional culture-based Business English Civic and Political Education in School G is medium to high, which still needs to be strengthened. Secondly, the overall score of Business English Civics Education based on Traditional Culture is 72.0105, with a score range of 70-80, so School G still needs to further strengthen the Business English Civics Education for students. Through empirical analysis, the correlation and regression relationship between the dimensions of the evaluation of Business English Civic and Political Education based on Traditional Culture and the overall quality evaluation were analyzed. It is verified that different individual factors: gender and region will have different degrees of influence on the evaluation level of Business English Civics Education based on Traditional Culture.
