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Rowe, Emma; Perry, Laura B. – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2020
Parent involvement in their child's schooling is routinely celebrated and emphasised in government education policy in many countries. We take a critical lens to examining parent involvement by investigating voluntary parent fees in public secondary schools, and how these fees are patterned by school socioeconomic status (SES). In Australia, where…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Educational Finance, Private Financial Support, Public Schools
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Holloway, Jessica; Keddie, Amanda – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2019
Using the stories of two autonomous public schools in Australia, this paper demonstrates how commercialisation can simultaneously position schools as both consumer and for-profit producer. Drawing on Foucault's articulation of discourse as that which constitutes and makes available what is possible to be said, done and imagined, the paper…
Descriptors: Institutional Autonomy, Commercialization, Public Schools, Educational Resources
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McDonald, Paula; Pini, Barbara; Mayes, Robyn – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2012
The way in which private schools use rhetoric in their communications offers important insights into how these organizational sites persuade audiences and leverage marketplace advantage in the context of contemporary educational platforms. Through systemic analysis of rhetorical strategies employed in 65 "elite" school prospectuses in…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Privatization, Rhetoric, Academic Achievement
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Forsey, Martin – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2009
The research reported here demonstrates the need for greater subtlety in the practice of policy than appears to be evident in many parts of the globe. Based upon an ethnographic study of school reform, this paper heeds Appadurai's call for those researching the "global diaspora of ideas" to pay attention to the contextual conventions…
Descriptors: School Restructuring, Ethnography, Personal Autonomy, Educational Change