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Nathie, Mahmood – Journal for Multicultural Education, 2021
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to examine whether Australian Islamic schools, by dint of their unique status within Australian private schooling, may be construed as elitist or exclusivist premised on markers such as religious affiliation, school age, history, location, reputation and non-curricular excellences such as affluence and alumni.…
Descriptors: Islam, Religious Schools, Institutional Characteristics, Private Schools
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Variyan, George – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2019
The evolution of teachers' identities in Australia highlights the struggles between state and civic over the control of schooling and also the contingent nature of the teacher identity itself. A genealogical analysis of this history makes visible these contingencies, but more importantly suggests that little reckoning has been afforded to…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, School Administration, Educational History, Transformative Learning
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Sriprakash, Arathi; Proctor, Helen; Hu, Betty – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2016
This article explores parents' use of private tutoring services for their primary school children in Sydney, Australia's largest city. Using Bernstein's theories of invisible and visible pedagogies, we look, through the eyes of a small group of middle-class Chinese-background interviewees, at the tensions between certain pedagogic forms associated…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Elementary School Students, Advantaged, Foreign Countries
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Kenway, Jane; Fahey, Johannah – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2014
How are elite schools caught up in the changing processes of globalisation? Is globalisation a new phenomenon for them? This paper focuses on the globalising practices that selected elite schools adopt. It also explores how globalisation is impacting on the social purposes of elite schools, which conventionally have been to serve privileged social…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Selective Admission, Advantaged, Social Status
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Drew, Christopher – Australian Journal of Education, 2013
Australia's neoliberal education agenda drives a competitive market climate where schools compete for potential clientele. In this climate, school impression management and self-promotion has become an important factor in maintaining a financially viable school. Schools produce image management texts including school prospectuses, newspapers…
Descriptors: Marketing, Selective Admission, Web Sites, Neoliberalism