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Ojomo, Efosa; Fohtung, Jacob – Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation, 2022
Brazil spends more money, and a higher percentage of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP), on education than other Latin American countries. However, many of the outcomes of the country's education system are worse than its peer countries. We call this mismatch Brazil's Education Paradox. One of the primary reasons for Brazil's Education Paradox is…
Descriptors: Educational Legislation, Administrative Organization, Foreign Countries, Educational Finance
Douglass, John Aubrey – Center for Studies in Higher Education, 2012
For-profit colleges and universities in the US have been growing at a staggering pace in enrollment, in profits, and in the corporate value of those traded on the New York Stock Exchange. From 2000 to 2010, the sector grew by some 235 percent in enrollment, increasing its market share from 3 to 9.1 percent of all tertiary enrolled students. What…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Free Enterprise System, Public Colleges, Educational Attainment
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Kosack, Stephen – Comparative Education, 2009
The goal of Education for All (EFA) is in jeopardy, and the cause is widely perceived to be a lack of political will. But we lack an accurate definition of political will. In this article, I offer a definition that determines beforehand whether a government will have political will. In contrast to current academic work and popular discourse, which…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Education, Politics of Education, Political Influences
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Haussman, Fay – Change, 1978
The staggering growth of higher education in Brazil has affected academic performance, income levels, the labor market, and student aspirations as well as the political perspective of the authoritarian regime. Implications of broader access to education and of student activism are discussed. (LBH)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Access to Education, Activism, Authoritarianism
Gama, Elizabeth M. P. – 1986
Investigations into the Brazilian education system indicate the system's inadequacies in democratizing education. Instead, education is accessible to those who can afford it and not to those who most need it. Although research evidence consistently shows the positive relationship between socioeconomic characteristics and school access and…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Educational Development, Educational Planning, Educational Policy
Levy, Daniel – 1980
A Chilean case study of higher education under an authoritarian regime is presented. The study restricts itself to the most prevalent sub-type of the authoritarian regime which is "bureaucratic-authoritarianism" (BA). The BA designation refers to regimes which exert considerable repressive control over societies that have undergone…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Administration, Admission Criteria, Authoritarianism