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New Localism in the Neoliberal Era: Local District Response to Voluntary Open-School Markets in Ohio
Lee, Jin – SAGE Open, 2021
Local education governance has allowed neighborhood schools to offer community-oriented curricula and activities, and public schools have been operated to serve only residents' children within the defined areas. The rise of neoliberalism may, however, undermine political foundations of the traditional political systems. This article explores how…
Descriptors: Neighborhood Schools, School Districts, School District Autonomy, Neoliberalism

Wronkovich, Michael; Robinson, James; Hess, Caryl A. – NASSP Bulletin, 1998
A survey of students at three Ohio high schools explored reasons for movement to other schools through state-legislated open-enrollment provisions. Response analysis identified five trends: students with unmet expectations, students with fulfilled expectations, students seeking safety, students desiring to stay at their "home school,"…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, High Schools, Open Enrollment, School Choice

Fowler, Frances C. – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1994
Arena models developed by T. Mazzoni relating to policy innovation are applied to the passage of open enrollment legislation in Ohio. The macro arena was relatively inactive, but a shift from the subsystem to the leadership arena occurred, partially validating Mazzoni's revised model. (SLD)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Innovation, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education

Fowler, Frances C. – Educational Policy, 1996
In 1993-94, Ohio implemented an interdistrict open-enrollment policy, allowing student transfers only to adjacent districts. Districts can be open or closed, but cannot prevent transfers. A 1994 survey found that open districts were small, rural, racially homogeneous districts with declining enrollment. Closed districts were suburban, with…
Descriptors: Crowding, Educational Supply, Elementary Secondary Education, Free Enterprise System