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Ye, Rebecca – Educational Review, 2022
This paper considers the COVID-19 pandemic as a test that has disrupted the flow of a particular type of social and physical mobility. It takes pathways embarked upon by students from Asian countries to "prestigious" anglophone universities as its focal point of analysis, considering how the residential, consecratory experience of…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Universities, Selective Admission
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Martin, Jane – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2021
The following two articles are taken from the FORUM archive. First published in the autumn of 1981, they offer a restatement of comprehensive principles in the context of the educational policies of the incoming Conservative government from 1979. The first thing Margaret Thatcher's education secretary, Mark Carlisle, did was to repeal Labour…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Schools, Educational Policy, Educational Change
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Lucy Bailey – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2024
This article employs critical discourse analysis of the Spear's Schools Index of 'the best private schools in the world', the first such global ranking of schools, to understand representations of elite education in globalised societies. It argues that the Index is a powerful text that exemplifies a global gaze -- an imagined perspective from…
Descriptors: Reputation, Institutional Characteristics, Selective Admission, Competitive Selection
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Aline Courtois; Michael Donnelly – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2024
This article focuses on the relationship between elite British boarding schools and the overseas branches ('satellites') that they have established around the world. While British schools are categorised as charities, the satellites are operated as commercial ventures through subsidiaries. The UK-based schools can thus profit from the export of…
Descriptors: Advantaged, Boarding Schools, Taxes, Trusts (Financial)
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Bainbridge, Alan; Bartley, Joanne; Troppe, Tom – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2021
A detailed analysis of "Hansard" transcripts was undertaken to explore the dialogue used in parliamentary debates and committee meetings where reference was made to grammar schools between October 2015 to March 2019. During this period, the first new grammar school for fifty years had been approved, along with the establishment of the…
Descriptors: Selective Admission, Educational Policy, Legislators, Educational Finance
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Anna Mountford-Zimdars; Julia Gaulter; Neil Harrison – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
This original study followed up ten beneficiaries of a UK charity-led programme that supported disadvantaged students in applying to elite US universities. First interviewed in 2015 during their early university days in the United States, in our 2019 follow-up all participants had graduated. Six remained in the United States and four had returned…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, Disadvantaged, College Applicants, Selective Admission
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Susan L. Robertson – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
In this paper, I argue a new politics of ordinal differentiation and its instruments for governing education aims to make invisible a 'low intensity civil war' against the labouring classes. It does this through the elevation and ubiquity of actuarial and quantitative measures aimed at producing a new form of differentiated belonging: that of…
Descriptors: Social Differences, Politics of Education, Citizenship, Personal Autonomy
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Bunnell, Tristan; Courtois, Aline; Donnelly, Michael – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2020
Our paper examines the opening of branches overseas ('satellite colleges') by elite private schools mainly located in England ('founding colleges'), largely in emerging economies of the Middle East and South East Asia. We trace the development of these 'satellite colleges' over three successive waves of growth, from opportunistic venturing in…
Descriptors: International Education, Foreign Countries, Selective Admission, Educational History
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Bardach, Lisa; Rushby, Jade V.; Klassen, Robert M. – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2021
Background: Situational judgement tests (SJTs) measure non-cognitive attributes and have recently drawn attention as a selection method for initial teacher education programmes. To date, very little is known about adverse impact in teacher selection SJT performance. Aims: This study aimed to shed light on adverse effects of gender, ethnicity, and…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Racial Differences, Ethnicity, Socioeconomic Influences
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Koutsouris, George; Stentiford, Lauren; Norwich, Brahm – British Educational Research Journal, 2022
Inclusion is seen as an ethical obligation, grounded in notions of equity and social justice for all groups and at all stages of education, with higher education (HE) representing a distinctive space where the inclusion agenda is becoming more influential. However, inclusion is also increasingly recognised as an ambiguous concept that might have…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Educational Policy, Selective Admission, Discourse Analysis
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Walkerdine, Valerie – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2021
Drawing on my own experience as a working-class academic, as well of that of working-class students in the present, I discuss how the experience for working-class students in elite universities still includes many aspects of classism, even when those students can, and do, do very well indeed and even when policies are apparently in place to…
Descriptors: Working Class, Colleges, Selective Admission, Social Class
Furlong, John, Ed.; Lunt, Ingrid, Ed. – Higher Education Policy Institute, 2020
HEPI's last foray into the debate on academic selection suggested grammar schools are successful in helping their poorer pupils reach highly-selective universities. In this response, a diverse set of voices use the latest evidence to challenge the idea that grammar school systems serve pupils better than comprehensive schools. This collection of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Secondary Schools, Selective Admission
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Emily Smith-Woolley; Jean-Baptiste Pingault; Saskia Selzam; Kaili Rimfeld; Eva Krapohl; Sophie von Stumm; Kathryn Asbury; Philip S. Dale; Toby Young; Rebecca Allen; Yulia Kovas; Robert Plomin – npj Science of Learning, 2018
On average, students attending selective schools outperform their non-selective counterparts in national exams. These differences are often attributed to value added by the school, as well as factors schools use to select pupils, including ability, achievement and, in cases where schools charge tuition fees or are located in affluent areas,…
Descriptors: Performance Factors, Tests, Differences, Selective Admission
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Verger, Antoni; Moschetti, Mauro C.; Fontdevila, Clara – Comparative Education, 2020
Despite Public-Private Partnerships' (PPPs) growing popularity within education policy circles, research on their effects yields contradictory results. The understanding of PPP effects is limited by the prevalence of generalist analyses that neglect to acknowledge the exceptional heterogeneity of the policy frameworks in which PPPs crystallize.…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, Educational Policy, Public Sector, Private Sector
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Cooley, Alexander; Prelec, Tena; Heathershaw, John – Journal of Comparative and International Higher Education, 2022
We explore how the influx of foreign funding into the higher education sectors of the United States and United Kingdom has raised the challenge of "reputation laundering"--when foreign donors and individuals use donations to prestigious universities to boost their international public image and offset negative images or reported…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Finance, Cross Cultural Studies, Foreign Countries
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