Publication Date
In 2025 | 4 |
Since 2024 | 37 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 151 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 410 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 1150 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Kirst, Michael W. | 4 |
Nilsen, Sigurd R. | 4 |
Penning, Nick | 4 |
Vinovskis, Maris A. | 4 |
West, Anne | 4 |
Ahmed, Manzoor | 3 |
Barnett, W. Steven | 3 |
Bottery, Mike | 3 |
Butcher, Jonathan | 3 |
Clark, David L. | 3 |
Dickinson, Katherine P. | 3 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Policymakers | 220 |
Practitioners | 59 |
Administrators | 45 |
Researchers | 24 |
Teachers | 19 |
Community | 8 |
Media Staff | 2 |
Students | 1 |
Location
United States | 131 |
Australia | 123 |
Canada | 111 |
United Kingdom (England) | 107 |
United Kingdom | 96 |
China | 84 |
California | 51 |
New Zealand | 39 |
South Africa | 34 |
India | 30 |
New York | 30 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Does not meet standards | 1 |
Ben Williams – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
Free schools were a flagship policy of the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition (2010-15), aligned with the broader academisation programme, yet both consolidating and transcending New Labour's educational narrative between 1997 and 2010. Driven by political 'modernisers' such as Prime Minister David Cameron and his Education Secretary Michael…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Free Schools, Educational History, Educational Policy
Tao Fu; Yonghan Ji – SAGE Open, 2024
Using the Triple Helix model, this study explores the government-university relationship in the context of China's AI talent development, and their outcomes in terms of AI program deployment, enrollment and faculty. Their interaction may best be summarized as a model of government pull and university response, but with more support and autonomy…
Descriptors: Government Role, Universities, Artificial Intelligence, Talent Development
Capucine Coustere; Lisa Ruth Brunner; Takhmina Shokirova; Karun K. Karki; Negar Valizadeh – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
Through higher education-migration ('edugration') systems, many immigrant-dependent countries have become structurally reliant on the retention of post-secondary international students as a source of the so-called global talent. This emerging area of research focuses primarily on the "potential" economic contributions international…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Students, Global Approach, College Students
Andrew Gillen – Cato Institute, 2025
The federal government is the lender for the current student loan system, but replacing it with a system that harnesses the advantages of a marketplace of private lending would save $212 billion over the next 10 years while also benefiting students by helping them avoid risky educational choices. Due to ongoing court cases and upcoming regulatory…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Federal Aid, College Students, Government Role
Patrick Yarker – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2024
This article opens with two contrasting accounts of the provenance of Oak National Academy before tracing Oak's controversial development as a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Department for Education as a means (it is argued) of extending control not only over what teachers teach but over how they may teach it.
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Educational Policy, Government (Administrative Body), Government Role
Deb Verhoeven; Ben Eltham – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
Universities and management consultants are locked in a "danse macabre." We turn to the vampire genre to elaborate on the relationship of consulting companies to the university sector, focusing on the University of Alberta in Canada and Monash University in Australia. We are academics with long experience of the consequences of change…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Consultants, Organizational Change
Justin D. Fraser – Critical Education, 2024
In 2021, the government of Manitoba made their plans to reform public education overt with Bill 64. Although the legislation was withdrawn as a result of immense opposition from critically engaged Manitobans, the government did not abandon its neoliberal reform plans. Instead, the spectre of Bill 64 now lingers through a variety of new educational…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Neoliberalism, Educational Legislation, Public Education
José Joaquin Brunner; Mario Alarcón – Prospects, 2024
This article presents an analytical framework for examining the different roles the state can play in improving higher education governance in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). It argues that adequate governance of national higher education systems is fundamental to moving toward a new social contract in the sector. It describes different…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Governance, Foreign Countries, Barriers
Anthony Welch – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
Globally, one in three students are now enrolled in private higher education institutions (PHEIs), with the total reaching almost 70 million enrolments. This pattern is similar across a highly diverse Asia: more than 35% of students are enrolled in the private sector, and around 60% of higher education institutions (usually much smaller than their…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, College Students, College Enrollment, Government Role
Swinson, Jeremy – Educational Psychology in Practice, 2023
This paper examines the importance of educational psychology influence on UK Government education policy and school practice between the 1930s and the present time. It focuses on: the lead up to the 1944 Education Act; the 1967 Plowden Report on primary education; the 1973 Bullock Report on literacy; the 1978 Warnock Report on special education;…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Psychology, Government Role, Educational Policy
Vong, Sou Kuan; Lo, William Yat Wai – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2023
This paper explores the governmentality in Macao's higher education (HE) by exemplifying how neoliberalism and Chinese nationalism simultaneously inform the governmental rationalities and technologies in the city. Like many other systems, neoliberalism has substantially shaped Macao's HE. However, owing to post-colonial identity, Chinese…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Neoliberalism, Nationalism
Silverwood, James; Wolstencroft, Peter – British Educational Research Journal, 2023
James Callaghan's speech at Ruskin College, Oxford in October 1976 is widely considered a pivotal moment in modern English educational policy. Whilst it is not our intention to challenge this fundamental point, the paper will critically interrogate some long-held assumptions about the motivation that led Callaghan to deliver his speech at Ruskin…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Change, Educational Principles, Public Speaking
Dunlop, Lynda; Rushton, Elizabeth A. C. – British Educational Research Journal, 2022
In this paper we present an analysis of the sustainability and climate change strategy for education and children's services systems in England, produced by the Department for Education. Using critical discourse analysis, we juxtapose qualitative data collected from >200 youth teachers and teacher educators in the context of co-creating a…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Foreign Countries, Sustainability
V. Kalyan Shankar; Rohini Sahni; Krishna Kanta Roy – Learning, Media and Technology, 2024
The introduction of computers in Indian schools runs parallel with the development of a digital divide in the country. In addition to the formal ways in which government policies shape access to computers in schools, deeper informal cultures of the state and schools shape opinion about these technologies. In this paper, we examine three levels of…
Descriptors: Access to Computers, Foreign Countries, Disadvantaged, Technology Uses in Education
Gunter, Helen; Courtney, Steve – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
Successive UK governments have adopted failure as a strategy in the reform of public education in England: first, to construct crises in order to blame professionals/parents/children for a failing system; and second, to provide rescue solutions that are designed to fail in order to sustain the change imperative. We describe this as policy…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Government Role, Moral Values, Educational Change