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Julia Burdick-Will; Leela Gebo; Alexandra D. Williams – Sociology of Education, 2024
In this study, we examine whether students in violent neighborhoods actively avoid their local school as a form of social and physical protection. Specifically, we use 10 years of administrative data (2010-2020) from the high school choice open enrollment program in the Baltimore City Public School System to evaluate the interaction between…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Violence, School Choice, Geographic Location
Jude Schwalbach – Education Next, 2024
Open enrollment in public schools is a form of school choice that allows students to attend schools other than the one assigned to them by their school district. Though often less visible than policies such as charter schools, vouchers, and education savings accounts, K-12 open enrollment is rising in popularity across the nation, and 73 percent…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Open Enrollment, Public Schools, School Choice
Douglas N. Harris; Jamie M. Carroll; Debbie Kim; Nicholas Mattei; Olivia G. Carr – National Center for Research on Education Access and Choice, 2024
Families are being given more and more choices of schools, from charter schools to virtual schools and private schools, through school vouchers. However, families often report not being well informed about these choices. Many report being awash in information, though not necessarily the information they want or need. State, district, and school…
Descriptors: School Choice, Web Sites, Information Seeking, Access to Information
Merry, Michael S. – Theory and Research in Education, 2023
In this article, I examine a case involving an equity-minded parent caught in a quandary about which school to select for her child, knowing that her decision may have consequences for others. To do so, I heuristically construct a fictional portrait and explore the deliberative process a parent might have through a dialogue taking place among…
Descriptors: Parents, School Choice, Equal Education, Parent Attitudes
Kristof, John M. – Journal of School Choice, 2023
Discourse around school choice often is divisive. Less understood is the effect polarization has within advocate groups. The Narrative Policy Framework (NPF) approach offers a systematic approach to understanding how political actors use narratives to affect policy debates. Because NPF assumes bounded relativity, the approach requires a theory of…
Descriptors: Political Influences, Ideology, Politics of Education, School Choice
Raf Vanderstraeten – Nordic Journal of Studies in Educational Policy, 2023
The genesis of the education system is linked with the rapid expansion of school education in the eighteenth and nineteenth century. The genesis of the education system therefore brought about a primary form of differentiation in the education system, viz. the differentiation between family and school. Family education and school education can be…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Home Schooling, Individualized Instruction, Education
Line Saur; Rita Nikolai – Journal of School Choice, 2024
The German school system is known for its stratified secondary school system following the four-year elementary school. While access to grammar schools was strictly regulated in German school history, most federal states have now strengthened the will of parents and abolished the tradition of binding elementary school recommendations. New in the…
Descriptors: School Choice, Politics of Education, Foreign Countries, Secondary Schools
Olchefske, Joseph; Adamowski, Steven – Education Next, 2023
The traditional K-12 schooling model is a "bundled" product that provides parents with an all-in-one package of services: instruction, transportation, lunch, extracurriculars, and athletics, all delivered by one provider in one location: the school. Historically, parental choice has been limited to selecting from among different…
Descriptors: Parent Rights, School Choice, Elementary Secondary Education, Charter Schools
EdChoice, 2023
Implementation of ESA programs will not be easy. The ESA model is novel and foreign to most state education agencies, which have little to no experience with helping families purchase a wide variety of educational goods and services using government funds. Even if agencies had the relevant experience, ESA programs are complex, involving millions…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Money Management, Guides, Student Financial Aid
Stéphane Lavertu – Thomas B. Fordham Institute, 2024
For more than twenty-five years, public charter schools have served Ohio families and communities by providing quality educational options beyond the local school district. But it's no secret that we've also had a long-standing debate over whether increasing school choice impacts students who remain in traditional districts. In important--and…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, School Choice, Graduation Rate, Attendance Patterns
Lauri, Triin; Põder, Kaire – Journal of School Choice, 2023
This article investigates educational preferences in the bilingual education system that reinforce the salience of both socio-economic and socio-cultural issues. We ask, first, how many distinct groups of educational preferences exist and whether these differ by ethnic nationality. Second, we investigate the extent to which economic self-interest…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Educational Policy, Preferences, Bilingual Education
Das, Jishnu – Education Next, 2023
In low- and middle-income countries, private schools account for 20 percent of all primary enrollment and are rapidly gaining ground. In Pakistan, the number of private schools rose to more than 70,000 by 2015, up from 3,000 in 1982; by 2015, these schools educated 34 percent of Pakistani children enrolled in primary schools. This growth in…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Public Schools, Private Schools, Elementary Secondary Education
"It's a Chance, Not a Choice": Black Families, School Choice, and Gentrification in Washington, D.C.
Alisha Butler; Bradley Quarles – Teachers College Record, 2024
Background: Public education reforms, such as expanded school choice, have become a critical lever for remaking urban landscapes. These reforms often aim to attract and retain affluent and White families in urban schools, so scholars have examined how these parents navigate the perceived risk of choosing these schools for their children. Purpose:…
Descriptors: African Americans, School Choice, Neighborhoods, Public Schools
Hsiao-Yuh Ku – History of Education, 2024
Arthur Seldon (1916-2005) was a significant British neo-liberal economist in the second half of the twentieth century. From 1957 to 1988, as the "engine room" of the Institute of Economic Affairs, Seldon had been advocating the reform of "free" state education. He vigorously argued for education vouchers, by which each parent…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Educational Vouchers, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
Smith, Aaron Garth; Schwalbach, Jude – American Enterprise Institute, 2023
Nearly 70 years after Milton Friedman first proposed K-12 education vouchers, students in Arizona, Iowa, Utah, West Virginia, and other states can customize their education using education savings accounts (ESAs). ESAs allow parents to spend public education funding on expenses such as private school tuition, tutoring, and homeschooling curricula.…
Descriptors: Open Enrollment, Public Schools, Political Attitudes, Educational Policy