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Rowe, Emma; Perry, Laura B. – Comparative Education, 2022
Parent-generated revenue in public schools, in the form of fee-giving or fundraising, is fast developing as a robust source of financial revenue for public schools in OECD countries. In this paper we draw on a comprehensive empirical dataset of parent-generated financial revenue for public schools located in New South Wales, Australia. We draw on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Finance, Fees, Parent Financial Contribution
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Exley, Sonia – Comparative Education, 2020
The notion of selecting students based on academic achievement into different schools at certain points in their educational careers is one that has long been contested in education. In this paper I consider the role selective schooling may play in driving families' demand for private tutoring -- a phenomenon currently growing in many regions of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Selective Admission, Private Education, Tutoring
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Merry, Michael S.; Boterman, Willem – Comparative Education, 2020
In this paper the authors examine the role the Dutch gymnasium continues to play in the institutional maintenance of educational inequality. To that end they examine the relational and spatial features of state-sponsored elite education in the Dutch system: the unique identity the gymnasium seeks to cultivate; its value to its consumers; its…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Secondary Schools, Public Schools
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Debs, Mira; Cheung, Hoi Shan – Comparative Education, 2021
Parents around the globe are increasingly understood to contribute to educational inequality through their choice of schools. This important critique risks minimising the way choice systems may favour certain parents over others. A case study of Singapore and its primary school enrolment process helps illustrate how parent's interactions with…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, School Choice, Discourse Analysis, News Reporting
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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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Windle, Joel – Comparative Education, 2022
This paper examines educational segregation in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro through the lens of a multifaceted centreperiphery relationship involving geographical, racial and historical dimensions. The paper first situates Brazilian racial inequalities historically, drawing on decolonial theory, before examining student enrolment patterns…
Descriptors: School Segregation, Racial Segregation, Political Attitudes, Foreign Countries
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Merry, Michael S. – Comparative Education, 2015
In this paper Merry examines in detail the continued--and curious--popularity of religious schools in an otherwise "secular" twenty-first century Europe. To do this he considers a number of motivations underwriting the decision to place one's child in a religious school and delineates what are likely the best empirically supported…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Protestants, Catholic Schools, Educational Quality
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Sung, Youl-Kwan – Comparative Education, 2011
This paper examines the politics of policy-borrowing in Korean education. I use the term "loanwords" as a metaphor for the practice in some Korean educational sectors of using borrowed English-origin educational rhetoric to create actual policy reform. I argue that discourses of choice and diversity, as loanwords, are initially…
Descriptors: High Schools, Figurative Language, Foreign Countries, Linguistic Borrowing