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Quintero-Fragozo, Camilo; Cortés, Yasna; Sarrias, Mauricio – Journal of Education Policy, 2023
This study analyzes the effect of spatial competition on public schools' efficiency in Chile, an extreme case of market-oriented reforms in the educational sector. To address this issue, we use a measure of competition that captures three major characteristics of market competition in a spatial context: the number of competitors, based on distance…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Foreign Countries, Public Schools, Efficiency
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Resnik, Julia – Journal of Education Policy, 2020
Since the 1980s, education in Canada has been through a process that led to school choice, targeting the improvement of students' performance through school competition. These policies fostering an education quasi-market became an ideal framework for the expansion of IB schools. Since the Diploma Programme of the International Baccalaureate (IBDP)…
Descriptors: Competition, Advanced Placement Programs, School Districts, International Education
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Wennström, Johan – Journal of Education Policy, 2020
In a radical school choice reform in 1992, Sweden's education system was opened to private competition from independent for-profit and non-profit schools funded by vouchers. Competition was expected to produce higher-quality education at lower cost, in both independent and public schools. This two-pronged study first examines to what extent the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Choice, Competition, Educational Vouchers
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Perry, Laura B.; Southwell, Leonie – Journal of Education Policy, 2014
This study examines how access to academic curriculum differs between secondary schools in Australia, a country whose education system is marked by high levels of choice, privatisation and competition. Equitable access to academic curriculum is important for both individual students and their families as well as the larger society. Previous…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Foreign Countries, Secondary School Curriculum, Equal Education
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Wu, Xiaoxin – Journal of Education Policy, 2008
The positional competition reflected in the current parental choice fever in China is highlighted by the introduction of market mechanisms: buying houses near preferred schools, paying choice fees or co-founding fees, giving donations and spending money on spare time training classes, etc. All of these work effectively together with the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Competition, Parent Student Relationship, School Choice
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Levine-Rasky, Cynthia; Ringrose, Jessica – Journal of Education Policy, 2009
This paper presents a psychosocial analysis of interview data of three Canadian, middle-class, Jewish mothers engaged in processes and practices of "school choice". We consider how middle-class, white identity intersects with Jewish ethnicity. We also examine how commitments to Canadian ideals of multiculturalism sit in contradiction…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Jews, Mothers, School Choice
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Taylor, Alison – Journal of Education Policy, 2006
This paper examines what happens to "vocational education" within an education market. We ask the question: how does the policy emphasis on competition and choice fit with the rhetoric of facilitating school-to-work transitions for all students? Findings from interviews with high school principals and representatives from the Edmonton…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Urban Schools, Equal Education, School Choice
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Adnett, Nick; Davies, Peter – Journal of Education Policy, 2000
Based on conventional economic analysis, increasing competitive pressures on schools should promote greater curricular innovation and diversity. The United Kingdom's experience suggests that market-based reforms can initially create pressures to increase curriculum conformity in local schooling markets. Innovation incentives are greatest for…
Descriptors: Competition, Curriculum Development, Educational Economics, Educational Policy
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Taylor, Chris – Journal of Education Policy, 2001
Considers competition among schools in the UK state education system in three ways: as self-governing, hierarchical, or nonhierarchical competition spaces. The diverse schools in the marketplace compete unequally. Denominational and selective schools do not compete for local students. Nondenominational and nonselective grant-maintained schools top…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Competition, Foreign Countries, Geographic Location
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Broccolichi, Sylvain; van Zanten, Agnes – Journal of Education Policy, 2000
Faced with pupil flight to more prestigious public and private schools, French secondary schools create "good classes," reinforce security and discipline, and try to strengthen links to feeder schools. Parents remain skeptical about relevant criteria for judging school quality; measures are needed to equalize their choosing ability.…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Competition, Educational Quality, Evaluation Criteria
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Cookson, Peter W., Jr. – Journal of Education Policy, 1992
Examines origins and implications of consumership ideology (belief that market-driven governance policies alone can solve the U.S. education crisis) as related to the school choice movement. If consumership replaces citizenship as education's ethos and driving force, the public school system will vanish. Self-interest and competition will triumph…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Citizenship, Competition, Consumer Economics