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Hamlin, Daniel – Midwest and Plains Equity Assistance Center, 2023
Demands for school choice have led to a substantial increase in the educational options available to families in the United States (Stanford, 2023). Throughout the country, many areas have experienced post-pandemic expansions of school choice through micro-schools, virtual schools, and other non-traditional school models (Hamlin et al., 2023).…
Descriptors: School Choice, Leadership, School Desegregation, Race
Adamo Di Giovanni; Lana Parker – Critical Education, 2024
In this article, we draw on various critical perspectives to theorize neoliberal choice and examine how it has been deployed to market new educational reforms in Ontario. We begin by offering a contemporary framing of neoliberalism that looks at its core elements as well as its chameleon-like tendencies to draw on neoconservative elements as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Social Systems, Educational Change
Garion Frankel – Journal of School Choice, 2024
In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as the ensuring culture wars, the American school choice coalition has almost completely unraveled, but many school choice advocates assert that the coalition can be rebuilt. In this essay, I argue that the school choice coalition dissolved not because of politics or circumstance, but because the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, School Choice, Educational Change, Politics of Education
Jabbar, Huriya; Fong, Carlton J.; Germain, Emily; Li, Dongmei; Sanchez, Joanna; Sun, Wei-Ling; Devall, Michelle – Educational Policy, 2022
School-choice policies are expected to generate healthy competition between schools, leading to improvements in school quality and better outcomes for students. However, the empirical literature testing this assumption yields mixed findings. This systematic review and meta-analysis tests this theory by synthesizing the empirical literature on the…
Descriptors: School Choice, Academic Achievement, Competition, Educational Policy
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
Heather Ganshorn – Critical Education, 2024
Privatization of public education in North America has long been influenced by two schools of conservative thought: neoliberalism, which seeks to create a marketplace for public services in which individuals choose the option they judge to be in their best interests and government's role is limited as much as possible to simply funding these…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Political Attitudes, Parent Attitudes
Anders Trumberg; Emma Arneback; Andreas Bergh; Jan Jämte – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2024
Swedish compulsory schools are committed to work for equality and social cohesion. Increasing school segregation, however, challenges this commitment. Based on survey data from Swedish municipalities, this article maps and analyses local initiatives that counteract school segregation. We identify three main types of initiatives--reinforcement,…
Descriptors: School Segregation, School Desegregation, Equal Education, Educational Change
Andrew Eisenlohr; Kate Kennedy; Katrina E. Bulkley; Julie A. Marsh – Educational Policy, 2024
Advocates often predict that school choice policies will expand access to high-quality schools, particularly for marginalized communities. To interrogate this assumption, we employed a sequential mixed-methods analysis examining the state of charter reform in the District of Columbia. We observed that stakeholders consistently defined equity as…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Charter Schools, Educational Change, Educational Policy
Ee-Seul Yoon – Critical Education, 2024
This article examines a popularized term, the Global Education Reform Movement (GERM), and its underlying paradigm of neoliberalism. It elucidates neoliberalism's maddening effects on the education sector, especially public education. To analyze these effects, I draw from and adapt Michel Foucault's analytical approach to madness. My analysis…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Educational Change, Neoliberalism, Criticism
Eduardo Tapia – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
Previous studies investigating how the school choice paradigm shapes school segregation have found that students' ethnic school preferences drive school segregation by leading students to rank and change current schools following ethnic homophily orientations. This study investigates an intermediate moment in which these preferences contribute to…
Descriptors: School Segregation, Educational Change, Grade 9, High School Students
Bilingual Education in a Globalized Age: An Ecological Perspective on Two Chosonjuk Schools in China
Guihua Zhao; Wendy Li; Chih-Hao Chang – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2024
Drawing on ecological perspectives, this study investigates changes in the bilingual education of ethnic Koreans in China in the context of globalization. Focusing on two Chosonjuk (ethnic Korean in China, ?????, ???) schools in Northeast China that experienced challenges due to declining enrollment as a result of the increasing popularity of…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Educational Change, Minority Group Students, Individualized Instruction
Margolis, Jesse; Dench, Daniel; Hashim, Shirin – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2023
New York City's school system is among the most diverse and segregated in the United States. Using difference-in-differences and placebo tests, we evaluate two desegregation policies in two geographic districts in New York City, District 3 and District 15. Both districts attempted to lower economic segregation within their district while…
Descriptors: School Desegregation, Racial Integration, Urban Schools, Educational Policy
Kafka, Judith; Wilson, Adam – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2023
This article uses interest convergence and market-based theories to examine a recently-adopted controlled choice school admissions model intended to desegregate a diverse, urban school district. Drawing on longitudinal, qualitative interviews with advantaged parents who articulated support for controlled choice, we find that these parents'…
Descriptors: School Desegregation, Educational Change, Admission (School), Models
Bueno, Carlos; Bonal, Xavier – British Educational Research Journal, 2023
The geography of school choice critically shapes families' educational opportunities. Residential segregation, social inequalities and the educational marketplace interact in complex ways and produce spatialised educational opportunities for families. This paper analyses the link between these dimensions and how they structure families'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Geography, School Choice, Educational Supply
Carly Lassig; Shiralee Poed; Glenys Mann; Beth Saggers; Suzanne Carrington; Sofia Mavropoulou – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2024
The United Nations has called upon Governments that are signatory to the "Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities" (CRPD) to adopt practical but progressive systems to transfer resources from segregated settings/special schools into mainstream schools. What will this mean for Australia's special schools, particularly given…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Special Schools, Student Rights, Students with Disabilities