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Charles L. Glenn – Journal of School Choice, 2024
AI offer first-hand account of a key stage in the development of parental choice in American public schooling, when Massachusetts state officials, concerned not to repeat the trauma and disruption resulting from mandatory reassignment of students to achieve desegregation in Boston, persuaded and helped more than a dozen other cities to adopt plans…
Descriptors: School Choice, Parent Role, Social Justice, Public Schools
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Poole, Wendy; Fallon, Gerald – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2015
This paper examines increasing privatisation of education in the province of British Columbia, Canada. Conceptually, the paper is informed by theories of privatisation and social justice; and methodologically, it uses policy analysis to examine documents and financial records obtained from government departments. The paper critically analyses…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, School Districts, Social Justice, Foreign Countries
Sahlberg, Pasi – School Administrator, 2012
Schools everywhere vary little with regard to the subjects they teach, the classrooms where students learn, and the students' opinions about school. They do differ significantly in one area, however: the way they address the inequalities and diversity their students bring to school. For the small, agrarian, and relatively poor nation of Finland,…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Opportunities, Standardized Tests, Foreign Countries
Jennings, Jack – Center on Education Policy, 2012
Over the past fifty years, U.S. school reform has been dominated by three major movements, aimed at promoting equity, increasing school choice, and using academic standards to leverage improvement. These reforms are equity-based reform, school choice, and standards-based reform. While all three have changed schooling in notable ways, none has…
Descriptors: Public Education, Educational Quality, Educational History, Educational Change
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Sutton, Lenford C.; King, Richard A. – Journal of Education Finance, 2011
Legal scrutiny of school voucher policies initially focused on the establishment clause concerning with allocating public dollars to schools sponsored by religious organizations. In recent years, advocates asserted that the exclusion of faith-based organizations from voucher plans that permit expenditures in secular private organizations violates…
Descriptors: School Choice, Educational Finance, Religious Organizations, Educational Change
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Viteritti, Joseph P. – Journal of School Choice, 2010
This essay traces the roots of the equity approach to school choice to the work of Coons & Sugarman, which began as an outgrowth of their involvement with the landmark California school finance case, "Serrano v. Priest" (1971). Comparing the equity approach to the market model espoused by Milton Friedman, the author argues that the former is…
Descriptors: Educational Needs, School Choice, Educational Finance, Disadvantaged
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Murray, Dale – Theory and Research in Education, 2009
While political philosophers have paid a great deal of attention to providing a theory of secession for cases of nations breaking away from nation-states, little has been said about perhaps the most common type of secession--school district secession. I argue that while there is no principled prohibition against school district secession, there…
Descriptors: School Districts, Politics of Education, Equal Education, Educational Finance
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Smyth, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2008
Australia has been one of the countries to most enthusiastically embrace the neo-liberal conditions conducive to the dismantling of equitably provided public schooling. The article argues that part of the explanation for the absence of any effective challenge to this trajectory lies in the contradictory nature of the Australian identity. The…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Private Education, Middle Class, School Choice
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Voigt, Kristin – Theory and Research in Education, 2007
Does the unequal participation of non-traditional students in higher education indicate social injustice, even if it can be traced back to individuals' choices? Drawing on luck egalitarian approaches,this article suggests that an answer to this question must take into account the effects of unequal brute luck on educational choices. I use a…
Descriptors: Nontraditional Students, Social Influences, School Choice, Social Justice