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Kenway, Jane; Fahey, Johannah – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2014
How are elite schools caught up in the changing processes of globalisation? Is globalisation a new phenomenon for them? This paper focuses on the globalising practices that selected elite schools adopt. It also explores how globalisation is impacting on the social purposes of elite schools, which conventionally have been to serve privileged social…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Selective Admission, Advantaged, Social Status
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Kenway, Jane; Fahey, Johannah – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2015
Privileged benefaction in elite schools and the moral dilemmas, contradictions and power politics involved are the focus of this paper. The notion of "the gift" provides our analytical lens. We concentrate on two girls' schools--one in South Africa and one in England. These were both built, in various ways, on the British model of public…
Descriptors: Advantaged, Selective Admission, Females, Single Sex Schools
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Fahey, Johannah; Prosser, Howard – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2015
Elite schools around the world aspire to produce perfect students and yet there are always obstacles to this perfection being achieved. In this paper, we suggest that this process of perfectionism and obstruction can best be understood using a methodology that looks to the creative arts, rather than the usual social science orthodoxies. Our focus…
Descriptors: Best Practices, Foreign Countries, Ethnography, Secondary School Students
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Kenway, Jane; Fahey, Johannah – Journal of Education Policy, 2010
We seek to contribute to political and policy analyses of globalisation by attending to global flows of emotions and by developing the concept global emoscapes. In so doing we build on Arjun Appadurai's theorisation of the disjunctive scapes of the global cultural economy. As a way of illustrating the benefits of our approach, we deploy it to…
Descriptors: Relationship, Politics, Educational Policy, Psychological Patterns