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Spicksley, Kathryn – Journal of Education Policy, 2022
This article explores how teachers were discursively positioned in England following the formation of the Coalition government in 2010, using a corpus-assisted critical discourse analysis of 363 speeches produced by government ministers. Findings show that young teachers were privileged in post-2010 government discourse, constructed as valued and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Beginning Teachers, Experienced Teachers, Discourse Analysis
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Harel Ben Shahar, Tammy; Berger, Eyal – Journal of Education Policy, 2018
Despite ongoing efforts to promote ethnic, racial and socio-economic integration, segregation continues to challenge education administrators and legal scholars. Privileged parents seeking to avoid integration employ various strategies such as attending private schools or buying houses in neighbourhoods with good school. This paper offers a…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Socioeconomic Status, School Segregation, Advantaged
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Haugen, Cecilie Rønning – Journal of Education Policy, 2020
Oslo introduced a combination of school choice, per capita funding, balanced management and accountability in their public schools. Recent studies point out that this has increased segregation. In this study, teachers have been interviewed about their experiences. Bernstein's "classification" and "framing tools" have been used…
Descriptors: School Choice, Educational Policy, Educational Finance, School Administration
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Yoon, Ee-Seul; Lubienski, Christopher; Lee, Jin – Journal of Education Policy, 2018
This analysis aims to measure the impact of school choice policy on secondary school students' enrolment patterns within the social geography of Vancouver, an increasingly polarized global city. The rationale for the study is to examine the impact of "education market" reforms on the socio-economic composition of schools in a Canadian…
Descriptors: School Choice, Neighborhoods, Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students
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Gabay-Egozi, Limor – Journal of Education Policy, 2016
Using open-ended, semi-structured interviews, this study pulls together insights on social class and geography to explore how parents choose schools differently for their children in a unique Israeli setting. Querying parents' feelings and perceptions about themselves and others in their immediate and distant locality offers an opportunity to…
Descriptors: School Choice, Moral Values, Social Class, Geography
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Posey-Maddox, Linn – Journal of Education Policy, 2016
Given recent budgetary gaps in public education, many civic and educational leaders have relied upon private sources of funding for US public schools, including funds raised by parents. Yet parents' role as economic actors in public education has been largely unexplored. Drawing from a qualitative study of parent engagement, fundraising, and…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Parent Attitudes, Urban Education, Equal Education
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Higham, Rob – Journal of Education Policy, 2014
Free school policy claims to partly decentralise to local proposers decisions over who provides a free school, where and for what reasons, within the constraints of a government approval process. This article analyses empirically the people and organisations doing the proposing and their interactions with the approval process. The article begins…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Free Schools, Privatization, Educational Policy
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Thrupp, Martin; Lupton, Ruth – Journal of Education Policy, 2011
Multiple contexts interact to position any school on a spectrum from cumulatively advantaged to cumulatively disadvantaged. This article discusses a study of the contextual advantages and disadvantages experienced by primary schools in the south east of England, concentrating especially on schools in the least deprived 5% of schools nationally.…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Context Effect, Parent Participation, Advantaged
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Smith, Emma; White, Patrick – Journal of Education Policy, 2011
This paper reports the findings of an Economic and Social Research Council-funded study investigating patterns of participation in UK higher education science programmes across two decades. Using data on applications and acceptances to university, the paper describes trends in the proportions of candidates who choose to study science and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Science Education, STEM Education
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Coldron, John; Cripps, Caroline; Shipton, Lucy – Journal of Education Policy, 2010
This paper seeks an explanation for the persistent social phenomenon of segregated schooling in England whereby children from families with broadly the same characteristics of wealth, education and social networks are more likely to be educated together and therefore separate from children from more socially distant groups. The paper outlines the…
Descriptors: Community Schools, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Social Networks
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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