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Anas Hajar; Mehmet Karakus – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2024
This mixed-methods study explored the nature, effectiveness, and policy implications of the fee-charging private supplementary tutoring (PT)--including online--that first-year Kazakhstani university students attended over the last 12 months. The data were collected from 952 participants using a close-ended questionnaire followed by semi-structured…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Program Effectiveness, Tutoring, Fees
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Farheen Mahmood; Julie W. Ankrum – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Children's literature in the form of picturebooks, storybooks, and anthologies/readers in Pre-Kindergarten (PreK) to Grade 3 holds a special place in literacy development and in the lives of children. While reading children's literature, developing readers navigate between words and images to form meaning as they read. Although studies in many…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Literature, Early Childhood Education, English
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Rob J. Gruijters; Mohammed A. Abango; Leslie Casely-Hayford – Comparative Education Review, 2024
In this study, we take stock of fee-free secondary education (FSE) initiatives in sub-Saharan Africa and review their impact on equitable access and achievement, as well as their cost-effectiveness. We begin by discussing the theoretical arguments for and against the abolition of secondary school fees. Second, we examine aggregate statistics on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Access to Education, Cost Effectiveness
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Sebastian Orboh Ehiaguina; Anolu Easter; Aireruor Napoleon Eromosele; Okoedion Sarah Ojiehisegbe – African Educational Research Journal, 2024
Inadequate funding of university education that is occasioned by the present economic quagmire has made the need for generating revenue other than government allocation sacrosanct. It is against this backdrop that this paper attempted a holistic perusal of the issues associated with Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) in Nigerian Universities. This…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Financial Support, Income, Foreign Countries
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Gabriel Asante; Godfred Bonnah Nkansah; David Agbee – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
The underlying ambition of fee-free education is to increase school access. This study reflects on decentralisation in the decision-making process and implementation of fee-free policies. We compare two policies at the high school level in Ghana to evaluate the differences and commonalities in how they responded to school access. We used…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Access to Education, Fees, Administrative Organization
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Baozhong Li; Chengxuan Kang – European Journal of Education, 2025
This study was based on the data of the funding scale, income and expenditure structure and academic output level of the Russell Group universities from 2013 to 2022. By using methods such as the Granger causality test and the two-way fixed effects model, it analyses the relationship between the funding scale, structure and the academic output.…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Universities, Institutional Characteristics, Foreign Countries
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Kevin Wai Ho Yung; Scarlet Poon – European Journal of Education, 2025
Well-being development in young people's formative years is crucial for their transition to adulthood. While research on well-being in formal education contexts is expanding, little attention has been paid to out-of-school educational settings, particularly supplementary tutoring for disadvantaged students. Adopting Sirgy's concept of positive…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Economically Disadvantaged, Adolescents, Well Being
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Chris Millward – Oxford Review of Education, 2024
Since 2006, universities in England that want to charge higher fees to their domestic undergraduates have been required to agree a plan with an access regulator appointed by the government. This article identifies the objective for the regulation as equalising opportunity, then considers its effect, drawing on policy literature, ministerial…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Higher Education, Access to Education
Don Tawanpitak – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This dissertation studies the effect of higher education costs on students' outcomes in the labor market, particularly when credit constraints are absent. It utilizes the UK's institutional setting to identify such an effect. The key findings are as follows. (i) Increasing tuition fees does not have adverse effects on students as long as credit…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Labor Market, Costs, Higher Education
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Chisholm, Linda – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2023
Migration, xenophobia, barriers and rights to education have emerged as a significant issue in recent South African history. While there is a growing body of work on migrants and refugees within South Africa, little is known of the histories and contexts from which migrants come and how these have shaped their educational trajectories. Using…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Migrant Education, Refugees
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Rob Hickey – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
The last 25 years have seen a dramatic shift in tuition fee policy in England. This paper uses Critical Discourse Analysis to understand the motivations behind policy setting, comparing the pivotal reviews undertaken by Dearing, Browne and Augar. It concludes that four themes may have influenced tuition fee policy making: national politics and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Finance, Tuition, Fees
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Abdul-Rahim Mohammed; Jennifer Apiung – Educational Review, 2025
Financial barriers to education such as the payment of school fees have long been identified as a key driver of the perennially high out-of-school rates in developing countries. Accordingly, Ghana implemented the education capitation grant (CG) policy in 2005 as part of efforts to universalise access to primary education. At its core, the policy…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Finance, Access to Education, Grants
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Gabriel Asante – Educational Review, 2024
Following the widespread adoption and implementation of Education for All (EFA) at the World Education Forum held at Dakar as part of the Millennium Development Goals in 2000, school enrolment at the basic level of education has increased in Sub-Saharan Africa. With the region having the lowest rate of youth enrolled in upper secondary schools in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sustainable Development, Secondary Education, Costs
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Shuning Liu – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2024
This ethnographic data-driven article investigates the urban political economy of a new form of elite schooling, which is represented by the fee-charging international programs recently established by 'key' public high schools in metro China. Grounding the analysis in Harvey's work on urbanization and neoliberalism, the literature on China's…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Politics of Education, International Programs, Public Schools
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Chernoff, Egan J. – Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, 2022
While recovering from a major personal tipping point (see Part I), I was still able to keep on the lookout for Canadian mathematics education matters. After all, if Canadian mathematics education matters, Canadian mathematics education matters. In doing so, I ran into a number of other financial problems. Everywhere I turned was a financial…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mathematics Education, Money Management, Financial Problems
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