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Christian Bokhove; John Jerrim; Sam Sims – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
In England, a substantial proportion of school inspections are conducted by current school leaders. This may lead to concerns that this gives their school (about 2% of schools) an advantage in the inspection process when it is their turn to be inspected. Yet scant evidence exists on this issue. This paper thus presents the first evidence on this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Inspection, Institutional Evaluation, Leaders
Christian Bokhove; John Jerrim; Sam Sims – School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 2023
School inspections are a common feature of education systems across the world. These involve trained professionals visiting schools and reaching judgements about the quality of education they provide. Yet there is currently little academic research investigating the consistency of school inspections, including how judgements vary across inspectors…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Institutional Evaluation, Educational Quality, Government Employees
Melanie Ehren; Jo Hutchinson; Bernardita Muñoz-Chereau – School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 2023
In 2017 the Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills (Ofsted) identified stuck schools that have failed inspections continuously since 2005. Our study used quantitative methods to identify factors associated with improving or remaining stuck by analysing a sample of 580 primary and secondary stuck schools and their matched…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Schools, Secondary Schools, Disadvantaged
John Jerrim; Alex Jones – School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 2024
School inspections are a common feature of many education systems. These may be informed by quantitative background data about schools. It is recognised that there are pros and cons of using such quantitative information as part of the inspection process, though these have rarely been succinctly set out. This paper seeks to fill this gap by…
Descriptors: Inspection, Foreign Countries, Statistical Analysis, Educational Quality
Bokhove, Christian; Sims, Sam – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2021
Many national education systems incorporate a central inspectorate tasked with visiting, evaluating and reporting on the performance of schools. The judgements produced by inspectors often play a part in the way that schools are held to account and constitute an important source of data in their own right. Inspection reports are therefore of great…
Descriptors: Reports, Data Analysis, Inspection, Institutional Evaluation
George Leckie; Richard Parker; Harvey Goldstein; Kate Tilling – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
School value-added models are widely applied to study, monitor, and hold schools to account for school differences in student learning. The traditional model is a mixed-effects linear regression of student current achievement on student prior achievement, background characteristics, and a school random intercept effect. The latter is referred to…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Value Added Models, Accountability, Institutional Characteristics
Phil Wood; Aimee Quickfall – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
The COVID pandemic temporarily altered the functioning of all sections of society. In England, it led to major disruption in the teacher education sector leading to curtailed training in schools and a rapid shift to alternative approaches to teaching and learning. By the 2021-2022 academic year, it was hoped that activity would return to a level…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Teacher Education Programs, COVID-19, Pandemics
Jane Perryman; Alice Bradbury; Graham Calvert; Katie Kilian – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2025
Accountability policy and its negative effects on teachers' working lives and retention is internationally recognised as a problem in education with school evaluation and inspection being a particular issue, particularly in England. Research suggests that the school inspection system Ofsted impacts negatively on the health and well-being of staff…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Accountability, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy
Lu, Binwei – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
This study compares the estimated grammar school effect in different regression models, and explains why previous evidence of the effectiveness of grammar school is mixed. Like most studies of school effectiveness evaluation, previous research on grammar school effect usually applies regression to control for confounding between-school factors and…
Descriptors: Value Added Models, School Effectiveness, Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis
Spours, Ken; Hodgson, Ann; Grainger, Paul; Smith, David – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2020
This article draws on research into the further education (FE) Area-Based Review (ABR) process in London, England over the period 2016-2018 to suggest that the significance of ABRs can be judged as to the extent they reinforce or challenge the historical marketised model of FE. The implications of ABR are viewed historically through the conceptual…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Postsecondary Education, Vocational Education, Adult Education
Bradley, Alex; Quigley, Martyn – Studies in Higher Education, 2023
The mass participation in higher education has led to greater spending by governments and students which has increased the focus on graduate outcomes. In England, the Office for Students (OfS) is planning to take regulatory action, using the Proceed metric, against universities and their courses which do not have 60% of students with positive…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Education Work Relationship, Outcomes of Education
Bokhove, Christian; Jerrim, John; Sims, Sam – Journal of School Choice, 2023
School inspections are a key component of the accountability system in many education systems, including England. The judgments and reports produced through these inspections are widely used by parents when they are choosing a school for their children. But should they be? This paper presents new evidence on this issue. We illustrate how parents…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Secondary School Students, School Choice, Information Sources
Bloch, Roland; Hartl, Jakob; O'Connell, Catherine; O'Siochru, Cathal – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2022
Many contemporary analyses criticise metrics-based evaluation in the higher education context as a neoliberal technology, notwithstanding the different national contexts and organisational topographies in which metrics are used. This Anglo-German study offers a comparative exploration of the role of metrics in two contrasting cases: highly…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Cross Cultural Studies, Teacher Attitudes, Accountability
Papadimitriou, Maria; Johnes, Jill – Studies in Higher Education, 2019
This paper focuses on the effect of merger on university efficiency. In a first stage analysis, efficiency scores of English universities are derived for a 17-year period using the frontier estimation method data envelopment analysis. A second stage analysis explores the effect of merger and other factors on efficiency. We find that mean…
Descriptors: Organizational Change, Universities, Efficiency, Educational Policy
Phoenix, David – Higher Education Policy Institute, 2021
Positive social mobility benefits individuals in terms of personal advancement and the nation in terms of productivity. There are other social benefits aside. Education, including higher education, is widely understood to be a key contributor to social mobility. However, without a measure of universities' impact on social mobility it is difficult…
Descriptors: Social Mobility, Higher Education, Universities, Outcomes of Education