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Gordt, Simon – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
In the course of the institutionalisation of modern school systems, the originally confessional schooling sector was largely transformed into a system regulated by public law, a process which is interpreted as secularisation. In a historical-comparative analysis, the secularisation paths of the classical educational nations England and France are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Religion, Educational History, Catholics
Anil Balan – Cogent Education, 2023
This study discusses the impact of neoliberalism on legal education in England and Wales and the challenges and opportunities it presents. Neoliberalism is characterised by a focus on economic efficiency, competition, and individual responsibility, which can result in the commodification of education. The adoption of neoliberal policies in legal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Legal Education (Professions), Privatization
Bray, Mark – Hungarian Educational Research Journal, 2021
Private supplementary tutoring, widely known as shadow education, has become a global phenomenon. It has a range of providers, including commercial companies, university students desiring extra pocket money, and regular school teachers who provide tutoring as a sideline activity. This paper focuses on the last category. Governments are commonly…
Descriptors: Private Education, Supplementary Education, Tutoring, Foreign Countries
Bray, Mark – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2023
A growing literature, much of it with cross-national comparisons, employs geographic lenses to secure insights into educational studies. Most of this literature focuses on schooling, though parts address kindergartens and higher education. The present paper, by contrast, employs geographic lenses to focus on the shadow education system of private…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Private Education, Supplementary Education, Comparative Education
Hajar, Anas – British Educational Research Journal, 2020
England has experienced recent growth in the prevalence of private tutoring (PT). The qualitative study reported in this article aims to explore the perceptions of 14 Year 6 pupils and their teachers from three state-maintained primary schools in East Kent on PT participation and its impact on grammar school admissions. Data were collected through…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Education, Tutoring, Tutors
Bae, Sang Hoon – International Journal for Research on Extended Education, 2018
Extended education flourishes all over the world. Within different cultures and sociopolitical backgrounds, it takes different terms, forms, and developments across nations. Without identifying the common concepts of extended education, we may not expect further developments in extended education research. This study examined the terms that are…
Descriptors: Vocabulary, Educational Research, Educational Development, Models
Smith, Helen Victoria – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2019
At a time when neo-liberal policy agenda are resulting in many public services being taken away from families with young children, this paper draws on Basil Bernstein's concepts of visible and invisible pedagogies to reveal how professionals offer 'support' to parents of young (under five years old) children in a small town in the East Midlands…
Descriptors: Mothers, Literacy, Educational Policy, Early Childhood Education
Campbell, Tammy; Gambaro, Ludovica; Stewart, Kitty – British Educational Research Journal, 2018
For over a decade, all three-year-olds in England have been entitled to a free part-time early education place. One aim of this policy is to close developmental gaps between higher-income and low-income children. However, the success of the initiative depends on children accessing the places. Using the National Pupil Database, we examine all…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Preschool Education, Access to Education, Educational Benefits
Scott, David; Scott, Ben – Trentham Books, 2018
This book is about social categories such as gender, race, dis-ability, intelligence, sexuality and class, as they are used in education. Knowledge of and about them and their effects is central to how we can understand society, equalities and inequalities within it, and educational relations. The evidence to support the claims being made in this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Gender Differences, Racial Differences, Ethnicity
Chankseliani, Maia; Relly, Susan James – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2015
Despite expending a great deal of public money, and after many government-led "reforms" to develop an apprenticeship system that rivals those found in other countries, the apprenticeship system in England still faces a number of challenges and failings, not least in the private training market. This paper explores the landscape of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Apprenticeships, Private Education, Educational Methods
Parry, Gareth – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2015
Distinctions between academic, vocational and professional education inform but do not define the divisions of English higher education. Nevertheless, there are zones where courses, qualifications and institutions are specifically oriented to the world of work. These include most short-cycle higher education, large parts of undergraduate and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Skill Development, Employment Potential
Maxwell, Claire; Aggleton, Peter – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2014
The paper examines processes of cultural production and reproduction among members of the elite and upper-middle classes. Drawing on findings from a study of private education in England, it explores the utility of a conceptual framework to examine how practices in and across different sites may be reproductive of various forms of…
Descriptors: Advantaged, Social Class, Private Education, Guidelines
Maxwell, Claire; Aggleton, Peter – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2013
This paper takes as its starting point the concept of concerted cultivation as coined by Annette Lareau. It examines whether a focus on concerted cultivation adequately captures the various practices observed in young women's experiences of being privately educated in four schools in one area of England. We suggest that a variety of practices of…
Descriptors: Females, Foreign Countries, Private Education, Curriculum
Ireson, Judith – Institute of Education - London, 2011
In many parts of the world, the state education system is accompanied by a shadow system that mirrors the school curriculum. In England, most provision in the shadow system is through private, one-to-one tutoring, offered by those working independently and through local, regional and national agencies. International surveys indicate that shadow…
Descriptors: Young Children, Foreign Countries, Lecture Method, Tutoring

Tomlinson, John – Oxford Review of Education, 1986
Criticizes policies which would damage or destroy a public education system. Examines the relationship between government-provided education and democracy. Concludes that privatization of public education would emphasize self-interest and selfishness, further jeopardizing the altruism and civic mindedness necessary for the public good. (JDH)
Descriptors: Citizenship, Democracy, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
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