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Alejandro Carrasco; Gabriel Gutiérrez – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
This article offers new empirical evidence regarding the limits of the premises of educational privatisation policies. Educational markets rely on the assumption that private participation has the potential to boost school diversification and open new educational opportunities for students from disadvantaged backgrounds. Using a fresh empirical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Privatization, Educational Policy, Educational Facilities
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Achala Gupta – British Educational Research Journal, 2025
Studies have shown how family (typically parents) and formal institutions (specifically schools and universities) shape individuals' dispositions--or "habitus." However, other sites of academic socialisation, such as tutoring centres and coaching institutions (collectively forming a shadow education system), are seldom scrutinised for…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Private Education, Foreign Countries, Elementary Secondary Education
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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
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Holloway, Sarah L.; Pimlott-Wilson, Helena – British Educational Research Journal, 2020
Education researchers have explored the marketisation of schools resulting from neoliberal education policy, but little attention has been paid to supplementary education markets. Supplementary education services, such as private tuition, are delivered outside of school but designed to improve performance within it. A small body of research…
Descriptors: Marketing, Private Education, Private Financial Support, Tuition
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Addi-Raccah, Audrey – British Educational Research Journal, 2019
Private tutoring (PT) is a widespread educational phenomenon that blurs the conceptual boundaries of public and private education and can affect the formal school system and teachers' work. This study examined whether participation in PT and the estimation of private tutors' contributions are related to pupils' attitudes towards teachers'…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Student Attitudes, Socioeconomic Status, Institutional Characteristics
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Guill, Karin; Lüdtke, Oliver; Schwanenberg, Jasmin – British Educational Research Journal, 2020
More and more students attend private supplementary tutoring to improve their academic achievement. Private tutoring might be understood as a reaction to insufficient instructional quality in school, especially regarding individual support. However, it might also be possible that parents generally see insufficient grades as an indicator of lacking…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Tutoring, Private Education, Predictor Variables
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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