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Tooley, James; Longfield, David – Oxford Review of Education, 2016
The affordability of private education is a contentious issue. While the extent of "low-cost" private schooling is widely accepted, there is no agreement on what "low-cost" means in this context and how this relates to affordability for poor families. This paper addresses the lacuna in the literature by defining…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Costs, Tuition, Low Income Students
Tooley, James – Oxford Review of Education, 2016
Muralidharan and Sundararaman report a randomised controlled trial of a school voucher experiment in Andhra Pradesh, India. The headline findings are that there are no significant academic differences between voucher winners and losers in Telugu, mathematics, English, and science/social studies, although because the private schools appear to use…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Educational Vouchers, School Choice, Foreign Countries
Tooley, James – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
The phenomenon of low-cost private schools "mushrooming" in poor areas of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, and elsewhere, is now well-documented. Findings from research by the author's teams and others show that these schools are serving a majority (urban and peri-urban) or significant minority (rural) of the poor, including…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Foreign Countries, Poverty, Rural Areas
Tooley, James; Bao, Yong; Dixon, Pauline; Merrifield, John – Journal of School Choice, 2011
There is widespread concern about differences in the quality of state-run and private schooling. The concerns are especially severe in the numerous developing countries where much of the population has left state-provided schooling for private schooling, including many private schools not recognized by the government. The fees charged by the…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Private Schools, Private Sector, School Choice
Tooley, James; Dixon, Pauline; Shamsan, Yarim; Schagen, Ian – School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 2010
The "mushrooming" of private schools for low-income families has been widely noted in the literature; however, very little is known about the quality of these schools. This research explored the relative quality of private unaided (recognised and unrecognised) and government schools in low-income areas of Hyderabad, India. A preliminary…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Private Schools, Cost Effectiveness, Academic Achievement
Tooley, James; Dixon, Pauline; Stanfield, James – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2008
Free primary education (FPE) is widely assumed to be required to ensure that the poor gain enrolment. After the introduction of FPE (from January 2003) in Kenyan schools, huge increases in enrolment were officially reported. However, our research, conducted 10 months after the introduction of FPE in and around the informal settlement of Kibera,…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Private Sector, Primary Education, Focus Groups
Tooley, James – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2007
This paper challenges Richard Pring's suggestion that parents using private education may be undermining the desire for social justice and equality, using recent arguments of Adam Swift as a springboard. Swift's position on the banning of private schools, which uses a Rawlsian "veil of ignorance" argument, is explored, and it is suggested that, if…
Descriptors: Private Education, Middle Class, Private Schools, Social Justice
Tooley, James; Dixon, Pauline; Amuah, Isaac – International Review of Education, 2007
A census and survey of schools in the district of Ga, Ghana, explored the nature and extent of private education, and compared inputs to public and private schooling. Three quarters of all schools found were private, with almost as many unregistered private as government schools. Several important differences between registered and unregistered…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Private Education, Class Size, Private Schools
Tooley, James; Dixon, Pauline – International Journal of Educational Development, 2007
A census and survey of schools in the slums of East Delhi, India, explored the nature and extent of private education serving low-income families, and compared inputs to public and private schooling. Around two-thirds of all schools were private unaided, with more unrecognised private than government schools. Teaching activity was found to be…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Slums, Teacher Attendance, Private Education
Tooley, James; Dixon, Pauline; Gomathi, S. V. – Oxford Review of Education, 2007
Development literature suggests that private schools serving the poor are not part of the solution to meeting the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of universal primary education. The study conducted a census and survey of schools in notified slums of Hyderabad, India, to contribute to the sparse literature on the nature and extent of private…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Elementary Education, Private Schools
Tooley, James; Dixon, Pauline – Compare: A Journal of Comparative Education, 2006
Three types of privatisation are identified--involving demand-side financing, reforms to the educational supply-side and "de facto" privatisation, where responsibilities are transferred to the private sector, through the rapid growth of private schools, rather than through reform or legislation. Although "de facto"…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Needs, Teacher Salaries
Tooley, James – Education Next, 2005
The accepted wisdom is that private schools serve the privileged. Everyone else, especially the poor, requires public school. The poor, so this logic goes, needs government assistance if they are to get a good education, which helps explain why, in the United States, many school choice enthusiasts believe that the only way the poor can get the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Schools, Economically Disadvantaged, Low Income Groups
Tooley, James – 1999
This book focuses on the impact of private education in developing countries, such as Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, India, Indonesia, Peru, Romania, Russia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe. The private education sector is large and innovative in the countries studied and not the domain of the wealthy. Contrary to popular opinion, private education in…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Developing Nations, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Tooley, James; Dixon, Pauline; Olaniyan, Olanrewaju – International Journal of Educational Research, 2005
A census and survey of schools in selected poor areas of Lagos State explored the nature and extent of private education, and compared inputs to public and private schooling. Of all schools (71%) were found to be private, with more unregistered private than government and registered private schools. It was estimated that 33% of school children…
Descriptors: Private Education, Private Schools, Public Schools, Low Income
Smith, Fay; Hardman, Frank; Tooley, James – International Education Journal, 2005
This paper reports on a study of classroom interaction and discourse in privately-funded schools serving low-income families in Hyderabad, India. In common with other developing countries, India has seen a proliferation of such schools and yet little systematic study has been made of them. One hundred and thirty eight lessons were analysed using a…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Classroom Communication, Low Income, Observation