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Showing all 14 results
Openshaw, Roger – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2014
This paper endorses Dick Selleck and Geoffrey Sherington's view that public policy-making is characterised by both fluidity and contestability. In April 1988, the report of a Taskforce headed by Brian Picot recommended major reforms in New Zealand's public education system. Even today, however, there is controversy regarding the major…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Public Policy, Public Education
Bolton, Eric – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2014
In this article, the author, a former Senior Inspector at Her Majesties Inspectorate (HMI), United Kingdom, presents the historical activities between 1968 through 1991 surrounding HMI and the government agencies and persons who influenced how the inspection of school activities have evolved over that time period. Bolton reports that the HMI was…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Administration, Inspection, Educational Policy
Mesquita, Leopoldo – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2012
It is assumed in this paper that the main trend in global education policies is based on an entrepreneurial model intended to submit school work to the same logic that prevails in economic systems at large. Thus, I try to recognise such a model in current educational changes in Portugal. Two paths for the entrepreneurialisation of school work were…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Public Education, Entrepreneurship, Productivity
Ball, Stephen J. – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2012
This paper argues that English education policy has come full-circle--from the first constitution of a state system of education in 1870 to the beginning of the end of state education in 2010--and that this circularity can be understood in relation to the reluctant state. That is, in the nineteenth century, the English state hesitantly and slowly…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Policy, Public Education, Neoliberalism
English, Fenwick W. – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2012
This article examines the concept of misrecognition as advanced by Pierre Bourdieu in the development and implementation of educational leadership standards in the USA and in England. The line of argument advanced is that leadership standards were promulgated as an agenda to control and dominate a contested field in both countries by certain…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Instructional Leadership, National Standards, Educational Change
Tilleczek, Kate – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2012
This paper provides an analysis of international literature and focus group data arising from a three-year critical ethnographic study with 795 young people, educators and parents speaking about transitions through public education in Canada. It fills fissures in qualitative and process-based sociological work on youth transitions and redresses…
Descriptors: Transitional Programs, Focus Groups, Ethnography, Foreign Countries
Green, Bill; Reid, Jo-Anne – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2012
The late nineteenth-century expansion of public schooling in Australia from an initial focus on the elementary phase to post-primary provision, and then to a more systematic secondary education over the early to mid-twentieth century, went hand in hand with the emergence of new populations of children and young people--a new constituency. In turn,…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational Policy
Lupton, Ruth – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2011
This article reviews Bernard Barker's claims that "the pendulum is swinging", in relation to school markets and competition. Barker's arguments are complex in this regard. He rejects markets and competition as a means of improving outcomes and equity, but supports some of the system features that are often associated with marketisation, such as…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Equal Education, Social Justice, Competition
Wright, Nigel – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2011
Barker argues that in England under New Labour, school leaders and teachers have been "bastardised" and suggests that the situation in 2010, with a general election afforded an opportunity in education policy for the "pendulum to swing". In this article, the key points about "bastard Leadership" are briefly summarised. The article then develops a…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Instructional Leadership, Public Education
Smyth, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2011
Sometimes an educational idea is inexplicably adopted around the world with remarkable speed and consistency and in the absence of a proper evidence base or with little regard or respect for teachers, students or learning. This paper examines what has arguably been the most contentious and virulent educational reform of the past half-century.…
Descriptors: Evidence, School Based Management, Educational Change, Public Education
Stevenson, Howard; Carter, Bob – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2009
Teachers in the English and Welsh State education system have experienced a changing and turbulent relationship with the State in recent decades. This article adopts a historical analysis and argues that the concept of "partnership" is key to understanding the relationship between teachers and the State in the period since the Second World War.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Government School Relationship, Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Associations
Smyth, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2008
Australia has been one of the countries to most enthusiastically embrace the neo-liberal conditions conducive to the dismantling of equitably provided public schooling. The article argues that part of the explanation for the absence of any effective challenge to this trajectory lies in the contradictory nature of the Australian identity. The…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Private Education, Middle Class, School Choice
Davis, Matthew D. – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2006
This article explores the General Education Board, a John D. Rockefeller-led philanthropy, and its work during the first half of the twentieth century to improve Southern US public education. In contrast to most historical treatments of the Board that limit their investigations to its origin, this essay explores the full sweep of the Board's…
Descriptors: Stimulation, Educational Improvement, General Education, Public Education
Fleming, Thomas; Raptis, Helen – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2005
Few historical studies of government's interest in student achievement exist and, of those that do, most concern themselves with relatively short periods of time, a decade or two in general. This discussion takes a longer view of measurement practices in one jurisdiction, British Columbia. Based on archival records, it examines testing and…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries, Accountability

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