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Showing 61 to 75 of 913 results
Härmä, Joanna – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
Lagos is home to 12,098 private schools catering to 57% of the state's enrolled children, from ultra-rich to relatively poor households, with many schools targeting those of lower socio-economic status. Government schools were intended to provide a just and equitable option for all; however, they have not kept pace with demand in terms of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Access to Education, Educational Quality, School Choice
Levin, Henry M.; Cornelisz, Ilja; Hanisch-Cerda, Barbara – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
Social justice in education refers to the expectation that the education system provides fairness in its access to opportunities and results. Proponents of educational privatisation believe this would not only open up opportunities for those that otherwise are restricted from attending good schools, but that it would also improve overall…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Justice, Privatization, Commercialization
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
Power, Sally; Taylor, Chris – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
This paper explores the complex relationship between social justice and education in the public and private spheres. The politics of education is often presented as a battle between left and right, the state and the market. In this representation, the public and the private spheres are neatly aligned on either side of the line of battle, and…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Correlation, Public Education, Private Education
Lubienski, Christopher – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
The American experiment with charter schools advanced on dual impulses of increasing opportunities for disadvantaged students and unleashing market competition. While critics see these independently managed schools as a form of privatisation, proponents contend that they are public schools because of funding and accountability arrangements and…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Outcomes of Education, Educational Opportunities, Disadvantaged
Bray, Mark; Kwo, Ora – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
Most governments, at an official level, espouse the principles of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Among its statements is that education shall be free, at least in the elementary and fundamental stages. Yet while the façade of government education systems presents an image that instruction is free of charge, families across the…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Civil Rights, Tutoring, Costs
Walford, Geoffrey – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
Section 12 of the Indian Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 (the RTE Act) states that 25% of the entry-level places in all private schools should be free and reserved for students from economically and socially disadvantaged families. The Indian State governments will pay schools a per-child fee based on costs in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Justice, Private Schools, Economically Disadvantaged
Robertson, Susan L.; Dale, Roger – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
This paper explores the social justice implications of two, "linked", governance developments which have been instrumental in reshaping many education systems throughout the world: the "privatising" and "globalising" of education (Klees, Stromquist, & Samoff, 2012). We argue that such education governance…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Justice, Privatization, Governance
Simpson, Lucy; Baird, Jo-Anne – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
Over recent years, the credibility of public examinations in England has increasingly come to the fore. Government agencies have invested time and money into researching public perceptions of the reliability and validity of examinations. Whilst such research overlaps into the conceptual domain of trust, trust in examinations remains an elusive…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Exit Examinations, Trust (Psychology), Test Reliability
Gardner, John – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
Evidence from recent research suggests that in the UK the public perception of errors in national examinations is that they are simply mistakes; events that are preventable. This perception predominates over the more sophisticated technical view that errors arise from many sources and create an inevitable variability in assessment outcomes. The…
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Public Opinion, Error of Measurement, Foreign Countries
Mansell, Warwick – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
This paper considers the public debate surrounding assessment in English education and presents evidence of the misuse of public data from national tests. Statistics generated by pupil assessments in schools and colleges in England are argued to be subject to misinterpretation by the media and policy makers. The discourse tends either to be…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Data Interpretation, Mass Media Effects, Politics of Education
O'Neill, Onora – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
Systems of accountability are "second order" ways of using evidence of the standard to which "first order" tasks are carried out for a great variety of purposes. However, more accountability is not always better, and processes of holding to account can impose high costs without securing substantial benefits. At their worst,…
Descriptors: Accountability, Educational Assessment, Evidence, Evaluation Utilization
Klenowski, Val – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
Curriculum and standards-referenced assessment reform in accountability contexts are increasingly dominated by the use of testing, evidence, comparative analyses of achievement data and policy as numbers all of which have given rise to a set of related developments. Internationally these developments towards the use of standards for assessment and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academic Standards, Educational Assessment, Accountability
Brookhart, Susan M. – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
The United States education system depends on legislation and funding at the federal, state and local levels. Public understanding of assessment therefore is important to educational reform in the USA. Educational reformers often invoke assessment information as a reason for reform, typically by citing unacceptable achievement on some measure or…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Assessment, Public Opinion, Educational Indicators
Newton, Paul E. – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
In May 2008, Ofqual established a two-year programme of research to investigate the nature and extent of (un)reliability within the qualifications, examinations and assessments that it regulated. It was particularly concerned to improve understanding of, and confidence in, this technically complex and politically sensitive phenomenon. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Reliability, Educational Assessment, Case Studies

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