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Machin, Stephen; McNally, Sandra; Silva, Olmo – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2006
In recent years the role of investment in Information and Communication Technology (ICT) as an effective tool to raise educational standards has attracted growing attention from both policy makers and academic researchers. While the former tend to express enthusiastic claims about the use of new technologies in schools, the latter have raised…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, School Districts, Educational Change, Educational Technology
Eyles, Andrew; Machin, Stephen; Silva, Olmo – Centre for Economic Performance, 2015
The English education system has undergone a large restructuring programme through the introduction of academy schools. The most salient feature of these schools is that, despite remaining part of the state sector, they operate with more autonomy than the predecessor schools they replace. Two distinct time periods of academy school introduction…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Schools, School Based Management, Institutional Autonomy
Machin, Stephen; Silva, Olmo – Centre for Economic Performance, 2013
In this paper, we survey the UK-based literature on school structures and school autonomy to identify settings in which alternative and more autonomous school arrangements can improve the educational attainments of pupils in the bottom tail of the achievement distribution. We also present new evidence on the effect of school academies on the…
Descriptors: Institutional Autonomy, Foreign Countries, Educational Attainment, Nontraditional Education
Machin, Stephen; McNally, Sandra; Wyness, Gill – Centre for Economic Performance, 2013
Education is an area that is highly devolved in the UK, and the fact that all four constituent countries have pursued very different policies in the recent past provides a good testing ground to undertake a comparative review of the merits or otherwise of the education reforms that have taken place. There is, of course, an important policy context…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Statistical Analysis, Educational Development, Educational Change
Machin, Stephen; McNally, Sandra – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2011
Educational inequalities are evident even before children start school. Some educational achievement gaps widen out as individuals progress further through the education sequence and into the labour market, especially those connected to disadvantaged students. Thus, there is a significant need for careful evaluation of educational policies that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Evidence, Equal Education
Green, Francis; Machin, Stephen; Murphy, Richard; Zhu, Yu – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2010
Private schooling, in its various guises, is an important feature of education systems across the world. The existence of a private education sector generates the possibility for parents to opt their children out of state provided education. In the case of the UK, private schools, though far less numerous than state schools, have for a long time…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Education, Public Education, Education Work Relationship
Green, Francis; Machin, Stephen; Murphy, Richard; Zhu, Yu – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2010
Private schools have historically played an important role in the reproduction of the ruling classes in Britain. They continue to do so, but there is surprisingly little modern research as to how these schools impinge on the economy. In this paper we analyse the role of independent schools in the teachers' labour market. Teacher shortages in…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Teachers, Public School Teachers, Competition
Machin, Stephen; Pelkonen, Panu; Salvanes, Kjell G. – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2008
Regional labour mobility has long been viewed as a crucial component in the functioning of the labour markets of different countries. Indeed, the study of regional labour mobility has moved towards the top of the research agenda, especially in Europe, where regional unemployment differentials have been persistently larger than in the United…
Descriptors: Occupational Mobility, Compulsory Education, Educational Change, Educational Attainment
Machin, Stephen; Telhaj, Shqiponja; Wilson, Joan – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2006
In this paper we examine links between pupil mobility and pupil and school characteristics at all levels of compulsory schooling in England. We derive measures of mobility from two academic years of the Pupil Level Annual School Census (PLASC) data, a unique national administrative pupil level longitudinal data source. Our findings suggest that…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries, Institutional Characteristics
Machin, Stephen; Vignoles, Anna – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2006
Throughout the post-war period there have been many attempts to reform the UK education system, often with an explicit intention to try and make it more productive. The list of education policy reforms that have been attempted over the last 50 years is quite extensive, and recently the UK (and in particular England and Wales) has introduced many…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Change Strategies
Machin, Stephen; McNally, Sandra – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2006
In the UK, there is a marked gender gap in the educational attainment of boys and girls. At the end of compulsory education, 10 per cent fewer boys achieve 5 or more good GCSEs. This gap is by no means confined to GCSE. It is evident at all Key Stages. Furthermore, some indicators suggest that the gap has widened over time. In this paper, we…
Descriptors: Females, Compulsory Education, Numeracy, Foreign Countries