This essay analyses how magic is presented and how the schools teaching it are structured in three series of children's fantasy literature: J.K. Rowling´s Harry Potter and the Philosopher´s Stone; Tamora Pierce´s Lioness Quartet books; and The Earthsea Trilogy, by Ursula K. Le Guin. It focuses on the boarding school story genre and uses Foucault´s view of institutions and discipline to analyse how the child characters are taught, and what they are taught at the schools, as well how the books themselves relate to these teachings and methods.The analysis shows that magic is treated in a similar fashion in all series: that it is seen as just another form of power, which is intrinsically neither good nor bad. Rather, that distinction lies in ho...