Parent involvement in their child’s schooling is routinely celebrated and emphasised in government education policy in many countries. We take a critical lens to examining parent involvement by investigating voluntary parent fees in public secondary schools, and how these fees are patterned by school socioeconomic status (SES). In Australia, where this study is located, public schools may request ‘voluntary’ fees from parents to enhance education programmes and facilities. As public schools are increasingly situated in a competitive market, this has arguably augmented pressure for schools and their communities to generate funds. Our findings show large inequalities between public schools, with high-SES schools enjoying more than four times ...
The role of school fees in achieving both allocative and productive efficiency in the delivery of pr...
Government subsidies have provided a major source of funds to private schools in Australia for three...
The study was to identify factors leading to low parental contribution to school fund in North “A” D...
In Australia, debates around school funding tend to focus on comparisons of funding between school s...
In Australia, debates around school funding tend to focus on comparisons of funding between school s...
Parent-generated revenue in public schools, in the form of fee-giving or fundraising, is fast develo...
This study examines inequalities of school funding as exclusively generated by the parent community ...
Providing incentives for parents to pay for schooling is good public policy. For forty years, Austr...
For over three decades, government subsidies have been a major source of funds for private schools i...
Government subsidies have provided a major source of funds to private schools in Australia for three...
Several court-mandated public school finance reforms, among them the Serrano cases in California, th...
In a globally austere policy context, state financing of public services has been positioned as pere...
This study focuses on parents´ involvement in primary education in the marginalized areas of Guayaqu...
Strengthening cooperation between schools and parents is critical to improving learning outcomes for...
The role of school fees in achieving both allocative and productive efficiency in the delivery of pr...
The role of school fees in achieving both allocative and productive efficiency in the delivery of pr...
Government subsidies have provided a major source of funds to private schools in Australia for three...
The study was to identify factors leading to low parental contribution to school fund in North “A” D...
In Australia, debates around school funding tend to focus on comparisons of funding between school s...
In Australia, debates around school funding tend to focus on comparisons of funding between school s...
Parent-generated revenue in public schools, in the form of fee-giving or fundraising, is fast develo...
This study examines inequalities of school funding as exclusively generated by the parent community ...
Providing incentives for parents to pay for schooling is good public policy. For forty years, Austr...
For over three decades, government subsidies have been a major source of funds for private schools i...
Government subsidies have provided a major source of funds to private schools in Australia for three...
Several court-mandated public school finance reforms, among them the Serrano cases in California, th...
In a globally austere policy context, state financing of public services has been positioned as pere...
This study focuses on parents´ involvement in primary education in the marginalized areas of Guayaqu...
Strengthening cooperation between schools and parents is critical to improving learning outcomes for...
The role of school fees in achieving both allocative and productive efficiency in the delivery of pr...
The role of school fees in achieving both allocative and productive efficiency in the delivery of pr...
Government subsidies have provided a major source of funds to private schools in Australia for three...
The study was to identify factors leading to low parental contribution to school fund in North “A” D...