This paper argues that the logic of neoliberal choice policy is typically blind to considerations of space and place, but inevitably impacts on rural and remote locations in the way that middle-class professionals view the opportunities available in their local educational markets. The paper considers the value of middle-class professionals’ educational capitals in regional communities and their problematic distribution, given that class fraction’s particular investment in choice strategies to ensure their children’s future. It then profiles the educational market in six communities along a transect between a major regional centre and a remote ‘outback’ town, using publicly available data from the Australian Government’s My School website. ...
At school pick-ups, at homes, in cafés and at work, worried parents debate the merits of dif...
This article explores issues of mobility in education in terms of the neo-liberal and neo-conservati...
Australia has invested heavily in promoting school choice as a path towards greater quality and equi...
This paper argues that the logic of neoliberal choice policy is typically blind to considerations of...
Market principles now dominate the education and social policies of many Anglophone countries, inclu...
Australia has many isolated communities that require human services provided by qualified profession...
This chapter has outlined historical changes in the organisation of school education in Australia, w...
Chapter 10 of the book, Markets, rights and power in Australian social policy, edited by Gabrielle M...
Staffing rural and remote schools is an important policy issue for the public good. This paper examin...
Since the 1990s in Australia, education policies have created an environment in which competition am...
The paper provides a critique of ‘school choice’ research, which is particularly relevant for Austra...
© Author(s) 2016. Neoliberal forces since the latter part of the 20th century have ushered in greate...
With the launch of the ‘My School’ website in 2010, Australia became a relative latecome...
Educational campaigning has received little attention in the literature. This study investigates lon...
The launch in Australia of a government website that compares all schools on the basis of student pe...
At school pick-ups, at homes, in cafés and at work, worried parents debate the merits of dif...
This article explores issues of mobility in education in terms of the neo-liberal and neo-conservati...
Australia has invested heavily in promoting school choice as a path towards greater quality and equi...
This paper argues that the logic of neoliberal choice policy is typically blind to considerations of...
Market principles now dominate the education and social policies of many Anglophone countries, inclu...
Australia has many isolated communities that require human services provided by qualified profession...
This chapter has outlined historical changes in the organisation of school education in Australia, w...
Chapter 10 of the book, Markets, rights and power in Australian social policy, edited by Gabrielle M...
Staffing rural and remote schools is an important policy issue for the public good. This paper examin...
Since the 1990s in Australia, education policies have created an environment in which competition am...
The paper provides a critique of ‘school choice’ research, which is particularly relevant for Austra...
© Author(s) 2016. Neoliberal forces since the latter part of the 20th century have ushered in greate...
With the launch of the ‘My School’ website in 2010, Australia became a relative latecome...
Educational campaigning has received little attention in the literature. This study investigates lon...
The launch in Australia of a government website that compares all schools on the basis of student pe...
At school pick-ups, at homes, in cafés and at work, worried parents debate the merits of dif...
This article explores issues of mobility in education in terms of the neo-liberal and neo-conservati...
Australia has invested heavily in promoting school choice as a path towards greater quality and equi...