New Zealand legislation removing school zones radically reshaped school choice, resulting in increased school stratification from parental choice frequently driven by social factors such as ethnic makeup of the school community. This article considers school choice through the eyes of 1,465 adolescents from 12 secondary schools in Dunedin (New Zealand). The most common reasons for school choice included: preference for a coeducational school, school’s facilities, positive comments from parents/students, and friends’ enrollment. Reasons for school choice differed by who was making the decision. Social factors and school programs/facilities, rather than proximity to home, influenced school choice decisions in Dunedin
The expansion of public school choice was an important component of the sweeping educational reforms...
Australia has invested heavily in promoting school choice as a path towards greater quality and equi...
The article looks at how different types of reasoning about educational choices within a group of ni...
New Zealand legislation removing school zones radically reshaped school choice, resulting in increas...
This paper considers the issue of parental choice, a key aspect of the Picot Report and Tomorrow’s S...
Background: Absence of requirements to attend a local school combined with social factors driving sc...
This chapter provides an overview of research on school choice and educational markets which has bee...
This dissertation entitled “Educational choice and educational space” aims to explore the confluence...
The article deals with the possibilities of the school choice. The study revealed that the majority ...
The impact of the marketization of education on choice and school intakes in ‘Greencity’, New Zealan...
At school pick-ups, at homes, in cafés and at work, worried parents debate the merits of dif...
School choice has been an issue in the education systems where parents are given the autonomy to sel...
The current political climate of educational reform very actively focuses on the positive aspects of...
The Education Reform Act of 1988 introduced a policy of open enrolment into English secondary educat...
When signed into law in 2001, the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation ushered in broad policy af...
The expansion of public school choice was an important component of the sweeping educational reforms...
Australia has invested heavily in promoting school choice as a path towards greater quality and equi...
The article looks at how different types of reasoning about educational choices within a group of ni...
New Zealand legislation removing school zones radically reshaped school choice, resulting in increas...
This paper considers the issue of parental choice, a key aspect of the Picot Report and Tomorrow’s S...
Background: Absence of requirements to attend a local school combined with social factors driving sc...
This chapter provides an overview of research on school choice and educational markets which has bee...
This dissertation entitled “Educational choice and educational space” aims to explore the confluence...
The article deals with the possibilities of the school choice. The study revealed that the majority ...
The impact of the marketization of education on choice and school intakes in ‘Greencity’, New Zealan...
At school pick-ups, at homes, in cafés and at work, worried parents debate the merits of dif...
School choice has been an issue in the education systems where parents are given the autonomy to sel...
The current political climate of educational reform very actively focuses on the positive aspects of...
The Education Reform Act of 1988 introduced a policy of open enrolment into English secondary educat...
When signed into law in 2001, the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation ushered in broad policy af...
The expansion of public school choice was an important component of the sweeping educational reforms...
Australia has invested heavily in promoting school choice as a path towards greater quality and equi...
The article looks at how different types of reasoning about educational choices within a group of ni...