This paper investigates the introduction of free universal secondary education in England and Wales in 1944. It focuses on its effects in relation to a prime long-term goal of pre-war Boards of Education. This was to open secondary school education to children of all social backgrounds on equal terms. Adopting a difference-in-difference estimation approach, we do not find any evidence that boys and girls from less well-off home backgrounds displayed improved chances of attending selective secondary schools. Nor, for the most part, did they show increased probabilities of gaining formal school qualifications. One possible exception in this latter respect relates to boys with unskilled fathers
The Free Schools policy in England has led to the opening of a number of new autonomous state‐funded...
We assess whether changing from an academically selective to a comprehensive schooling system promot...
The 1944 Butler Act laid the legal foundations for a new secondary education system in England, one...
This paper investigates the introduction of free universal secondary education in England and Wales ...
This paper investigates the introduction of free universal secondary education in England and Wales ...
This paper investigates the introduction of free universal secondary education in England and Wales ...
We compare the probabilities of selective (grammar) school entry in England and Wales before and aft...
British secondary schools moved from a system of extensive and early selection and tracking in secon...
British secondary schools moved from a system of extensive and early selection and tracking in secon...
To what extent and why do social origins matter for access to higher education, including access to ...
To what extent and why do social origins matter for access to higher education, including access to ...
To what extent and why do social origins matter for access to higher education, including access to ...
To what extent and why do social origins matter for access to higher education, including access to ...
We assess whether changing from an academically selective to a comprehensive schooling system promot...
We assess whether changing from an academically selective to a comprehensive schooling system promot...
The Free Schools policy in England has led to the opening of a number of new autonomous state‐funded...
We assess whether changing from an academically selective to a comprehensive schooling system promot...
The 1944 Butler Act laid the legal foundations for a new secondary education system in England, one...
This paper investigates the introduction of free universal secondary education in England and Wales ...
This paper investigates the introduction of free universal secondary education in England and Wales ...
This paper investigates the introduction of free universal secondary education in England and Wales ...
We compare the probabilities of selective (grammar) school entry in England and Wales before and aft...
British secondary schools moved from a system of extensive and early selection and tracking in secon...
British secondary schools moved from a system of extensive and early selection and tracking in secon...
To what extent and why do social origins matter for access to higher education, including access to ...
To what extent and why do social origins matter for access to higher education, including access to ...
To what extent and why do social origins matter for access to higher education, including access to ...
To what extent and why do social origins matter for access to higher education, including access to ...
We assess whether changing from an academically selective to a comprehensive schooling system promot...
We assess whether changing from an academically selective to a comprehensive schooling system promot...
The Free Schools policy in England has led to the opening of a number of new autonomous state‐funded...
We assess whether changing from an academically selective to a comprehensive schooling system promot...
The 1944 Butler Act laid the legal foundations for a new secondary education system in England, one...