This short article provides a critique of Dr. Ellis’ paper in a recent edition of the Canadian Journal of Educational Administration and Policy (CJEAP), focusing on where future Canadian research in educational finance can have practical implications rather than simply offering transitory displays of polemical fireworks
The Standing Senate Committee on National Finance has recently recommended a major change in the way...
Between 1970 and 1990 enrolment in Newfoundland and Labrador schools dropped by 22 percent. The firs...
This paper has two central objectives. Generally, its purpose is to trace the trajectory of the fisc...
This short article provides a critique of Dr. Ellis’ paper in a recent edition of the Canadian Journ...
In Issue 196 of the Canadian Journal of Educational Administration and Policy (CJEAP), the journal p...
A response to critics of the article "A Short History of K-12 Public School Spending in British Colu...
This article deals with the OECD Report of 1976 on Canadian education. It reviews issues concerned w...
The aging of Canada’s population in the coming decades will drive up the cost of many government pro...
This article provides an analysis of the features, determinants, and effects of a series of reforms ...
Since 2004, a number of Canadian provinces have initiated comprehensive reviews of their respective ...
If educational finance includes the acts of raising, allocating, and using resources for educational...
Canadian education has traditionally been financed by two major sources: (1) transfer payments from ...
A growing number of post-secondary education institutions and public bodies have recently terminated...
This article looks at fifty years’ worth (1970-2020) of public K-12 education expenditure data from ...
Canada invests heavily in education. Expenditure per student on elementary and secondary schooling i...
The Standing Senate Committee on National Finance has recently recommended a major change in the way...
Between 1970 and 1990 enrolment in Newfoundland and Labrador schools dropped by 22 percent. The firs...
This paper has two central objectives. Generally, its purpose is to trace the trajectory of the fisc...
This short article provides a critique of Dr. Ellis’ paper in a recent edition of the Canadian Journ...
In Issue 196 of the Canadian Journal of Educational Administration and Policy (CJEAP), the journal p...
A response to critics of the article "A Short History of K-12 Public School Spending in British Colu...
This article deals with the OECD Report of 1976 on Canadian education. It reviews issues concerned w...
The aging of Canada’s population in the coming decades will drive up the cost of many government pro...
This article provides an analysis of the features, determinants, and effects of a series of reforms ...
Since 2004, a number of Canadian provinces have initiated comprehensive reviews of their respective ...
If educational finance includes the acts of raising, allocating, and using resources for educational...
Canadian education has traditionally been financed by two major sources: (1) transfer payments from ...
A growing number of post-secondary education institutions and public bodies have recently terminated...
This article looks at fifty years’ worth (1970-2020) of public K-12 education expenditure data from ...
Canada invests heavily in education. Expenditure per student on elementary and secondary schooling i...
The Standing Senate Committee on National Finance has recently recommended a major change in the way...
Between 1970 and 1990 enrolment in Newfoundland and Labrador schools dropped by 22 percent. The firs...
This paper has two central objectives. Generally, its purpose is to trace the trajectory of the fisc...