There have been many claims that the introduction of parental choice for schools in the United Kingdom would lead to further socioeconomic segregation between schools. However, little evidence of this has actually emerged. Instead during the first half of the 1990s, in particular, the number of children living in poverty became more equally distributed between UK secondary schools. Part of the explanation for this lies with the prior arrangements for allocating children to schools, typically based upon designated catchment areas. In this paper we argue that the degree of residential segregation that exists in England ensured that schools were already highly segregated before the introduction of market reforms to education, and has continued...
This paper studies the evolution of school segregation in Sweden in the aftermath of the 1992 univer...
This paper studies the evolution of school segregation in Sweden in the aftermath of the 1992 univer...
Excess school segregation is a phenomena observed across many countries and one common explanation f...
There have been many claims that the introduction of parental choice for schools in the United Kingd...
There have been many claims that the introduction of parental choice for schools in the United Kingd...
There have been many claims that the introduction of parental choice for schools in the United Kingd...
The Schools Standards and Framework Act 1997 has weakened the role of the market in secondary educat...
The Education Reform Act of 1988 introduced a policy of open enrolment into English secondary educat...
Abstract – This paper summarizes the results on the relationship between school choice and social se...
This paper seeks an explanation for the persistent social phenomenon of segregated schooling in Engl...
This paper contains a summary of the findings for a recently completed ESRC-funded project (R0002380...
This study examines the proposition that secondary school choice in England has produced a stratifie...
Many countries use centralized school choice procedures to assign pupils to schools. To address exce...
Many countries use centralized school choice procedures to assign pupils to schools. To address exce...
Many countries use centralized school choice procedures to assign pupils to schools. To address exce...
This paper studies the evolution of school segregation in Sweden in the aftermath of the 1992 univer...
This paper studies the evolution of school segregation in Sweden in the aftermath of the 1992 univer...
Excess school segregation is a phenomena observed across many countries and one common explanation f...
There have been many claims that the introduction of parental choice for schools in the United Kingd...
There have been many claims that the introduction of parental choice for schools in the United Kingd...
There have been many claims that the introduction of parental choice for schools in the United Kingd...
The Schools Standards and Framework Act 1997 has weakened the role of the market in secondary educat...
The Education Reform Act of 1988 introduced a policy of open enrolment into English secondary educat...
Abstract – This paper summarizes the results on the relationship between school choice and social se...
This paper seeks an explanation for the persistent social phenomenon of segregated schooling in Engl...
This paper contains a summary of the findings for a recently completed ESRC-funded project (R0002380...
This study examines the proposition that secondary school choice in England has produced a stratifie...
Many countries use centralized school choice procedures to assign pupils to schools. To address exce...
Many countries use centralized school choice procedures to assign pupils to schools. To address exce...
Many countries use centralized school choice procedures to assign pupils to schools. To address exce...
This paper studies the evolution of school segregation in Sweden in the aftermath of the 1992 univer...
This paper studies the evolution of school segregation in Sweden in the aftermath of the 1992 univer...
Excess school segregation is a phenomena observed across many countries and one common explanation f...