School Choice in an Established Market

Front Cover
Routledge, Jan 4, 2019 - Business & Economics - 288 pages

First published in 1997, this study examines the trend towards markets in UK schools, with a particular focus on fee-paying schools in South Wales, by outlining the varied economic and political arguments both for and against increased parental choice and exploring parents’ real reasons for using fee-paying schools. Stephen Gorard destroys the cosy myth that fee-paying schools are large, successful, charitable institutions catering chiefly for a select group of privileged families. Instead, he reveals them as typically privately owned, coeducational and with fewer than a hundred pupils, based in a poorly-converted residential site with few facilities. It is the first book which allows children’s voices to be heard fully in the context of debates on the choice of a new school. Gorard has gathered the voices of parents and children via observation, interview and survey, comparing them directly and revealing stark differences in the perception of each generation.

 

Contents

Figures and tables
Acknowledgements
Markets in education
The prevailing evidence
The need for a fresh approach
2 Theoretical positions of families in
The sampling frame
2 The size of the private sector by county
1 The seven school types
1 Schooling of siblings
3 Fathers education by occupational class
The choice criteria
3 The main role in choosing by year group
11 Less than important reasons for choosing a school
20 Outcomes factor
Family influences on choice

Outline methodology
1 The sampling frame and the sample
2 Frequency of responses by year group
The schools and their users
The three step model
What are they paying for?
Conclusions and implications
Bibliography

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Stephen Gorard

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