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Privatization in and of Public Education [Hardback]

Edited by (Academic Dean, Glion Institute of Higher Education; Associate Member, Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford), Edited by (Professor of Economics, Estonian Business School)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 352 pages, height x width x depth: 150x224x31 mm, weight: 612 g
  • Sērija : International Policy Exchange
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Jun-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0197673503
  • ISBN-13: 9780197673508
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  • Cena: 83,33 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 352 pages, height x width x depth: 150x224x31 mm, weight: 612 g
  • Sērija : International Policy Exchange
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Jun-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0197673503
  • ISBN-13: 9780197673508
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Privatization of education has become a prevalent global trend, representing a significant shift from viewing education as a public good to considering it as a private commodity. This transformation is closely tied to the modernization of the state under the principles of neoliberalism. A comprehensive analysis, as presented in this book using Ball and Youdell's framework, sheds light on the diverse patterns of privatization in education, categorizing them into two types: exogenous and endogenous. The term "exogenous" refers to policies that grant the private sector increased rights and authority to deliver education services. On the other hand, "endogenous" pertains to policies aimed at making public schools operate more like businesses. This paradigm shift encompasses various elements, including parental school choice, inter-school competition, accountability to parents, and increased autonomy for schools. Still, the book shows that advantages of education privatization are evident, such as heightened efficiency and the ability to cater to the diverse needs of the public schooling system. However, it is crucial to recognize that these benefits come with an inadequately addressed trade-off between efficiency and equity or inclusion. This trade-off stands as the most pressing contemporary challenge of education privatization, affecting various contexts and cases explored within the book.

Prominent researchers in the field present a multi-faceted view of the forms and consequences of education privatization. Privatization in and of Public Education encompasses a wide range of countries and regions, including both developed and developing nations, offering valuable case studies that illustrate how privatization is unfolding across the globe. By examining the driving factors behind education privatization, such as economic, political, and social influences, the authors provide a comprehensive understanding of this global phenomenon.

This book explains how education is becoming more privatized around the world to fit local economic and political needs. Privatization in and of Public Education categorizes different types of privatization as traditional or non-traditional. Traditional policies give more rights to private companies to provide education, while non-traditional policies make public schools more like businesses. The authors show that privatization can lead to more efficient schooling, but it can also create a trade-off between efficiency and equity or inclusion. The book presents a range of perspectives on the impact of privatization, including structural, ethical, and subjective effects. The book also covers a range of countries and regions, including both developed and developing countries. This helps readers understand how privatization is playing out in different contexts around the world.

Recenzijas

Privatization in and of Public Education reflects the complexities of current global transformations in the provision, regulation, and funding of public education. The book shows how 'the private' is progressively embedded in forms of education within and outside education systems and in different territories. One of the great contributions of the book is the inclusion of forms of privatization in non-Western states, such as China, Russia, former soviet republics, or postcolonial states. Their inclusion proves that the scope and extent of privatization is becoming really global, and the need as social scientists to understand its implications for equity and social justice. * Xavier Bonal, Universitat Autņnoma de Barcelona * Societies are evolving to become more inclusive, diverse, and pluralistic. Education systems are also changing, moving away from the traditional, uniform models publicly provided through common schools to allow for different curriculums, management practices, and teaching methods. This increasing diversity in schools, with private providers playing a more significant role, can widen education disparities between the wealthy and the poor. With a future characterized by growing income disparities driven by technological progress and globalization, Privatization in and of Public Education is a stepping stone in the long-overdue agenda of reinventing education systems to fulfill their promise of being a force for equality and economic mobility. * Rafael de Hoyos, Program Leader, Human Development, EU Member States, World Bank *

Foreword by Stephen Ball
Introduction by A. Santalova & K. Põder

Section
1. Overview: Educational Diversification and Public Preferences

Chapter 1: Is the Common School Dead? Dilemmas of Plural Public Spaces
Bruce Fuller

Chapter 2: The Moral Economy of Diversity in Educational Options in Four
European 'Choice' Countries
Triin Lauri, Kaire Põder

Section
2. Privatization of Education: Exogenous Forms

Chapter 3: Measuring the Efficiency of Private Schools: Conceptual Issues and
Empirical Evidence
Tommaso Agasisti and Simona Ferraro

Chapter 4: Privatisation by Default: The Global Expansion and Implications of
Private Supplementary Tutoring
Wei Zhang & Mark Bray

Chapter 5: The Growth of Private Schools in the Gulf Cooperation Council
Countries: Drivers and Implications
Susan M. Kippels

Chapter 6: Shared and Contested Views of Education Professionals on the Forms
of Privatisation within Comprehensive Schooling in Finland
Nina Nivanahoa Mikko Haavistob, Tuire Palonenb, Sonia Lempinena, Piia
Seppänena

Chapter 7: Privatization in Children's Extracurricular Education Sector: the
Case of Russia and the Post-Soviet Context
Sergey Kosaretsky, Ivan Y. Ivanov

Section
3. Privatization in Education: Endogenous Forms

Chapter 8: School Financing and Equal Educational Opportunity: A Review of
Policy Interventions
Kristof De Witte, Mike Smet and Ruben Van Assche

Chapter 9: State Advances, Min Retreats: Recentralisation of Minban Education
in China
Raymond K.H. Chan, Ying Wang

Chapter 10: School Autonomy as a Form of Privatization in Public Schooling in
Post-Soviet Republics of Central Asia--Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan
Antonina Santalova

Chapter 11: Where the Public was Always Private: Going Beyond Privatization
in/of/through Education and Policymaking in Post-colonial Contexts
Mauro C. Moschetti, D. Brent Edwards Jr., & Alejandro Caravaca

Chapter 12: COVID-19 and the Commercialization of Finnish Schooling: a
National 'Digileap' and a Global Re-imagining of Digitalized Public
Schooling
Iida Kiesi and Anna Hogan

Section
4. Conclusion: Patterns and Policies

Chapter 13: Patterns of Privatization in/of Education
Antonina Santalova

Chapter 14: Policies: The Way Forward for Privatization
Kaire Põder
Antonina Santalova is Academic Dean, Glion Institute of Higher Education and Associate Member, Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford.

Kaire PƵder is Professor of Economics at Estonian Business School and a member of the Expert Group of Quality Investments in Education and Training, European Commission.