89 research outputs found
Travel-to-school distances in Sweden 2000–2006: changing school geography with equality implications
The journey travelled – A view of two settings a decade apart
Inclusion is generally recognized as an ongoing, active process which reflects shifts in policies, practice and values as well as political choices made over long periods of time. Although intended as a transformative concept it can also represent a messy compromise between congealed policy positions and contradictory practices. Against this background of compromise and dissatisfaction, this study aims to examine how two schools with clear inclusive aspirations and intentions have weathered the last decade. Drawing upon two research visits ten years apart in which the schools were filmed and members of the school community were interviewed, this study reports on their perception of the journey travelled. Data from the study shows that in both cases there was a shift away from practices which were previously seen as being a route towards greater inclusion. The causes for these shifts were political, economic and social factors underpinned by the pervasive influence of the special education and medical model on the two schools’ practice and principles
Why Do Some Young Adults not Graduate From Upper-Secondary School? On the Importance of Signals of Labour Market Failure
In high-income countries, not completing secondary school often entails a high risk of social exclusion. Using data on young adults born in 1985 that grew up in metropolitan Sweden, we study factors associated with not graduating from upper secondary school at age 21. Our hypothesis is that if a young person sees examples of people who are not able to earn a living despite having a long education, such negative examples are influential. Results from estimated logistic models are consistent with the hypothesis
The English School Reforms: Competition, Innovation and Fragmentation
The last 30 years have seen efforts by successive governments, of different political persuasions, to improve the English education system. Common to all of these reform
efforts is a concern to close the gap in attainment between students from economically disadvantaged students and their peers, although the approaches tried have varied
considerably. More recently, they have involved an increased emphasis on the idea of allowing schools greater autonomy within a policy context based on market forces
as the main improvement strategy. In this chapter, we analyse these developments in order to draw lessons for those in other countries who are interested in promoting greater equity within their national education systems. This leads us to argue that whilst school autonomy can be a positive force—particular where it encourages teachers to work together in exploring more inclusive practices—it requires coordination at the local level and the introduction of accountability arrangements that provide space for experimentation, as well as resources to promote the professional development of teachers
Komplement eller konkurrent? : Fristående gymnasieskolor i ett integrationsperspektiv
Föreliggande rapport är skriven inom ramen för projektet "Tillval eller tillflykt" och medekonomiskt stöd från Integrationsverket och Tema Etnicitet, Campus Norrköping, Linköpings Universitet. Ett antal forskare som ingår i projektet har studerat olika skolformers (kommunala och fristående skolor) mångfaldsorientering och utbildningssystemets kopplingar till frågor om segregation och integration i det svenska samhället. Rapporten fokuserar specifikt fristående gymnasiekolors framväxt med empiriska nedslag i tre sådana skolor
Can Multicultural Urban Schools in Sweden Survive the Freedom of Choice Policy?
The aim of this article is to describe and analyze how a number of multicultural urban schools in the Swedish cities of Stockholm and Malmö identify, understand and respond to the competition they have been exposed to on the emerging educational quasi-market. Based on interviews with school leaders and research on a wide range of secondary literature it is possible to identify three types of competitors: “white” schools, ordinary and religious/ethnic free schools and neighboring multicultural schools. The responding strategies vary from the logic of resignation and condemnation of parents for making “wrong” choices to a critical redefinition of pedagogical practices towards minority students and the equivocal alliances. I argue that the competition as an exclusive incentive for school development, as proposed by the neoliberal educationalists, only partly has proven its aptitude. If the education system is to maintain its transformative capacity then interventions are needed in the very basis of the structure of inequality that generates social differences; in the way the educational market is organized as well as; in the multicultural urban schools’ daily operations and communications with their local communities
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