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The Performance and Competitive Effects of School Autonomy
212
Citations
25
References
2009
Year
Educational PsychologyEducationLawSchool OrganizationAutonomyEducational SystemEducational PolicyEducation PolicySchool ChoiceSchool AutonomySchool FunctioningPublic PolicyRecent British ReformEducation PoliticsPublic EducationPerformance StudiesBritish Education SystemLocal Authority ControlEducation ReformPolitical Science
This paper studies a recent British reform that allowed public high schools to opt out of local authority control and become autonomous schools funded directly by the central government. Schools seeking autonomy had only to propose and win a majority vote among current parents. Almost one in three high schools voted on autonomy between 1988 and 1997, and using a version of the regression discontinuity design, I find large achievement gains at schools in which the vote barely won compared to schools in which it barely lost. Despite other reforms that ensured that the British education system was, by international standards, highly competitive, a comparison of schools in the geographic neighborhoods of narrow vote winners and narrow vote losers suggests that these gains did not spill over.
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