1st Edition

Privatizing Educational Choice Consequences for Parents, Schools, and Public Policy

By Clive R Belfield, Henry M. Levin Copyright 2005
    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    Controversies over the merits of public and private education have never been more prominent than today. This book evaluates public and private schooling, especially in regard to choices families must make for their children.While choice among publics schools is widely advocated today by families and states, public support for private education - including vouchers, tax credits, charter schools, and private contracting - is politically controversial. The authors accessibly describe what research shows as to the effects - for communities and children - of these approaches. They move beyond school choice to show how other factors - most notably the family - have a strong effect on a child's educational success. The book helps educators and parents better understand the rapidly changing educational environment and the important choices they make in educating the nation's children.

    Chapter 1 Education Privatization in Its Many Forms; Chapter 2 The Marketplace in Education; Part I The Family; Chapter 3 Families as Contractual Partners in Education; Chapter 4 Modeling School Choice; Chapter 5 Home-Schooling; Part II The Private Market; Chapter 6 The Effects of Competition on Educational Outcomes; Chapter 7 School Choice and the Supply of Private Schooling Places; Chapter 8 The Potential of For-Profit Schools for Educational Reform; Chapter 9 Postcompulsory Entitlements;

    Biography

    Clive R. Belfield, Henry M. Levin

    “…an extremely well-organized and well thought-out introduction into the conceptual issues of privatization in education and the framework of educational markets….I recommend this book to anyone who is seriously interested in the economics of education.”
    —Gerhard Glomm, University of Indiana, in the Economics of Education Review

    “Privatizing Educational Choice provides a wealth of information not usually present in discussions of choice, vouchers, charters, or other aspects of educational reform. People interested in the issues of choice and privatization will find it a handy book to have on the shelf.”
    —Teachers College Record