When Schools Compete


A Cautionary Tale

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By Edward B. Fiske, Helen F. Ladd
Imprint:
BROOKINGS INSTITUTION
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
320

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Description

Edward B. Fiske, an educational consultant and writer, is the author of the annual Fiske Guide to Colleges. He served as education editor of the New York Times from 1974 to 1991. Helen F. Ladd is Edgar Thompson Professor of Public Policy Studies and professor of economics at Duke Universitys Sanford Institute of Public Policy.


"Edward B. Fiske and... Helen F. Ladd have put together a detailed quantitative and qualitative analysis...

(Included as Notable Book of 2000)" -Rebecca Jones, Senior Editor of ASBJ, American School Board Journal, 1/3/2001



"Their book should be this summers required reading for every education policy maker in the United States." -Dorothy Shipps, Teachers College, Teachers College Record, 4/3/2001



"When Schools Compete: a Cautionary Tale (Brookings Institution Press), by Edward Fiske and Helen Ladd, warns that competition doesnt always produce good results for minorities. New Zealands 10-year experiment with something like a national system of c" -Gail Russell Chaddock, Christian Science Monitor, 4/3/2001



"Parental choice and competition among schools have led to an increase in ethnic polarisation, and a wider gap between poor and rich schools, according to two American education experts." -New Zealand Press Association, Waikato Times (Hamilton)



"[When Schools Compete] is first rate in almost every respect: lucidly written, readily accessible, rigorously argued, systematic in its coverage, empirically well grounded, eminently balanced in its treatment of the relevant issues, and full of fascinatin" -Jonathan Boston, New Zealand Education Review



"Fiske, a long-term former education editor at The New York Times, and Ladd, a professor of economics and public policy at Duke University, lay out admirably the reforms in New Zealand." -Madelyn Holmes, Basic Education



"PARENTAL choice and competition among schools have led to an increase in ethnic polarisation, and a wider gap between poor and rich schools, according to two American education experts.

Former New York Times education editor Edward Fiske and Duke Univ" - The Dominion (Wellington)



"When Schools Compete: A Cautionary Tale said polarisation was the most negative result of the reforms, which were introduced in 1989 and gave schools autonomy and parents the right to choose their childrens schools." -Alexander Miriyana, The Sunday Star-Times (Auckland)



"During their five months in New Zealand in 1998, Ladd and Fiske visited nearly 50 schools, analyzed data from the Ministry of Education and other sources and interviewed teachers, principals, parents, government officials and other policy makers.... Du" -Samantha Peterson, The Herald-Sun (Durham, NC)



"Those pondering the effect of the growing school-choice movement in America should look at New Zealand, [When Schools Compete] says. That countrys experience suggests that opening enrollment to all public schools and providing vouchers for private school" -Jay Matthews, The Washington Post



"[Fiske and Ladd] offer a series of yellow lights for Americans and others interested in hot educational issues like school choice and charter schools." -Joe Williams, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel



"It is a rare pleasure to find a book that carefully examines the practices of another country with regard to a policy with which we are still experimenting." -Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University, Education Matters, 7/1/2001



"This book is a pleasure to read. It effectively combines textured examples with common-sense empirical analysis to provide a relatively balanced description of the evolution and progress of one countrys experience with fundamental educational reform. It is a welcome addition to the heated school choice debate." -C.E. Rouse, Princeton University, Economics of Education Review, no. 21, 2002


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