Marketisation Flashcards
What does marketisation mean for schools
Schools placed into competition with each other to drive up standards parents given the right to choose whether they wanted to send their children to
Marketisation – formula funding
Finance of the school based on number of pupils enrolling as money is allocated per pupil enabled good schools to attract more pupils and poor schools it was an incentive to improve
Marketisation – open enrollment and parental choice
Parents could choose where they sent their kids to school encourage competition between schools
Marketisation league tables
Informed parents of each school’s performance in terms of exam results and its offsted report
Offstead marketisation
Can dogs inspections of all state schools reports are published and weaknesses have to be addressed
National curriculum marketisation
All schools have to teach same subjects between five and 16 all students study maths English science
SATs marketisation
Standard assessment tests and targets were introduced for children examinations were combined and became GCSE
Specialised schools marketisation
Schools had a special feature to pull more parents in to enroll their children in their school for example faith schools or schools that focus on sports
Evaluation weakness
Furthering the gap of inequality between middle class and working class as middle class students could move into and catchment areas for God or over subscribed schools to ensure their place